In many ways, 
Blues Walk marked the culmination of 
Lou Donaldson's prime period as a hard-driving, straight-ahead bop saxophonist. Until that point, he had been turning out intense, furious bop workouts -- afterward, as its successor 
Light Foot shows, he began to slow down a bit. With 
Light Foot, 
Donaldson still was pretty firmly grounded in bop, but the tempos began to slow down, and his blues influence came to the forefront; furthermore, the bop tracks are hard bop, not straight bop, which tended to dominate his previous recordings. That diversity makes 
Light Foot an interesting listen, but the record suffers from slightly uneven material and performances. His quintet -- featuring pianist 
Herman Foster, bassist 
Peck Morrison, drummer 
Jimmy Wormsworth, and conga player 
Ray Barretto -- is usually up to the task at hand, but they tend to play conventionally. And, ultimately, that's what 
Light Foot is -- an entertaining but conventional release from an alto saxophonist capable of greatness. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine