Initially created to be the house band for
Allen Toussaint and
Marshall Sehorn's Sansu Enterprises,
the Meters started out backing such famous names as
Lee Dorsey and
Betty Harris. Led by organist
Art Neville, the quartet was rounded out by jazz-influenced guitarist
Leo Nocentelli, along with the bubbling rhythm section of bassist
George Porter, Jr. and drummer
Joseph "Zigaboo" Modeliste.
Booker T. & the M.G.'s may have been the most obvious influence, but
the Meters differentiated themselves by injecting a healthy dose of New Orleans funk into their sound. Led by
Neville's fat-sounding organ,
the Meters quickly scored hits with the sinewy "Cissy Strut" and the more languid "Sophisticated Cissy." Simplicity is the hallmark of this impressive debut and nuance is paramount, whether it's
Nocentelli's lazy riffs echoing throughout "Ease Back" or
Modeliste unobtrusively riding his hi-hat along the perimeter of the Memphis-fried "6V6 La." Not unlike
the M.G.'s,
the Meters were masters of interpretation -- the band here moves easily from a chugging reading of Sly Stone's "Sing a Simple Song," to kicking back on a smoky version of
the Classics IV's "Stormy." ~ Rovi Staff