Disregard the understated title; Small Talk at 125th and Lenox was a volcanic upheaval of intellectualism and social critique, recorded live in a New York nightclub with only bongos and conga to back the street poet. Here Scott-Heron introduced some of his most biting material, including the landmark "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised" as well as his single most polemical moment: the angry race warning "Enough." Still, he balances the tone and mood well, ranging from direct broadsides to clever satire. He introduces "Whitey on the Moon" with a bemused air ("wanting to give credit where credit is due"), then launches into a diatribe concerning living conditions for the neglected on earth while those racing to the moon receive millions of taxpayer dollars. On "Evolution (And Flashback)," Scott-Heron laments the setbacks of the civil rights movement and provides a capsule history of his race, ending sharply with these words: "In 1960, I was a negro, and then Malcolm came along/Yes, but some nigger shot Malcolm down, though the bitter truth lives on/Well, now I am a black man, and though I still go second class/Whereas once I wanted the white man's love, now he can kiss my ass." The only sour note comes on a brush with homophobia, "The Subject Was Faggots."
Gil Scott-Heron
Small Talk at 125th and Lenox
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AllMusic Review by John Bush
Track Listing
Title/Composer | Performer | Time | Stream | |||
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1 | 3:21 | Amazon | ||||
2 | 1:46 | Amazon | ||||
3 | 2:35 | Amazon | ||||
4 | 4:27 | Amazon | ||||
5 | 1:21 | Amazon | ||||
6 | 3:11 | Amazon | ||||
7 | 3:21 | Amazon | ||||
8 | 2:53 | Amazon | ||||
9 | 1:59 | Amazon | ||||
10 | 4:32 | Amazon | ||||
11 | 4:16 | Amazon | ||||
12 | 0:34 | Amazon | ||||
13 | 5:15 | Amazon | ||||
14 | 4:30 | Amazon |