| フォーマット | CDアルバム |
| 発売日 | 1998年08月11日 |
| 国内/輸入 | 輸入 |
| レーベル | Virgin |
| 構成数 | 1 |
| パッケージ仕様 | - |
| 規格品番 | 46218 |
| SKU | 724384621827 |
構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:56:49
Personnel includes: Dr. John (vocals, piano); Paul Weller (vocals, guitar); Jools Holland (Hammond B-3 organ); Martin Duffy (keyboards); Spiritualized, Clive Deamer, Gaz Coombes, Mickey Quinn.
Personnel: Dr. John (vocals, piano, keyboards); Paul Weller (vocals, guitar); Carleen Anderson (vocals); Jason Pierce (guitar, Farfisa); Bobby Broom (guitar, background vocals); Gaz Coombes, Matt Deighton (guitar); Hugh McCracken (acoustic guitar, slide guitar, mandolin); Ravi (berimbau, percussion); Ray Moonshake (flute, saxophone); Ronnie Cuber (bass clarinet, saxophone, tenor saxophone); Shelley Woodworth (English horn); Lawrence Feldman (tenor saxophone); Alan Rubin (trumpet, piccolo trumpet); Tony Kadleck (trumpet); Clark Gayton (trombone); Little Big Horns (brass); The Kick Horns (horns); Thighpaulsandra (organ); Steve White (drums, percussion); Herman V. Ernest III (drums, sound effects, background vocals); Clive Deamer, Damon Reece (drums); Sammy Figueroa (congas, percussion); Robin Jones , Malcolm Cross (percussion); Jenny Douglas, Katherine Russell, David Barard (background vocals).
Audio Mixer: Jason Pierce.
Photographer: Andy Earl.
Arranger: Jason Pierce.
Throughout the '90s, Dr. John played on dozens of sessions, taking a particular interest in younger English bands including Supergrass and Spiritualized. A number of musicians from this scene repay the favor on this mix of voodoo mysticism and space rock. This time out, Dr. John reintroduces his alter ego, "The Night Tripper." The result is songs such as "Ki Ya Gris Gris," "John Gris" and "I Like Ki Yoka," where the New Orleans native wraps his raspy drawl and a languid tempo around a patois of phrases and musical movements that entice and mesmerize.
Members of Spiritualized help out with the metaphysical musings of "Hello God," while Jools Holland and Paul Weller add to a particularly matter-of-fact reading of John Martyn's "I Don't Wanna Know." Never quite cutting loose, Mac Rebennack does shake a funky leg on the title track and "Why Come." The good Doctor wraps it all up with "Sweet Home New Orleans," an ode to his hometown that starts out with a woozy tempo and builds up to include plenty of horns and female background singers.
録音 : ステレオ (Studio)
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