The Great J.J. Jackson

The Great J.J. Jackson
Studio album by J.J. Jackson
Released 1969
Genre Soul-jazz
Label Warner Bros.
Producer Lew Futterman
J.J. Jackson chronology
But It's Alright
(1967)
The Great J.J. Jackson
(1969)
The Greatest Little Soul Band in the Land
(1969)


The Great J.J. Jackson is the second album released by J.J. Jackson. The album was released in 1969 on Warner Bros. Records.

History and Critical Reaction

The album was released in 1969 by Warner Bros. Records, following the successful 1969 re-release by Warner Bros. of Jackson's 1966 hit single, "But It's Alright". Warner Bros. had acquired from Jackson's former record company, Calla Records, the rights to Jackson's first album, which included "But It's Alright". "But It's Alright" and four other songs from Jackson's first album were included on The Great J.J. Jackson. The balance of the album consisted of non-album singles released on Calla Records, plus A-sides and B-sides of singles Jackson had released in 1968 and 1969 on Loma Records, a Warner Bros. affiliate label, and Warner Bros. Records.

The music is regarded as being consistent across periods, with Jackson being described as "a man devoted to old-school soul", rather than following trends.[1]

Critically described as "the definitive J.J. Jackson collection",[1] in 2009 The Great J.J. Jackson was re-released, on CD, by Collector's Choice. The re-release included as additional tracks the remaining songs from Jackson's first album on Calla Records that had not been included in the original release of The Great J.J. Jackson.[1]

Track Listing

Additional Tracks on CD Reissue, 2009[10]

Credits

Original Recording

2009 Reissue[10]

  • Produced by Gordon Anderson
  • Mastered by Bob Fisher
  • Liner notes by Gene Sculatti

References

  1. 1 2 3 Mark Deming, Review of The Great J.J. Jackson; Allmusic. Retrieved 2017-10-16.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Included on the But It's Alright album.
  3. 1 2 Single originally released on Calla Records; not included on first album.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Co-written by Windsor King, a founding member of The "5" Royales and a frequent co-writer with Jackson.
  5. Warner Bros. single, 1968.
  6. B-side of "That Ain't Right" single, originally released by Calla Records, re-released in 1968 on Loma Records.
  7. Single release by Loma/Warner Bros., 1967.
  8. B-side of "Come See Me (I'm Your Man(", released as a single in 1968 by Loma Records.
  9. Loma/Warner Bros. single, 1968.
  10. 1 2 Particulars of The Great J.J. Jackson; Discogs. Retrieved 2017-10-20.
  11. Successful single when released by The Pretty Things in 1966. See particulars of "Come See Me"/L.S.D."; Discogs. Retrieved 2017-10-25. Released as a J.J. Jackson single by Loma Records in 1968.
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