Tampilkan postingan dengan label Jazz Rock. Tampilkan semua postingan
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Sabtu, 17 September 2011

Joni Mitchell - Shadows And Light (1980 us, jazz folk, double disc HDCD remaster issue - FLAC)

The extraordinary power of SHADOWS AND LIGHT, one of a handful of great live rock albums, took me by surprise, since Joni Mitchell is primarily a studio artist, not a concert performer. her earlier live set, MILES OF AISLES (1974), caught her at an insecure moment when she'd barely begun to explore jazz with hornman Tom Scott. Since 1974, however, Mitchell has grown into a breathtakingly polished pop-jazz singer.

Perhaps more important, she's created a brooding instrumental sound that's unique in popular music: a perfect sonic counterpart to her flowing, painterly imagery. This sound-stark, electric folk-jazz that's centered on the protoerotic interplay between her own agitated rhythm guitar and Jaco Pastorius' sweetly responsive bass-dominates SHADOWS AND LIGHT, and it's infinitely more flexible and emotionally varied than the glib noodlings of Scott 's L.A. Express.


I had no idea that such a sound could be reproduced so effectively onstage, because the atmosphere of HEJIRA and DON JUAN'S RECKLESS DAUGHTER, the records on which Mitchell refined it, is so insular. But stripped of the echoed choral frills she often uses as a running commentary, this style encourages the singer to be more casually effusive and joyous than she's ever been in the studio.

The difference between Mitchell's studio and concert voices is the difference between interior monologue and spoken conversation. While the transition from studio and stage entails some loss of poetic intensity, what's missing is amply made up for in accessibility and humor.


A dream band backs Mitchell on SHADOWS AND LIGHT : Pastorius, lead guitarist Pat Metheny, drummer Don Alias, keyboardist Lyle Mays and saxophonist Michael Brecker. In two cuts, she's joined by the Persuasions. This is the finest ensemble that Mitchell has worked with, and her exhilarating vocals reflect her complete confidence in these musicians. It hardly matters that her pitch isn't always perfect (though it's remarkably sure on difficult, chromatic tunes like "The Dry Cleaner from Des Moines") or that her voice has lost much of its sweetness, because Joni Mitchell has become an entrancing conversational singer.

In the studio treatment of "Furry Sings the Blues," an account of her visit with New Orleans jazzman Furry Lewis, she milked pathos from the comparison between Lewis' decrepitude and the tearing down of Beale Street. Related in an offhand, down-to-earth tone on the new LP (with Mitchell freely imitating Lewis), the song has metamorphosed into a vivid, funny tale whose pathos is implicit. While I admire Mitchell the reflective commentator, I LIKE Mitchell the Chaucerian storyteller.


Most of SHADOWS AND LIGHT focuses on material from HEJIRA, MINGUS and THE HISSING OF SUMMER LAWNS, but "Woodstock," the album's only clinker (so impossibly smug), at least lends itself melodically to the artist's present sound. Generally speaking, the current versions are better than the originals.

The rougher, live "Black Crow" captures the composition's crazy self-obsession much more frighteningly than the sleeker studio rendition. At the end of "Amelia," Pat Metheny sneaks in and takes over, lifting the tune to it's vanishing point in an airy, extended lyrical coda. Freed from its big-band horn arrangement, "The Dry Cleaner from Des Moines" sails forward with a manic lightness.


But the record's biggest stunners are two resurrections from THE HISSING OF SUMMER LAWNS. In both "Edith and the Kingpin" and "Shadows and Light," Mitchell stepped out of the confessional mode into a semiabstract, archetypal poetic style. While the original treatment of "Edith and the Kingpin" suggested a vague and murky urban tableau, its spare live setting uncovers a mythic yarn of seduction and corruption.

"Shadows and Light" appears twice: in the opening cut, "Introduction," where it frames an aural collage that splices dialogue from Rebel without a Cause with a snippet of Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers' "I'm Not a Juvenile Delinquent," and in a full gospel version with the Persuasions near the close of the LP.

The long rendition follows a stunning doo-wop re-creation of "Why Do Fools Fall in Love," in which Mitchell becomes Lymon. Indeed, what rock & roll standard could summarize more wittily Joni Mitchell's lifelong obsession with romance than "Why Do Fools Fall in Love"? It's been several years and many foolish loves since Mitchell, like millions of us, lost her heart to rock and ran away from home with it. "Shadows and Light" is merely a more sober and intellectual expression of the same drive for personal freedom that Frankie Lymon shouted in 1956. And, as Lymon insisted, fools falling in love has everything to do with rock & roll.


Perhaps more directly than anyone except Mick Jagger, Joni Mitchell has always acknowledged the inseparability of sexual curiosity and rock music. Having satisfied her curiosity Mitchell probably knows better than most of us the high price to be paid for such knowledge. So it makes sense that her answer to "Why Do Fools Fall in Love" should be evasive.

Constructing seemingly conflicting images of darkness and light, benefactors and parasites, law abiders and lawbreakers, the singer states her belief in the absolute relativity of moral standards and the ultimate indivisibility of good and evil. "Shadows and Light," like much of the album named after it, is a translucent masterpiece that embodies both the personal freedom and artistic majesty rock & roll continually strives for but rarely attains.

by Stephen Holden "Rolling Stone" November 13, 1980



Tracks
Disc 1
1. Introduction - 1:51
2. In France They Kiss on Main Street - 4:14
3. Edith and the Kingpin - 4:10
4. Coyote - 4:58
5. Goodbye Pork Pie Hat (Charles Mingus) - 6:02
6. The Dry Cleaner from Des Moines (Mitchell, Charles Mingus) - 4:37
7. Amelia - 6:40
8. Pat's Solo (Pat Metheny) - 3:09
9. Hejira - 7:42
Disc 2
1. Black Crow - 3:52
2. Don's Solo (Don Alias) - 4:04
3. Dreamland - 4:40
4. Free Man in Paris - 3:23
5. Band Introduction - 0:52
6. Furry Sings the Blues - 5:14
7. Why Do Fools Fall in Love (Frankie Lymon, Morris Levy) - 2:53
8. Shadows and Light - 5:23
9. God Must be a Boogie Man - 5:02
10.Woodstock - 5:08
All songs by Joni Mitchell except where noted.

