The Price You Got to Pay to Be Free | |
Type: | live |
Longtype: | with studio tracks |
Artist: | Cannonball Adderley |
Cover: | The Price You Got to Pay to be Free.jpg |
Released: | December 1970[1] |
Recorded: | September 19, 1970 (live); October 5 & 6, 1970 (studio) |
Venue: | Monterey Jazz Festival |
Studio: | Capitol (Hollywood) |
Genre: | Jazz |
Label: | Capitol |
Producer: | David Axelrod |
Chronology: | Cannonball Adderley |
Prev Title: | Love, Sex, and the Zodiac |
Prev Year: | 1970 |
Next Title: | The Happy People |
Next Year: | 1970 |
The Price You Got to Pay to Be Free is an album by the Cannonball Adderley Quintet recorded, in part, at the 1970 Monterey Jazz Festival. A portion of the performance is memorialized in the 1971 Clint Eastwood movie Play Misty For Me. Additional "live in-studio" tracks were recorded the following month at the Capitol Records Tower, in Hollywood, to stretch the Monterey material into a double album. The album features Adderley with brother Nat Adderley, Joe Zawinul, Walter Booker and Roy McCurdy and guest appearances by Bob West and Cannon's 15-year-old nephew Nat Adderley Jr. who wrote and performed the gospel-influenced protest title song.[2]
The Allmusic review by Richard S. Ginell awarded the album 3½ stars and states: "Cannonball was a populist at heart, and his generosity of spirit shines through this often deliciously diverse album, which ranges wildly from flat-out soul to Brazilian music to a cautious toedip into the avant-garde.... This is a fascinating contemporary snapshot of the Quintet, whose later recordings are too casually dismissed these days."[3]
All compositions by Julian "Cannonball" Adderley except as indicated