"This is Ambolley's 12th album since he shook up the scene in 1973 with "Simigwa", which introduced his signature vocable, spoken-word style ... "11th Street, Sekondi" is a follow-up to his fine 2017 release Ketan, and in this reviewer's opinion, it's even better. Start with a crack band, rich with guitars, brass, keyboards and percussion, and a super clean mix completely devoid of jazzy blandness or pop cliché-occasional flaws in some earlier work. Then wrap all that around a set of wonderful songs full of stinging critique, sage wisdom, and playful humor. Ambolley conjures a powerful brew of highlife, Afrobeat, jazz and funk, harder edged than Pat Thomas's highlife, but still-amazingly-lighter than air ... "Black Woman" kicks things off with a classic dual-guitar Afrobeat riff, setting up Ambolley's unmistakable, smoky bass whisper. His vocal is round and easy, half-sung, half-spoken, supremely relaxed. He tosses in a playful sax solo, offsetting the tart brass section arranging heard throughout these nine tracks".