Musicians
*Joni Mitchell - Electric Guitar, Vocals
*Pat Metheny - Lead Guitar
*Jaco Pastorius - Bass
*Don Alias - Drums
*Lyle Mays - Keyboards
*Michael Brecker - Saxophone
*The Persuasions - Backing vocals

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Selasa, 23 Agustus 2011

Chaplin Harness - II (1969 us, psychedelic, progressive rock with jazz/blues elements, gear fab 2010 release - MP3 320k and FLAC)

My first memory of the Chaplin Harness legend was from about ten years ago. I had a collector friend from overseas ask me if it was possible to obtain a copy of the test pressing. Not aware of what it was, I was intrigued. He explained to me that it was a "local" band who had made a psychy, funky album in 1969 that was never released except in a few test pressings.



Word spreads fast in the vinyl collector world! I checked with a few friends and they had heard of it but no one had a copy. Time passed and I forgot about it until two years ago when another friend Dan told me about the band and sent me a CD. On my first listen, I knew I had to release this on the Void label. I loved the LP! It was psychy, funky, bluesy, and even a bit progressive as well.



Dan also put me in touch with the main man in the band, Phillyjazz legend Rick lannaconne. Rick has played all over the world with some of the legends of the genre. While he was with Chaplin Harness in the late 60's, the band played frequently with all of Todd Rundgren's Philly area bands- Woody's Truckstop, The Nazz as well as opening for many big bands as they passed through town.



Musically, the album has a wide range of delights to offer. I have to say that I love Ray Bozarth's vocals, bluesy and powerful. Sadly, Ray left this world about 30 years ago. The big song on the album "Dit Dewey Man", also released as a 45, has a great funky feel to it. The band had a gift for the hook and the riff for sure.


from CD Liner Notes







Tracks


1. Magic Is Everywhere (Bozarth, J. Mingori, Monroe, Vespe, Fanelli) - 4:52

2. Old Man (Bozarth, J. Mingori, Monroe, Vespe, Fanelli) - 2:53

3. Tears (Bozarth, J. Mingori, Monroe, Vespe, Fanelli) - 2:13

4. In My Dream (G. Mingori, Monroe) - 5:07

5. Jack (J. Mingori, Monroe, Vespe, Fanelli, Tiberi, Argentina) - 12:22

6. Dit Dewey Man (Alt.), (Bozarth, lannacone) - 2:54

7. Baby I Know (G. Mingori, Monroe) - 4:06

8. Lay In My Bed (Bozarth, J. Mingori, Monroe, Vespe, Fanelli) - 2:15

9. Time (G. Mingori, Monroe) - 2:40

10.Tears (Bozarth, J. Mingori, Monroe, Vespe, Fanelli) - 1:56

11.Harness (J. Mingori, Monroe, Vespe, Fanelli) - 1:14

12.George (Vespe) - 0:45



Chaplin Harness

*Raymond Bozarth - Vocals

*Edward Monroe - Guitar

*William Vespe - Drums

*Joseph Mingori - Keyboards

*Nicholas Fanelli - Bass

*Rick lannaconne - Guitar

*Geri Mingori - Vocals

*Joe Mingori - Keyboards

*Phil Argentina - Bass

*John Tiberi - Keyboards

*Greg Hayes - Keyboards



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Selasa, 09 Agustus 2011

Michal Urbaniak - Fusion (June 73 polish jazz rock fusion - APE lossless)

First Michal Urbaniak album, which was available in US as well.



Excellent fusion of its time, recorded in Germany with team of skilled Polish musicians.

Urbaniak plays sax, but his main instrument is for sure violin.



Music there is on the level of jazz fusion leaders from mid 70-s.

Compositions are very vital, bright, melting Eastern European emotive melodies with light funk.



Michal's violin sound often similar to Jean Luc Ponty's , and all music is in a vein of Weather Report or RTF.



Fresh, enough original if a bit lightweight, jazz fusion record from golden genre era.



Very recommended for vintage jazz fusion fans. (by Snobb from progarchives)



Tracklist:

01.Good Times, Bad Times

02.Bahamian Harvest

03.Impromptu

04.Seresta

05.Fusion

06.Deep Mountain

07.Bengal



Personnel:

*Michal Urbaniak - violin, soprano saxophone

*Urszula Dudziak - voice, effects

*Adam Makowicz - keyboards

*Wojciech Karolak - hammond organ, farfisa

*Czeslaw Bartkowski - drums, paiste cymbals



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Jumat, 05 Agustus 2011

Dillinger - Dillinger (1974 canada progressive, jazz, blues rock - 320K and WAV)

Dillinger (not to be confused with the reggae band of the same name) was a Canadian progressive band from Toronto, Ontario.

The band's debut self-titled album was originally released on the Daffodil Records label in 1974.

The album contains three original songs composed by the band and a superb cover of the song "Nature's Way," originally done by Spirit on The 12 Dreams of Dr Sardonicus album.

Dillinger's music is a complex, guitar-and-organ fronted progressive sound which moves from jazz to blues and features a variety of instruments including piano, synthesizers, flute, sax, acoustic and electric guitars bass, and percussion.

In places the band sounds like Santana, while in other places like Iron Butterfly or Emerson, Lake & Palmer.

Dillinger has a unique sound for a Canadian band that attracted more attention in Europe than it did in North America.

With long songs and drawn-out solos, Dillinger is more or less one of your typical early-'70s progressive bands, nothing special, but nonetheless interesting and typical of the genre.

This release by Unidisc is a straight reissue of the original album at a budget price and contains no bonus tracks.



People:


Track List:
01. People
02. City Main
03. Nature's Way
04. Live and Return

Personnel:
*Jacques Harrison - Keyboards, Vocals , Sax, Flute, Accordion
*Robert Harrison - Drums, Percussions
*Paul Cockburn - Guitars
*Terry Bramhall – Bass

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Minggu, 10 Juli 2011

Secret Oyster - Secret Oyster (1973 denmark great instrumental mix of jazz, rock and fusion - 1st album - FLAC)

This has to be the greatest band ever to come out of Denmark. A supergroup of sorts with the drummer, sax, and bass player from BURNIN' RED IVANHOE joined by the avant-garde keyboard player from CORONARIAS DANS, and the amazing guitar player from HURDY GURDY.

