Macon, Georgia's answer to
Sly & the Family Stone,
Mother's Finest spent the first half of the ‘70s vying for work in bars and clubs across the American Southeast -- every last one of which probably possessed an unsigned local resident Southern rock act. And though they even got as far as releasing an oft-forgotten 1972 album that pleased neither their label RCA nor themselves,
Mother's Finest would only be properly "discovered" by Epic Records staff producer
Tom Werman (
Cheap Trick,
Ted Nugent, etc.) several years later. By then,
Mother's Finest had evolved into a fierce live proposition, armed with an explosive combination of urban funk and heavy rock, and this goes a long way toward explaining why this self-titled second try from 1976 frequently sounds like
Sly Stone being infected with a welcome case of
Nugent's "Cat Scratch Fever." For proof, listeners need look no further than the snarling riffs of first single "Fire," but they may just want to stick around ‘til the iron-soul powerhouse "My Baby" rolls around, and probably even through to the very last crash of album closer "Rain," since there is very little filler to be found in between. That first single, for example, may have stalled at number 93 on the American pop charts, but that's difficult to understand once
Mother's Finest's co-lead vocal team of
Joyce "Baby Jean" Kennedy (as fiery as
Tina Turner, as soulful as
Chaka Khan) and her hubby
Glenn Murdock (no slouch himself) start going toe to toe. Not to be outdone, the band's instrumental contributors proceed to stretch their wings to the fullest on an epic jam named "Give You All the Love (Inside of Me)," showcasing funky strums and crunchy chords from
Hendrix-inspired guitarist
Moses Mo, pulsing clavinet from keyboard player
Mike Keck, and double-trouble rhythm mastery courtesy of bassist
Jerry "Wyzard" Seay and drummer
Barry "B.B. Queen" Borden. Another highlight is the confrontational "Niggizz Can't Sang Rock & Roll," which at the time managed to ruffle feathers on both sides of the racial divide, and featured
Murdock displaying just as much passion and virtually as many vocal chops as his better half. Unfortunately, widespread success would continue to elude
Mother's Finest despite this album's many strengths -- perhaps because their songs were ultimately built to pay bigger dividends on-stage than on the radio, perhaps simply due to bad timing -- and thus a star-crossed, uneven career would follow. But for those able to appreciate where the band and its unique musical vision were coming from, it doesn't get much better than this singular LP. [Rock Candy's reissue includes two bonus tracks recorded live in 1979.]