
- Sun Goddess is back and sounds better than ever on this vintage Columbia pressing with incredible Nearly Triple Plus (A++ to A+++) grades from start to finish – just shy of our Shootout Winner
- The sound is huge, spacious, lively, transparent and punchy – this is jazz fusion that really rocks
- The last time we reviewed this album was all the way back in 2005!
- “Sun Goddess is also something of a stealth Earth, Wind & Fire album, as it features most of the key players from that band, and bears echoes of EW&F’s jazzier, more atmospheric side”
- 4 stars: “Pianist Ramsey Lewis first came to fame as the purveyor of swinging soul-jazz in the mid-’60s [but] Sun Goddess…is miles away from the finger-snapping supper club sounds of “The In Crowd.” Lewis had transformed himself into a jazz fusion funkateer, riffing on electric piano and synthesizer amid arrangements that meld jazz with funk, R&B, and yes, even touches of progressive rock.”
Ramsey Lewis meets Earth Wind and Fire.
This is a bright recording and it’s supposed to sound that way, just like EWF’s recordings. The music is full of energy and lots of fun. This isn’t real jazz; it’s pop jazz. It’s produced by Maurice White and it even has Phillip Bailey on vocals.
You can’t get much more Earth, Wind and Firey than that.