By the way Donovan's song "Hurdy Gurdy Man" is about this guitar player Claus Bohling.

This album is one of those great discoveries i come across once and a while that makes the search so worth while.

The album cover is from a post card of the mainstreet of the little town where they recorded this their debut record.

This really is a blend of jazz/rock/fusion with Claus just ripping it up throughout on his guitar.

"Dampexpression" opens with piano that builds as sax and a full sound arrives quickly.

The sax and drumming stand out along with the keys. The guitar before 2 minutes lights it up as the bass throbs,more great guitar again after 3 minutes.

"Fire & Water" has a nice beat as organ and fat bass lead the way.

Guitar comes in very psychedelic-like as the tempo picks up.Amazing sound 3 minutes in.The guitar rips it up before 5 minutes.

"Vive La Quelle?" has a memorable,uptempo melody until a calm a minute in where guitar and drums start to make some noise without a real melody.

Just raw guitar sounds and random drum patterns.We start to get a melody after 4 minutes.

Keys come in and they become dissonant at times.Some good guitar 7 minutes in. The song ends as it began.

"Blazing Lace" has a haunting intro before the guitar comes in and takes over.

Sax,drums and bass are all here.Love the guitar after 3 minutes. "Public Oyster" is the longest track at almost 11 minutes.

This is actually very krautrock-like early,the way the keys and guitar lead the way.

The sound starts to build 3 1/2 minutes in. Guitar comes in at 5 minutes and plays over top.Nice.Sax comes in sounding really good as does the relentless drumming. The guitar starts to shine after 9 minutes.

"Mis(s) Fortune" is lighter,almost canterbury-like with lots of keys and bass.

"Ova-X" opens with sax with not much of a melody as sounds come and go.It's kind of experimental and i like it.

This all-instrumental debut from SECRET OYSTER is so impressive. Just a pleasure to listen to (by Mellotron Storm).

Fire & Water:


Tracks List:
1. Dampexpressen (4:24)
2. Fire & water (5:34)
3. Vive la quelle? (8:50)
4. Blazing lace (4:45)
5. Public oyster (10:46)
6. Mis(s) fortune (1:28)
7. Ova-x (4:56)


Secret Oyster:
*Bo Thrige Andersen / drums
*Claus Bøhling / electric guitar
*Kenneth Knudsen / electric piano
*Mats Vinding / bass
*Karsten Vogel / alto & soprano saxes, organ


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Selasa, 28 Juni 2011

Blood Sweat & Tears - In Concert, aka Live & Improvised (1975 us, jazz rock 2CDs - Wave audio format)

Blood, Sweat & Tears didn't get around to cutting an official live album until they were well past their prime years - in this case, 1975, long after every original member (and even most of their first-generation successors) except for drummer Bobby Colomby (a true founding member, going back to the Al Kooper lineup) and vocalist David Clayton-Thomas, was gone.
But, as Clayton-Thomas was back for the accompanying album, New City, and was with the group on this tour, one supposes that Columbia Records decided to take advantage of its good fortune by taping several shows.

For his part, the singer is more mannered and pretentious than ever on most of this album, his singing powerful enough but his instincts pushing him more toward loud, ultimately over-the-top soul strutting, lacking any hint of subtlety.
His performance would be more of a problem, except that members of the group also stretch out for solos on trumpet, flügelhorn, etc., on tracks such as "Unit Seven," and extended versions of "Ride Captain Ride" and other numbers, thus counter-balancing his excesses with their own.

What's also lacking is some excitement - in the group's evident desire to emphasize their jazz side while minimizing any rock elements in their playing, they've also banished any tension, or the interplay between rock and jazz elements upon which their original appeal was founded.

Numbers like "Spinning Wheel", "Lucretia MacEvil", "And When I Die" and "I Love You More Than You'll Ever Know" are done in such loose-limbed fashion that, apart from showcasing some virtuoso playing and Clayton-Thomas' more oppressive mannerisms, they're rather weak reinterpretations.
It is curious to note, however, that even at this late date, Clayton-Thomas and company were still doing the Al Kooper-era "I Love You More Than You'll Ever Know", and were also still utilizing arrangements by Kooper and co-founder Fred Lipsius.

On the positive side, along with the presence of those arrangements, the playing is very good, if not always terribly involving, and in those moments when Clayton-Thomas keeps his instincts in check, the material does recapture and expand on the best components of the original group's sound.

This album was part of a small group of live recordings done by Columbia during this period - Donovan's Live in Japan was another - that were intended for the European and Japanese markets (in later years, there was also a laser disc of a concert from the same tour issued in Japan), where the group was still considered commercially viable. (by Bruce Eder from amg)

Track List :

CD 1 :

01.Spinning Wheel
02.I Love You More Than You'll Ever Know
03.Lucretia MacEvil
04.And When I Die
05.One Room Country
06.And When I Die (Reprise)
07.(I Can Recall) Spain

CD 2 :
01.Hi-De-Ho "That Old Sweet Roll"
02.Unit Seven
03.Life
04.Mean Ole World
05.Ride Captain Ride
06.You've Made Me So Very Happy

Personnel :
*David Clayton-Thomas - lead vocals
*Bobby Colomby - drums, background vocals
*Ron McClure - bass
*Don Alias - percussion, background vocals
*Dave Bargeron - trombone, tuba, percussion, background vocals
*Larry Willis - keyboards, background vocals
*Bill Tillman - sax, flute, background vocals
*Anthony Klakta - trumpet, background vocals
*Joe Giorgianni - trumpet, background vocals
*Steve Kahn - guitar, background vocals (at Schaeffer Music Festival; City Hall Plaza)
*George Wadenius - guitar (at The National Arts Center)
*Mike Stern - guitar, background vocals (at Monterey Jazz Festival)

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Jumat, 24 Juni 2011

The Running Man - The Running Man (1972 uk a fusion of hard rock, prog, free jazz, acid - MP3 320K and WAV)

One of 1972's one-shot bands was THE RUNNING MAN, genuinely credited as a project overseen by Ray RUSSELL or, simpler, one of his numerous records.

