About Ice
Hometown
United States
Formed
1970
Genre
Funk
Ice is the original name of the recording and performing moniker of the legendary -- and often sampled -- funk outfit, the Lafayette Afro Rock Band. The group was formed on Long Island, New York as the Bobby Boyd Congress. Deciding America was already overloaded with funk acts, they relocated to France in 1971. After scuffling for a time, Boyd returned to the United States. The remaining members -- guitarist Larry Jones, bassist Lafayette Hudson, keyboardist Frank Abel, horn players Ronnie James Buttacavoli and Arthur Young, drummer Ernest "Donny" Donable, and percussionists Keno Speller and Arthur Young -- renamed themselves Ice and scored a steady gig as the house band for producer Pierre Jaubert Parisound studio. Regularly performing live in Paris' Barbesse district -- an area made up primarily of African immigrants -- Ice's hard-edged funk became increasingly influenced by African rhythms and textures, and in the wake of their 1972 self-titled debut and 1973's Each Man Makes His Destiny, Jaubert changed the group's name to the Lafayette Afro Rock Band.
Guitarist Michael McEwan joined to record 1974's Soul Makossa (issued in the U.S. as Movin' & Groovin' sans the cover of Manu Dibango's signature track), highlighted by the oft-covered and much-sampled "Hihache." The follow-up album, Malik, featured the cut "Darkest Night." The tune's saxophone intro was later sampled by Public Enemy on "Show 'Em Whatcha Got," and provided the foundation for Wreckx 'N' Effect's "Rump Shaker" and Tuff Crew's "Nut." JHones returned and the band reverted back to the Ice name for 1974's Afro Agban (The Instrumental Album).
Later in 1975, the Lafayette Afro Rock Band backed jazz pianist Mal Waldron on the Jaubert-produced Candy Girl on Calumet and in 1976 collaborated with Sunnyland Slim on his Depression Blues. Ice issued 1975's Frisco Disco, and worked under another alias, Captain Dax, which landed a novelty hit in Japan with the single "Dr. Beezar, Soul Frankenstein" b/w "Push." They cut Seven Americans in Paris for RCA in 1977. Later that year, the label released Thumpin', a double-length set that combined tracks from their 1972 debut and Each Man Makes His Destiny on the first disc, with new tracks on the second. The band resurfaced as Crispy & Co in 1978 to issue Funky Flavored on the U.K.'s Creole label before returning to America and disbanding before the year was over. ~ Thom Jurek & Jason Ankeny
Members of Ice include, or have included, Bobby Boyd, Ronnie Buttacavoli, Arthur Young and more.
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