Around this time in their heyday,
the Crusaders were experimenting with orchestral/jazz fusions in concert -- and MCA thought enough of them to capture the music in London's Royal Festival Hall one fine summer.
Crusader pianist/sparkplug
Joe Sample evidently arranged and orchestrated all of the
Royal Philharmonic's parts himself, not necessarily with the expertise of a full-time practitioner of the craft. Too often, the orchestrations are piled on with a shovel; the orchestral "Overture" is a particularly mawkish piece of work. But
the Crusaders still had their signature rhythm section pumping away, with drummer
Stix Hooper in a particularly propulsive mood all night -- and they carry the excess weight easily along in the funky groove. Things come to a peak when fellow MCA signee
B.B. King slips on to the stage, first in a stomping "The Thrill Is Gone" and then in one of the most infectious tracks he or
the Crusaders ever cut, "Better Not Look Down." It's a master class in economy, every guitar note landing squarely in
Stix's pocket,
Sample matching every brief lick with a funky comment on the electric piano, the
King's command over the British audience complete.
King also tries out the big
Crusaders vocal hit "Street Life," but this time, guest singer
Josie James has him beat -- and there are some evidently unplanned numbers for
King and
the Crusaders as encores. Elsewhere, guitarist
David T. Walker is on-hand to provide economic, to-the-point commentary in his own style;
James is also featured in an exuberant "Burnin' Up the Carnival." Apart from his reliable comping on electric piano.
Sample also provides some elaborate elegance on solo acoustic piano on "Fly With Wings of Love," while tenor player
Wilton Felder acts as the genial emcee. The original double-LP issue took in the second half of the programs in London -- about an hour of music, easily transferable to one CD -- and it's one of the band's most enjoyable albums of that period. ~ Richard S. Ginell