On the other hand, there's enough to talk related to the experience of this band and its good work - washed away by the insignificant reception - or its key interest in classic prog (slightly different from Russell's Canterbury-fusion other teasers), fixated within the album's highlights.

Except Gary Windo's (Centipede, Carla Blay, projects with Nick Mason) exotic sax and Russell's distinct guitar, vocalist Alan Greed (also playing piano or bass), Alan Rushton on drums and Jeff Watts on bass even out the sound.

There are close ties between Russell and all the other musicians, given either prior collaborations (like Rushton being part of Russell's Quartet from '68), either further ones (Rushton again and Windo resuming roles on Secret Asylum, Alan Greed appearing on the Live At The I.C.A. retrospective, or Jeff Watts joining on another side-project, Mouse).

Released by RCA Records' Neon, The Running Man is mostly an art-rock expression, perhaps extending a bit towards jazz-rock as well.

References to it are rather peculiar, from CREAM, hints of David BOWIE or Clark Hutchinson to PROCOL HARUM or BJH, something that highlights the soft, "crossover" counterpart of the music.

In other words, a mixture of "catchy melodies, harsh rock singing and jazzy improvisations", of a central prog brew to which not-so-focused more minor styles or the dizzy rock sound all express cut-and-dried contrasts and loosening.



Find Yourself:


Track List:
01 - Higher & Higher
02 - Hope Place
03 - Nicholas
04 - Another
05 - Find Yourself
06 - Look & Turn
07 - If You Like
08 - Spirit
09 - Children
10 - Running Man

Personnel:
Ray Russell - Guitar, Bass
Alan Greed - Vocals, Keyboards
Alan Rushton - Drums
Gary Windo - sax
Harry Beckett - Trumpet, Flugel horn


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Egg - Egg (1970 uk mix of jazz, psychedelia, rock and fusion - ecletion edition with 02 bonus tracks - FLAC)

Organ / piano, bass guitar, and drums. Add occasional vocals and tone generator and that's it! Obviously not much rocking expected from that ensemble - for goodness sake, just three people and no guitars?

Well like so many of their Cantebury compats, these guys didn't read the memo and they created some ground breaking stuff.

In fact the notes on the original LP read: The music on this LP is not dancing music, but basically music for listening to.

It is harmonically and rhythmically complex, designed to be as original as possible within the confines of the instrumental lineup; so it's pretty demanding on the listener's attention.

Originally released in 1970, Egg took influences from such diverse genres as jazz, psychedelia, rock and fusion, but probably most important, from classical music - and Brahms, Stravinsky and Grieg are directly and indirectly represented here.

And Egg in turn gave their own influences to a number of other Cantebury acts of the early '70s.

Egg was Dave Stewart on keys and tones, Mont Campbell on bass and understated but very competent vocals, and Clive Brooks on drums.

They were hatched from Uriel in 1969, after they'd lost their guitar player, Steve Hillage to his university studies.

Later, Stewart and Hillage would form Khan, and Stewart would move into the realms of Hatfield and Ayers and Campbell would join him in National Health.

The family tree of the Cantebury scene is a complex web, and we won't try to unravel it here. Suffice it to say that this was one of the more influential if underrated acts of prog's golden age.

The music generated by this small lineup was heavily dependent on Stewart's organ and Campbell's bass - both of which were applied with flair and imagination - but all three artists were credited with various compositions.

There's a lot of avant garde generation of weird and spacey tones, but the rest is an entertaining example of several budding progressive genres taking their first baby-steps.

The English sense of humor is present in many songs, although the lyrics tend toward the spaced out rather than the poetic. "The Song Of McGillicudie The Pusillanimous (or Don't Worry James, Your Socks Are Hanging In The Coal Cellar With Thomas)" could almost have come off an album by The Doors.

And yes, that's the song's name! "I Will Be Absorbed" comes the closest to a prog 'song' in the traditional sense of the word. Symphony No. 2 is a 5-part 22-minute early-day-avant-garde attempt at a modern-era classic, in a similar vein to many of the Keith Emerson pieces that would come later.

Honors for the all-round favorite, however, go to "Seven Is A Jolly Good Time" which is a bonus track here and wasn't on the original record. By 'good time' they're taking a stab at the fixation with odd time signatures. These excerpts from lyrics tell it all:

I used to play in four time when I was very small...
...I started writing songs in all the rhythms I could find - Like five...
...Seven is a jolly good time, seven is a jolly good time...
...I found it hard to follow, my foot became confused...
...I gathered all the notes up and jumped 'em through a hoop - As in eleven

And of course, the song's actual time signatures follow the suggestions in the lyrics - 7/4, 11/4, etc.

The CD reviewed here was wonderfully remastered from the original tapes, and the Eclectic Discs reissue includes three bonus tracks, including both sides of the band's only single and "Third Movement" has at last been restored in its rightful place as an integral part of the now fully extended "Symphony No. 2".

So - the confines of the instrumental lineup of bass, drums and keys really didn't do much to stifle Egg's creativity. Come to think of it, the same lineup was used effectively by The Nice and ELP.

Who knows, that restricted lineup may have been the very challenge that spurred them to produce the influential music that would become one of the foundation stones of modern-day prog (by Duncan Glenday from http://www.seaoftranquility.org/reviews.php?op=showcontent&id=2094)


While Growing My Hair:


Track List:
01."Bulb" – 0:09
02."While Growing My Hair" – 4:02
03."I Will Be Absorbed" – 5:12
04."Fugue In D Minor" (Bach) – 2:49
05."They Laughed When I Sat Down At The Piano…" – 1:21
06."The Song Of McGillicudie The Pusillanimous (or don't worry James, your socks are hanging in the coal cellar with Thomas)" – 5:10
07."Boilk" – 1:03

"Symphony No. 2"
08."First Movement" – 5:47
09."Second Movement" – 6:17
10."Blane" – 5:28
11."Third Movement" (previously unreleased) – 3:10
12."Fourth Movement" – 3:13

Bonus Tracks
13."Seven Is A Jolly Good Time" – 2:48
14."You Are All Princes" – 3:45


Egg:
*Dave Stewart - organ, piano, tone generator
*Mont Campbell - bass, vocals
*Clive Brooks - drums


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Rabu, 22 Juni 2011

If - If2 (1970 uk jazz rock, fusion and progressive rock - repertoire records digipack repuk edition - FLAC)

The second If album came out within the same year as the first, and continues in the same distinctive jazz-rock vein the band worked on its debut.

