Reviewing
His Woman, Her Man for
AllMusic, Thom Jurek wrote: Here are some of the first
ARP synthesizer and
drum machine tracks ever recorded and the way Turner utilizes them, we can hear the later sounds of the
P-Funk organization as well as later
Earth, Wind & Fire,
Lonnie Liston Smith, and
Herbie Hancock's
funk-jazz directions...The sound of the ARP and drum machine — in 1971! — on traditional blues tracks like "
I've Got My Mojo Workin'," and
Berry Gordy's "
Money," turns the originals inside out and rocks them up...Wilder still are Ike's own "He Makes Me Want to Holler," with an unmistakable gospel chorus, steep funky backbeat, and the ARP put through a
wah wah pedal!...Tina's voice is in its prime here, as evidenced by the opener "Can't Find My Mind," and "Baby Get It On," which were originally written for
the Rolling Stones — who never recorded them. == Reissues ==