While not a universally praised piece of the Art Blakey discography, The African Beat is quite engaging. Yusef Lateef is the only horn player, featured on oboe, flute, tenor sax, cow horn, and thumb piano with Ahmed Abdul-Malik on bass, but trombonist Curtis Fuller is only heard playing tympani -- it was that kind of session. The drum ensemble includes Chief Bey, along with five other percussionists on conboro, log, and bata drums with penny whistles, gongs, congas, and African maracas. This is reminiscent of Lateef's more exotic sessions from the same time period, but quite unlike other Blue Note releases from the early '60s. ~ Al Campbell, All Music Guide
| African Beat | ||
|---|---|---|
| 1. Prayer by Solomon G Llori | :55 | |
| 2. Ife l'Ayo (There Is Happiness in Love) | 5:30 | |
| 3. Obirin African (Woman of Africa) | 3:42 | |
| 4. Love, the Mystery Of | 9:24 | |
| 5. Ero Ti Nr'ojeje | 7:34 | |
| 6. Ayiko, Ayiko | 7:14 | |
| 7. Tobi Ilu | 5:57 | |
| Album Credits | |
Performance Credits |
|
| Ahmed Abdul-Malik | Bass |
| Art Blakey | Percussion |
| Chief Bay | Percussion |
| Chief Bey | Conga |
| Curtis Fuller | Tympani [Timpani] |
| Garvin Masseaux | Percussion |
| James Ola. Folami | Percussion |
| Montego Joe | Percussion |
| Robert Crowder | Percussion |
| Solomon G. Illori | Drums |
| Yusef Lateef | Flute |
Technical Credits |
|
| Alfred Lion | Producer |
| Francis Wolff | Cover Photo |
| Michael Cuscuna | Reissue Producer |
| Nat Hentoff | Liner Notes |
| Patrick Roques | Reissue Design |
| Reid Miles | Cover Design |
| Rudy Van Gelder | Engineer |