The playing is excellent, with the sax and flute work of Dave Quincy and Dick Morrissey carrying the group's sound to a level unmatched by other, better known contemporaries like Chicago and Blood, Sweat & Tears. J. W. Hodkinson's unique vocals continue to sail through the music, while Terry Smith employs a deeper, grittier guitar tone than he used on the first LP.

The material here is not as interesting as on the earlier release, but the soloists have plenty of space to stretch out and strut their stuff over John Mealing's organ/electric piano bed of chord changes.

Jim Richardson lays down some inventive basslines and drummer Dennis Elliott keeps the band on track through various rhythmic twists and turns (by Jim Newsom).


I Couldn't Write and Tell You:


Track List:
01. "Your City Is Falling" (Dave Quincy) – 5:05
02. "Sunday Sad" (Dick Morrissey) – 8:23
03. "Tarmac T. Pirate and the Lonesome Nymphomaniac" (John Mealing, Preston) – 4:34
04. "I Couldn't Write and Tell You" (Dave Quincy) – 8:20
05. "Shadows and Echoes" (Margaret Busby, Lionel Grigson) – 4:27
06. "Song for Elsa, Three Days Before Her 25th Birthday" (J. W. Hodkinson) – 5:40

If:
*Dennis Elliott – drums
*J.W. Hodkinson – vocals, percussion
*John Mealing – organ, electric piano, backing vocals
*Dick Morrissey – tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, flute
*Dave Quincy – tenor saxophone, alto saxophone, flute
*Jim Richardson – bass
*Terry Smith – guitar


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Kamis, 16 Juni 2011

If - If (1970 uk jazz rock, fusion and progressive rock - repertoire records edition - FLAC)

Biography:
If was Great Britain's contribution to the jazz-rock movement begun and popularized in the late '60s/early '70s by Blood, Sweat & Tears and Chicago.

Formed in 1969 by Melody Maker jazz poll winners Dave Quincy, Dick Morrissey, and Terry Smith, the band never found popular success in the United States.

However, If produced several albums noteworthy for placing jazz players in a pop/rock band context and producing a true fusion of the two genres without diluting the players' improvisational skills.

Unlike most of their horn-band contemporaries, If had no brass players in the band, relying solely on the saxophones of Dick Morrissey and the flute and saxophones of Dave Quincy.

But what really gave If its unique sound were the vocals of J.W. Hodgkinson and the guitar of Terry Smith. Hodgkinson's vocal timbre was unusual -- smooth, flexible, and strong in the high end, sounding like no other vocalist.

Smith's trebly guitar sound was also unique, combining a rocker's use of sustain with the jazz fluency of Wes Montgomery and Django Reinhardt.

The original incarnation of If produced five excellent albums between 1970 and 1972, but these albums failed to find an audience.

Morrissey soldiered on with the If name for two more albums with a totally different lineup and a more generic rock-type sound, but these, too, went nowhere.

Drummer Dennis Elliott was later a member of the platinum-selling rock band Foreigner (by Jim Newsom - AMG).


Review:
In 1969, one of the big stories in pop music was the emergence of a new hybrid, "jazz-rock." Magazines and newspapers were full of stories about the "comeback" of the big band sound, and every rock band with a horn or two was lumped into this new category, whether there was any jazz component to their music or not.

The leading purveyor of the new sound was Blood, Sweat & Tears, a nine-piece outfit from New York whose eponymously titled second album burned up the charts that year following its release in December, 1968. Originally formed by Al Kooper in 1967 with the express purpose of mixing jazz improvisation into a horn-expanded rock band, BS&T's first album, Child is Father to the Man, failed to capture the music-buying public's imagination.

After some personnel changes, including the replacement of the founder in a coup by other band members, the group recorded and released Blood, Sweat & Tears. Propelled by the hit singles "You've Made Me So Very Happy," "Spinning Wheel" and "And When I Die," this album spent seven weeks in the number one slot on the Billboard album chart and eventually won the Album of the Year Grammy award.

1969 also brought forth another horn band album, Chicago Transit Authority, by the group that called itself Chicago. CTA didn't reach the stratospheric level of popularity that BS&T found at first, but the combined success of the two led many young musicians from various backgrounds to create their own versions of jazz-rock horn bands.

One of the best groups to emerge in the wake of the 1969 jazz-rock explosion was a septet from England that called itself "If." Formed by two Melody Maker jazz poll winners, saxophonist Dick Morrissey and guitarist Terry Smith, If integrated jazz into its arrangements more seamlessly than did Blood, Sweat & Tears.

Differentiating themselves from other horn bands of the era, If had no brass instruments. The band's horn section was all woodwinds---Morrissey and saxophonist/flutist Dave Quincy.

Another distinguishing characteristic was the unusual vocal timbre of singer J. W. Hodkinson, who soared through the upper reaches in a manner similar to Steve Winwood, only with more polish and elasticity.

In addition, guitarist Smith selected a unique trebly guitar tone that blended the sustain of a rocker with the fluent licks of a jazzman.

The band's first album, titled simply If, was released in the United States in the fall of 1970 to much fanfare from Capitol Records, their American label. It was a great album, one that still holds up more than thirty years later.

The album opens quietly, a lone guitar playing a gentle, bluesy intro that becomes a repeating riff in 7/4 time. Hodkinson's vocal arrives, with the first couple of verses accompanied only by the electric guitar floating atop barely audible organ chords.

The saxophones appear playing a complementary pattern as the bass guitar and drums sneak into the mix. The song builds for a couple of minutes, the odd-metered rhythm becoming more insistent. Then the guitarist's riff turns into a sizzling two-minute solo flight over smoldering organ, bass and drums.

