
The musicians were in rare form. Whitaker was a jazz musician who has served as maestro for other artists’ albums including Roy Ayers and Roberta Flack. He served as pianist-composer for this effort and it was his weighty chord placement that kept “Black Renaissance” sounding so important and proud throughout. Buster Williams’ bass is as thick as you’ll ever hear on that instrument and it’s his bass that acts as the intro for the 3 featured soloists. Saxophonist David Kitner (a white dude) is first up, followed by trumpet legend Woody Shaw (whose career is akin to, say, Big Pun or Jerome Brown) taking a solo "blowin’ all outside the horn." Then Azar Lawrence comes on for the final suite and murders it. All the while, Bill Hart (always one of the slickest kickin' kats) kept things grounded and groovin’. The whole song makes me feel black and proud; makes me feel like this song should be preserved in the Library of Congress.