Product Details
Shaft

Shaft
Isaac Hayes

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Track Listing

  1. Theme from Shaft [Vocal Version]
  2. Bumpy's Lament
  3. Walk from Regio's
  4. Ellie's Love Theme
  5. Shaft's Cab Ride
  6. Cafe Regio's
  7. Early Sunday Morning
  8. Be Yourself
  9. Friend's Place
  10. Soulsville [Vocal Version]
  11. No Name Bar
  12. Bumpy's Blues
  13. Shaft Strikes Again
  14. Do Your Thing [Vocal Version]
  15. End Theme

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #116550 in Music
  • Released on: 2006-03-24
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: Soundtrack
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: .20 pounds
  • Running time: 100 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
The "Theme from Shaft" is now so ingrained in popular consciousness as the blaxploitation-movie track that it's hard to listen to it without a faint smirk. ("Who's the black private dick that's a sex machine to all the chicks?"!!) But if you can get past the inadvertent humour, it's still a devilishly exciting piece of music--all hi-hat 16ths, wah-wah guitar, strings and woodwind, like a Norman Whitfield Motown production taken to a baroque extreme. The rest of the album consists mainly of incidental mood music of no great worth: "Walk from Regio's", "Ellie's Love Theme"--you know the sort of thing. Only two other tracks feature the Black Moses pipes, while the endless "Do Your Thing" takes its place in the catalogue of Hayes epics that began with Hot Buttered Soul. --Barney Hoskyns


Customer Reviews

Not many soundtracks come hotter than this!5
Isaac Hayes once again works his musical genious to produce a soundtrack that is second to none. The best known track is the "theme from shaft", but the others are all equally enjoyable. Definitly money well spent.

A truly great soundtrack5
My dad was a big fan of Isaac Hayes and indeed a lot of the other Stax artists, as a result, I grew up listening to a lot of music from the Stax label.

So far as Isaac Hayes is concerned and film soundtracks, this really is worth buying. Isaac Hayes shows the depth of his creativity by producing an original soundtrack that has everything in it...vocals, instrumentals, lots of strings, horns, excellant rhythym section etc.etc.

Most people will be aware of the 1st track 'The Theme from Shaft' but all the others are great as well. My particular faves include 'Soulsville', 'No Name Bar' and 'Bumpy's Lament' which specifically has been sampled/copied by numerous other rnb and rap artists.

Overall, it's a masterpiece and thoroughly deserving of its Oscar. As for the film........well the less said about that the better!

Wasted on the movie5
One of my most listened to albums and still absolutely ace after all these years. It's miles better than the dull, dated and cliché-riddled movie for which it was written and was, apparently, the first album to be more successful than the movie. The definitive wucka wucka guitar on the title track with a fab recording too, at Stax Studios down in Memphis, and all written when he was only 28. Tracks such as Soulsville are just absolutely dripping with cool (man), whilst Cafe Regio's is an utter classic of its genre.

Mr Hayes produced (brilliantly), whilst guest musicians include Lester Snell (electric piano), James Alexander (electric bass), Michael Toles and Charles Pitts (guitars ~ and the guitar playing here and there is utterly first class), Willie Hall (drums & tamborine) and Gary Jones (bongos and congas). The brass section on a few tracks is ace as well, though who the musicians were isn't credited.

Side 4's 19'38" Do Your Thing wasn't in the movie at all, but somehow it's still an essential element of the album, criminally cut to a quarter of its original length for the otherwise excellent 24 bit DR edition, almost certainly to accommodate the multi-media photos, artist info and video track stuck on at the end ~ which are okay, but not worth what had to be sacrificed to make way for them.

Funny, but to this day I've never managed to hear more than the odd track from any other of his albums, except for Hot Buttered Soul which didn't inspire me at all. Somehow, none could ever measure up to this one. A true and enduring classic, excellently remastered by Joe Tarantino at Fantasy Studios in Berkeley, CA.