Music Review: Incognito - Tales from the Beach

On “I Come Alive (Rimshots and Basses),” a track off Incognito’s latest CD, Tales from the Beach, lead singer Joy Rose sings, “I come alive, when the backbeat starts to hit me/Takes me home and feeds my soul.” 

Those lyrics not only define music as inspiration, but also summarize the Incognito sound.  Listening to their albums is like comfort food, an experience that relaxes you through its consistency and gentle grooves.  Longtime fans know exactly what to expect when picking up a new Incognito album, and that’s not a bad thing; the band excels at its particular sound, a unique fusion of funk and jazz.  Although Tales from the Beach marks their debut on new label Heads Up, longtime fans can be reassured that the move has not altered their musical style. 

Incognito’s particular style, however, is difficult to classify.  Jean-Paul “Bluey” Maunick (along with co-founding member Paul “Tubbs” Williams) formed the band in the early '70s, eventually releasing their landmark work, Jazz Funk, in 1981.  Melding world music with funky bass patterns and complicated chord changes, this work foreshadowed the U.K.’s burgeoning “acid jazz” movement, which reached its peak in the '90s (its best-known practitioners in the U.S. being Jamiroquai and the Brand New Heavies).  Williams subsequently left the group, so Incognito transformed into a music project helmed by Maunick and featured a rotating group of musicians and vocalists. 

Returning after a ten-year absence with 1991’s Inside Life, Incognito released a steady stream of albums in the '90s and the early 2000s.  After scoring a minor hit on U.S. contemporary R&B radio with “Deep Waters” in 1994, the group gained a devoted following in America as well as throughout the world, continuing to perfect their version of acid jazz.  

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Article Author: Kit O'Toole

Kit O'Toole is a lifelong music enthusiast who maintains a music blog, Listen to the Band. In addition, she is the internet columnist and a contributing editor for Beatlefan magazine. She also holds an Ed.D. in Instructional Technology.

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  • 1 - Pico

    Jun 24, 2008 at 7:06 pm

    Tales From The Beach has been a guilty pleasure of mine lately, reminds me a lot of EW&F at their peak, as well as ToP and Stevie Wonder. Some nice chord change-ups (like on "I Was Waiting") and punchy horn arrangments.

    FWIW, Jamiroquai, like Incognito, is a British practitioner of acid jazz, not American.

  • 2 - Kit O'Toole

    Sep 12, 2008 at 6:31 pm

    Oh yes, Jamiroquai is a great practitioner of British acid jazz (sorry if my review seemed to say the contrary). I hope to write about them in one of my future columns, as I recently discovered that they are terrific in concert.

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