When the horns reemerge to resume their earlier pattern, vocalist Hodkinson returns to take the song to its lyrical climax: "I'm reaching out on all sides, I'm grabbing at the truth instead of lies; I want it said when I am gone…I moved the world just one step on." Saxophones, organ and guitar build to a climax, until guitarist Smith is left alone for the denouement.

"I'm Reaching Out On All Sides" is a powerful opening musical statement. But the best was yet to come. The second track is the album's centerpiece, an eight-and-a-half minute instrumental jazz mini-suite called "What Did I Say About the Box, Jack?"

This piece builds to several internal climaxes and features an out-of-this-world flute solo, a fiery guitar solo, and a concluding slice of tenor sax virtuosity. Bassist Jim Richardson provides the hook at the beginning and end of this number, and John Mealing's organ chords make the bed over which the soloists soar.

The record's first side concludes with Hodkinson's best vocal of the set on "What Can a Friend Say?" The horn section is augmented on this track with trumpet and trombone, giving the arrangement a Blood, Sweat & Tears-like luster.

After Hodkinson belts out the lyrics, Dick Morrissey cuts loose on a ferocious Coltrane-inspired romp, only to be upstaged when Terry Smith comes out of nowhere to grab the spotlight with another well-constructed guitar solo that covers the length and breadth of the fretboard.

Whew!! It's already been an exciting twenty-one minutes of music, and we're only halfway through the disc.

The second half of the record opens with a much more conventional R&B/soul-style workout called "Woman Can You See (What This Big Thing is All About)." There's a nice soprano sax solo in the middle that sets this apart from the typical soul raveup of the time. Hodkinson flexes his bluesy vocal muscles and the band really cooks.

"Raise the Level of Your Conscious Mind" is the most poppish of the songs on If. As the title implies, the lyrics offer the kind of optimistic sentiments that were prevalent in 1970, but may sound dated to jaded 21st century ears. (Horn bands generally weren't known for the depth or profundity of their songs' lyrics.)

The wistfully nostalgic ballad "Dockland" provides a refreshing respite, but its middle section still offers guitarist Smith an opportunity to display his jazz chops. The recording closes with a blaze of horn-driven rock and roll as the band travels to "The Promised Land." When the recording ends, you can't get the insistent invitation of the chorus to "Come, come with me into the promised land" out of your head.

If became popular briefly in England and on the European continent, but never found its audience in the United States. The jazz-rock horn band genre didn't last very long, and If began to disintegrate in 1972 after four albums. Drummer Dennis Elliott ended up in the mega-selling rock band, Foreigner (by Jim Newsom - http://www.jimnewsom.com/Audiofile-If.html)


I'm Reaching Out on All Sides:


Track List:
01. "I'm Reaching Out on All Sides" (Quincy, Fishman) – 5:46
02. "What Did I Say About the Box, Jack?" (Dick Morrissey) – 8:24
03. "What Can a Friend Say?" (Dave Quincy) – 6:57
04. "Woman Can You See (What This Big Thing Is All About)" (J. W. Hodkinson) – 4:13
05. "Raise the Level of Your Conscious Mind" (Fishman, Marsala) – 3:18
06. "Dockland" (Daryl Runswick) – 4:47
07. "The Promised Land" (Dave Quincy) – 3:46

Bonus Tracks:
08. "Raise the Level of Your Conscious Mind" (7" version) (Fishman, Marsala) - 3:17
09. "I'm Reaching Out on All Sides" (7" version) (Quincy, Fishman) – 5:44

If:
*Dennis Elliott – drums
*J.W. Hodkinson – vocals
*John Mealing – keyboards, vocals
*Dick Morrissey – saxophones, flute
*Dave Quincy – saxophones
*Jim Richardson – bass
*Terry Smith – guitar


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Selasa, 31 Mei 2011

Jean Luc Ponty - King Kong: Jean Luc Ponty Plays The Music Of Frank Zappa (1970 france mix of fusion, jazz & RIO / avant garde - MP3 320K and FLAC)

Not just an album of interpretations, King Kong: Jean-Luc Ponty Plays the Music of Frank Zappa was an active collaboration; Frank Zappa arranged all of the selections, played guitar on one, and contributed a new, nearly 20-minute orchestral composition for the occasion.

Made in the wake of Ponty's appearance on Zappa's jazz-rock masterpiece Hot Rats, these 1969 recordings were significant developments in both musicians' careers.

In terms of jazz-rock fusion, Zappa was one of the few musicians from the rock side of the equation who captured the complexity -- not just the feel -- of jazz, and this project was an indicator of his growing credibility as a composer.

For Ponty's part, King Kong marked the first time he had recorded as a leader in a fusion-oriented milieu (though Zappa's brand of experimentalism didn't really foreshadow Ponty's own subsequent work).

Of the repertoire, three of the six pieces had previously been recorded by the Mothers of Invention, and "Twenty Small Cigars" soon would be.

Ponty writes a Zappa-esque theme on his lone original "How Would You Like to Have a Head Like That," where Zappa contributes a nasty guitar solo.

The centerpiece, though, is obviously "Music for Electric Violin and Low Budget Orchestra," a new multi-sectioned composition that draws as much from modern classical music as jazz or rock.

It's a showcase for Zappa's love of blurring genres and Ponty's versatility in handling everything from lovely, simple melodies to creepy dissonance, standard jazz improvisation to avant-garde, nearly free group passages.

In the end, Zappa's personality comes through a little more clearly (his compositional style pretty much ensures it), but King Kong firmly established Ponty as a risk-taker and a strikingly original new voice for jazz violin (by Steve Huey).

