Body Heat cover

Body Heat

Released

Anyone seriously suggesting the musical output of Kanye West is tantamount to Quincy Jones’s, or opining that producing Thriller established Q’s career, could use a serious crash course in music history. For a man who never sings a note, this original super-producer’s solo albums saturated R&B radio from the 1970s to the 1990s, including Body Heat. “Everything Must Change” (with vocals from Benard Ighner), “If I Ever Lose This Heaven” (featuring Leon Ware and Minnie Riperton) and the title track embody the high-quality musicianship that made Michael Jackson invite Q to produce Off the Wall, Thriller and Bad in the first place.

Miles Marshall Lewis

The artists Quincy Jones assembled for his sublime 1974 set Body Heat reads like a ‘who’s who’ of jazz and soul and included Herbie Hancock, Bob James, Dennis Coffey, Bernard Purdie, Wah Wah Watson, Billy Preston, Leon Ware and Minnie Riperton! Cecil and Margouleff were on board to programme the Arp synthesiser which is all over the album, providing a futurist, space-age edge to the deep funk and soul. Body Heat is a haunting, brooding, heavy-duty, atmospheric sci-fi funk record that didn’t really sound like anything else at the time and which easily stands up today. 

Harold Heath

Suggestions
Back to the World cover

Back to the World

Curtis Mayfield
Power Clown cover

Power Clown

Fila Brazillia
Ekundayo Inversions cover

Ekundayo Inversions

El Michels Affair, Liam Bailey
Number One cover

Number One

Mr President
Salongo cover

Salongo

Ramsey Lewis
Upchurch cover

Upchurch

Phil Upchurch
Sands Of Time cover

Sands Of Time

The S.O.S. Band
Hang On In There cover

Hang On In There

Mike James Kirkland