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Gotta Be Funky / Big Water Bed

Gotta Be Funky / Big Water Bed

Year
Style
Label
United Artists Records
Producer
Larry Maxwell

Album Summary

Monk Higgins — born Milton Bland — was a man who wore many hats, and baby, he wore every single one of them well. A saxophonist, arranger, and producer with his roots planted deep in the fertile soil of Chicago's recording scene, Higgins brought all of that hard-won craft to 'Gotta Be Funky / Big Water Bed,' a single released in 1972 through United Artists Records. Working squarely within the soul-funk idiom that had become his calling card, Higgins leaned into the horn-driven, rhythm-locked sound that was reshaping Black music at the dawn of that decade. The record stands as a testament to his instincts as both a performer and a studio architect — a man who understood that funk wasn't just a genre, it was a conversation between every instrument on the floor.

Reception

  • The single found its audience on the R&B and funk circuit, where Higgins had long been a respected and familiar name among genre devotees and the DJs who kept those grooves alive on the airwaves.
  • Like much of Higgins' work from this period, the release spoke most powerfully to dedicated soul and funk collectors rather than crossing over to mainstream pop audiences — a testament to its uncompromising, street-level authenticity.

Significance

  • 'Gotta Be Funky' stands as a tight, purposeful example of early 1970s instrumental funk, with Higgins deploying his signature horn arrangements over a rhythmic foundation that was built to move bodies and shake floors.
  • The single reflects the broader industry shift occurring in Black music at the time — a movement away from lush orchestral soul toward leaner, harder-hitting funk productions that put the groove front and center.
  • Higgins' recordings from this era became treasured finds among crate-digging collectors, with this release earning a place in the canon of raw, unpolished funk that defined an era and laid groundwork for generations of music to come.

Samples

  • "Gotta Be Funky" — sampled and sought after by hip-hop producers drawn to its raw horn stabs and driving rhythmic energy, becoming one of the more recognized titles in Higgins' catalog among beat-diggers and sample-based producers.

Tracklist

# Song BPM Preview Time
  1. A Gotta Be Funky 81 YouTube 3:15
  2. B Big Water Bed 81 YouTube 2:46

Artist Details

Monk Higgins was the working name of Milton Bland, a Chicago-based saxophonist, arranger, and producer who was cooking up some of the smoothest soul-jazz and funk grooves coming out of the Windy City from the mid-1960s through the 1970s, recording for labels like Chess, United Artists, and Solid State. His real gift was that big, lush orchestral sound he'd wrap around a funky backbeat, making records that felt equally at home in a smoky lounge or a packed dance hall, and his production and arrangement work touched countless sessions across soul, blues, and R&B. Monk Higgins stands as one of those unsung architects of the Chicago soul sound, a behind-the-scenes heavyweight whose fingerprints are all over an era of music that still makes folks move their feet and close their eyes.

Members

Artist Discography

Mac Arthur Park (1968)
Extra Soul Perception (1969)
Little Mama (1972)
Heavyweight (1972)
Dance to the Disco Sax of Monk Higgins (1974)

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