King Kong:


Track List:
01.King Kong (4:54)
02.Idiot Bastard Son (4:00)
03.Twenty Small Cigars (5:35)
04.How Would You Like to Have a Head Like That (7:14)
05.Music for Electric Violin and Low Budget Orchestra (19:20)
06.America Drinks and Goes Home (2:39)

Personnel:
*Jean-Luc Ponty (violin)
*Ian Underwood (conductor, alto & tenor saxophones)
*Ernie Watts (alto & tenor saxophones)
*Vincent DeRosa (French horn, descant)
*Arthur Maebe (French horn, tuben)
*Johnathan Meyer (flute)
*Gene Cipriano (oboe, English horn)
*Donald Christlieb (bassoon)
*Milton Thomas (viola)
*Harold Bemko (cello)
*Gene Estes (vibraphone, percussion)
*George Duke (piano)
*Frank Zappa (guitar)
*Buell Neidlinger, Wilton Felder (bass)
*Arthur Tripp III, John Guerin (drums)


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Rabu, 18 Mei 2011

Roger Bunn - Piece Of Mind (1969 uk, exotic, psychedelic, free jazz rock, progressive with smoky moments, paper sleeve edition - MP3 320k and FLAC)

July 2005, what pundits and journalists have termed "the most important rediscovered 60s classic", the album with Roger Bunn singing his own and a number of poet John Mackie lyrics, Piece of Mind was brought back into "the arts" and onto the market.

Vocalist, composer, master guitarist, double and electric bass player, and long standing human rights activist Roger Bunn, worked with dance orchestras, blues bands and jazz groups, including the original Blue Notes from South Africa and the Spontaneous Music Ensemble.

In 1968 David Bowie recorded Roger's classic "Life is a Circus" and through being careless with his copyright, allowed this early 60s song to fall into the hands of pirates.
Nowadays we're all fans. Or at least we're told we should be. We need to be entertained and demand new familiar or not-so-familiar sounds to satisfy our consumer instinct. For many, music is more about selling and buying than creating.

Looking back at "psych" music we can check any number of musical commodities and ask ourselves, "Was it pop with ornamentation or something heavier and far-out?" In our disposable age it's hard to see the effect that an album could have artistically, especially in retrospect. Bands now are happy to ape each other with ironic glee or frustration for a time when pop music seemed very important.

The frustration also seems to be with the overwhelming entertainment directive that guides so many of our lives.
But in 1969 Roger Bunn put together "stream-of-consciousness" words with jazz rhythms and acid-psych, punctuated by the occasional James Brown horns, to make a unique album. How many albums, even in the sixties, captured the real sense of unknown territory evident in Ken Kesey's "Merry Pranksters" bus rides? All through "Piece of Mind" we hear songs that have the same mythic sense of exploration that was about more than fashion and drug use. The need to entertain is certainly not just a new phenomenon.

Even the Beatles "Magical Mystery Tour" seems pulled between the demands of well-crafted radio-friendly pop expectations and the sense of abandon and new territory suggested by psychedelia. They pull it off pretty well of course (as they tended to do), but one could argue that this split between commercial expectation and artistic development is really what broke up the Beatles in the end. "Magical Mystery Tour" (the film anyway) certainly didn't go down very well at the time, and it seemed to be a possible sign of self-indulgence.

But maybe in retrospect we can see that it was just a sign of the complexity of the times and the difficult balance that's needed to recreate an experience that is truly internal and "psychedelic" in a way that can be enjoyed by all.
With "Piece of Mind," we have a real testament to one person's take on many of the influences of the time, and the journey is definitely as inward as it is outward.

Looking back, there will be those who prefer more pop with psychedelic tinges in their music, as well as more accommodations for listeners who want their music a certain way. But this is an album that sets its own standard. While the Doors plastered some jazz chord changes onto "Light My Fire," they also couldn't escape the blues background that placed them firmly in a traditional setting. "Piece of Mind" is part jazz as well, but the sound changes from song to song, and it points towards the experimentation of bands like Can, Agitation Free, and the German rock of the 1970's. Listeners may hear cues from folk, jazz and psychedelia, but it's really an album "sui generis" that stands out as an anomaly.

People may love it or hate it, but that could well have something to do with where this album points towards, and the listener's attitude about the developments in music and marketing that occurred throughout the seventies.
Regardless, this James Brown meets Arthur Brown meets Pete Brown sort of eclectic style is definitely ahead of its time. Although there is some folk and plenty of acoustic guitar to be heard, this is not a traditional album.

The reference guide "Tapestry of Delights" calls Roger Bunn's "Piece of Mind" 'weird but serious pop-sike.' You can hear that in the album along with a whole lot of other sounds. Meeting Roger one afternoon and listening to him weave a conversation from history and religion through politics and music, (the whole time accompanied by gentle improvisation on his electric guitar), I could tell that this was a person who puts a lot of himself into what he does.

"Piece of Mind" is definitely of a time, but as a message from Roger himself, it also makes you see the artificial limits of our rush for "new" sounds and things. There is new and old, and then there is truly adventurous music. "Piece of Mind" has some of the sound of a particular time in musical history, but it also has the enduring sound of someone trying something different. And it's that second part that goes a long way towards explaining the difference between commodity-based entertainment and art.
by Joe McFarland


Pete Drummond - BBC 1970 said: "It is a wonderful album. It's far too musical and intelligent to succeed."




Tracks
1. Road to the Sun (Bunn) - 5:37
2. Jac Mool (Bunn, Mackie) - 0:44
3. Fantasy in Fiction (Bunn) - 1:35
4. Jac Mool (Bunn, Mackie) - 0:16
5. Crystal Tunnel (Bunn, Mackie) - 2:57
6. Three White Horses (Bunn) - 2:43
7. Catatonia (Bunn, Mackie) - 1:33
8. Suffering Wheel (Bunn, Mackie) - 1:40
9. Guido the Magician (Bunn, Mackie) - 2:45
10.Powis Square Child (Bunn, Mackie) - 2:30
11.Old Maid Prudence (Bunn, Mackie) - 5:21
12.Humble Chortle (Bunn, Mackie) - 1:52
13.Jason's Ennui (Bunn, Mackie) - 3:52
14.110° East + 107° North (Bunn) - 3:21
15.A Weekend in Mandraxia (Bunn) - 6:08
16.Life Is a Circus (Bunn) - 6:14
17.Falling Ships (Bunn) - 3:20
18.In the Future (Bunn) - 3:29
19.Lin-da's Jukebox (Bunn) - 5:58
20.You and I (Bunn) - 3:43
21.In Love with You Babe (Bunn) - 4:24
22.Up for Grabs (Bunn, Pete Brown) - 5:47

*Roger Bunn - Guitars, Vocals, Bass
*Ruud Bos - Conductor (1-14)

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Senin, 16 Mei 2011

The Good Rats - Birth Comes To Us All (1978 us mix of hard rock, jazz and pop rock - MP3 320K and Wave audio format)

The Good Rats were like a NYC, more refined version of Slade, with touches a la Queen, and the always enjoyable songwriting of main man and vocalist Peppi Marchello; "Birth comes to us all" is just another example of this under-rated band's sound, right before their classic line up would change, with the incorporation of lead guitarist Bruce Kulick (later rock star of KISS fame).

