Popular Music
Great Albums You May Have Missed: The O'Jays' Ship Ahoy (1973)
![](http://www.nypl.org/sites/default/files/images/album-ship-ahoy.inline vertical.jpg)
The songs on Ship Ahoy feel topical, but also timeless. The O'Jays sing about racism, greed, politics, and divisions within the black community, just for starters. The title track is a 9-minute wonder about the Middle Passage of the African slave trade, and the album's second single, "For the Love of Money," has one of the greatest--and most sampled--bass lines in pop music. As with any great soul album, there are terrific love songs, too.
The horns soar. The lush and elaborate string sections give the songs a full, warm feeling. It's soul, but quite different from the better-known Motown sound; a little darker, a little funkier, and with a strong emphasis on the contrasts between the various, expertly arranged instruments. If you're listening on the train or walking down the street, consider yourself warned: you just may find yourself dancing, too.
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