This "Birth comes to us all"s production (Stephan Galfas) it's especially remarkable, technically outstanding, its musical style is versatile, the vocal harmonies are pretty elegant, and the band shows a fine musicianship, commanded by the jazzy guitar of John "The Cat" Gatto, a bit different to their heavy sound, perhaps closer to the pop/rock.

Highlights, like the upbeat 'City liners', the orchestrated 'Man on a fish' or the closing title track make the disc meritorious, though I still find more interesting "From rats to riches", issued that same year, 1978.

Track List:
01.School Days (3:44)
02.City Liners (3:30)
03.Cherry River (3:27)
04.Gino (2:41)
05.Ordinary Man (4:07)
06.Man On A Fish (3:42)
07.You're Still Doing It (4:00)
08.Juvenile Song (2:27)
09.Bed And A Bottle (2:20)
10.Birth Comes To Us All (2:49)

The Good Rats:
*Joe Franco: Drums
*John Gatto: Guitar
*Lenny Kotke: Bass (Vocal)
*Mickey Marchello: Guitar, Vocals
*Peppi Marchello: Composer, Vocals


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CODE: 51906

Centipede - Septober Energy (1971 uk, progressive experimental fusion jazz, Keith Tippet's musical direction - FLAC)

One look at the fifty-piece Centipede orchestra, organized and led by British free jazz pianist Keith Tippett over thirty years ago, and the mind boggles that such an unwieldy collection of musicians, from such a multitude of musical camps, could ever be brought together to create a remotely coherent musical statement. And, truth be told, when Septober Energy was released in '71, it was met with almost universal critical derision.

Maybe it's because Tippett, who had already burst onto the scene with a refreshing ability to meld free improvisation with heady arrangements on his first two records— You Are Here' I Am There ('69) and Dedicated to You But You Weren't Listening ('71)—had bitten off more than he could chew with an ambitious 85-minute, four movement suite. Maybe it was that this stylistic melange tried to buck the old adage "you can please some of the people some of the time, but you can't please all of the people all of the time." Or maybe it was just plain critical cantankerousness. Irrespective, looking back at Septober Energy , remastered and reissued by BGO Records in '00, reveals a piece of work that may be flawed, but still has much to recommend.

Part 1 is the most problematic, mainly because it doesn't really know what it wants to be—pedal tone passages are replaced by a sudden anarchy of instruments building into a marching drum passage with ascending and descending horns and a pattern of strings creating the first recognizable motif of the disc before breaking down into a quartet that sounds like an outtake from King Crimson's Islands —which is no surprise considering Crimson guitarist Robert Fripp not only produced Septober Energy , but used Tippett extensively on his own records at the time.

Part 2 hangs together better, with a more assertive rhythmic focus that makes good use of flugelhorn player Ian Carr and oboist Karl Jenkins over a more accessible funk groove. The only misstep is Brian Godding's stiff and clichι-ridden solo, more the pity since a far better guitarist, Fripp, was only a few feet away in the control booth. But one can easily ignore Godding's less-than-memorable contribution, as solos by cornet player Mark Charig and saxophonist Brian Smith more than make up for his obvious deficiencies.

Part 3 suffers the same flaws as Part 1, but Part 4 contains some positively beautiful moments, notably Tippett's piano solo which opens the movement and includes some McCoy Tyner-ish inflections. And after some of the chaos that came before, the final movement is more groove centric and approachable, like Part 2.

Bombastic? Sometimes. Over-reaching? Possibly. But reassessing Septober Energy has value, if for no other reason than it harkens back to a time where an album of this kind was even possible, and on a major label to boot. Flawed gems are still gems and Septober Energy is one with its own peculiar beauty.
by John Kelman

Tracks
Disc One:
1. Septober Energy - Part 1
2. Septober Energy - Part 2
Disc Two:
1. Septober Energy - Part 3
3. Septober Energy - Part 4.

Musicians
*Wendy Treacher, Jihn Trussler, Roddy Skeping, Wilf Gibson (lead), Carol Slater, Louise Jopling, Garth Morton, Channa Salononson, Steve Rowlandson, Mica Gomberti, Colin Kitching, Philip Saudek, Esther Burgi. - Violins
*Michael Hurwitz, Timothy Kramer, Suki Towb, John Rees-Jones, Katherine Thulborn, Catherine Finnis - Cellos
*Peter Parkes, Mick Collins, Ian Carr (doubling flugelhorn), Mongesi Fesa (pocket cornet), Mark Charig (cornet) - Trumpets
*Elton Dean (doubling saxello), Ian Steel (doubling flute), Ian MacDonald, Dudu Pukwana - Alto Saxophones
*Larry Stabbins, Gary Windo, Brian Smith, Alan Skidmore - Tenor Saxophones
*Dave White (doubling clarinet), Karl Jenkins (doubling oboe), John Williams (bass saxophone, doubling soprano) - Baritone Saxophones
*Nick Evans, Dave Amis, Dave Perrottet, Paul Rutherford - Trombones
*John Marshall (and all percussion), Tony Fennell, Robert Wyatt - Drums
*Maggie Nichols, Julie Tippett, Mike Patto, Zoot Money, Boz. - Vocals
*Roy Babbington (doubling bass guitar), Jill Lyons, Harry Miller, Jeff Clyne, Dave Markee, Brian Belshaw - Bass
*Brian Godding - Guitar
*Keith Tippet - Piano, Musical Director

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CODE: 51852