Stone Free: A Tribute to Jimi Hendrix is a 1993 album recorded by various artists in tribute to Jimi Hendrix. The artists were drawn from many genres of popular music. Contributors include his classic rock contemporaries Eric Clapton and Jeff Beck, blues man Buddy Guy, classical violinist Nigel Kennedy, alternative pop/rock bands Belly and Spin Doctors, hip hop artists P. M. Dawn, among others. According to the liner notes, the "artists were encouraged to not only record one of their own personal favorites but to also place their stamp on Jimi's songs." Several artists recorded radically different interpretations, particularly, P. M. Dawn, The Cure, Nigel Kennedy and Pat Metheny. Some artists, on the other hand, recorded versions that were rather similar to the originals.
The band M.A.C.C. is made up of Mike McCready (guitarist from Pearl Jam), Jeff Ament (bassist from Pearl Jam), Matt Cameron (drummer for Soundgarden and later for Pearl Jam), and Chris Cornell (singer of Soundgarden and later Audioslave). The cover of "Hey Baby (Land of the New Rising Sun)" is their only known recording. All four members of this group had previously worked together on the Temple of the Dog project, and the song "Hey Baby (Land of the New Rising Sun)" was added to Temple of the Dog's live set in 2016.
Eric Clapton's backing group on the title track includes the three original core members of Chic (Nile Rodgers, Bernard Edwards and Tony Thompson) and is the last recording on which all three played together.
I had forgotten about this one and someone made reference to Jimi Hendrix and rockers of the 70's during a radio spot - and I found this gem on Amazon. I owned it on cassette way about the time it came out in 1993 - and what a trip down Memory Lane! The Cure singing "Purple Rain", Buddy Guy's cover of "Red House", The Spin Doctors doing "Spanish Castle Magic" - and of course - The Pretenders with "Bold As Love". What I loved most about this compliation is that you hear Jimi Hendrix's unique compositions and lyrics very clearly, with the added extra of what made these newer bands so special twenty years after Hendrix's passing. If you're a Hendrix fan, you're really going to love this CD.
Not wanting to go song by song, I'll just say that the Paul Rodgers/Slash collaboration on "I Don't Live Today" is worth the price alone. PM Dawn's take on You Got Me Floain' is a favorite, and Buddy Guy brought it with "Red House". Jeff Beck and Seal did the same on "Manic Depression". And Body Count doing "Hey Joe"... ok, I'm going song by song. If you like Jimi, you'll love this!
I had this way back when it first came out on cassett. There are some real gems on here including, Jeff Beck & Seals version of Manic Depression and M.A.C.C.s Hey Baby. There are a lot of other great renditions of Jimis work as well. Some are done very differently but still are interesting to listen to. This is probably my favorite tribute album so far. You can pick it up for next to nothing used so there is nothing to lose and a lot of cool music to gain.
On February 9, 2015, the album was released for the first time on vinyl by Music on Vinyl.
https://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/search?q=Jimi+Hendrix
Track listing / Artists:
All tracks written by Jimi Hendrix, except track five (by Billy Roberts).
01. "Purple Haze" (produced by Robert Smith and Bryan "Chuck" New) The Cure 5:19
02. "Stone Free" (produced by Nile Rodgers) Eric Clapton 4:25
03. "Spanish Castle Magic" (produced by Eddie Kramer) Spin Doctors 4:06
04. "Red House" (produced by Eddie Kramer) Buddy Guy 3:48
05. "Hey Joe" (produced by Ernie C) Billy Roberts Body Count 4:28
06. "Manic Depression" (produced by Jeff Beck, Eddie Kramer and Seal) Seal and Jeff Beck 5:11
07. "Fire" (produced by Nigel Kennedy) Nigel Kennedy 4:39
08. "Bold as Love" (produced by Stephen Street) Pretenders 3:23
09. "You Got Me Floatin'" (produced by P. M. Dawn) P.M. Dawn 4:49
10. "I Don't Live Today" (produced by Eddie Kramer) Slash, Paul Rodgers and Band of Gypsys 4:32
11. "Are You Experienced?" (produced by Paul Q. Kolderie and Sean Slade) Belly 3:38
12. "Crosstown Traffic" (produced by Ron Saint Germain) Living Colour 3:10
13. "Third Stone from the Sun" (produced by Pat Metheny) Pat Metheny 6:00
14. "Hey Baby (Land of the New Rising Sun)" M.A.C.C. 5:26
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Various Artists. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Various Artists. Sort by date Show all posts
Sunday, September 16, 2018
Friday, February 2, 2018
Various Artists – 1993 The Rolling Stone Collection - "25 Years Of Essential Rock" [7 CD Box]
Various Artists – The Rolling Stone Collection - 25 Years Of Essential Rock
Not everyone who was a rock music fan during at least part of the 25 years covered by the seven CDs in this collection will agree on what was the most "essential rock" of this era. Since this collection is associated with Rolling Stone magazine, you would be correct if you assumed that some of the magazine's favorite artists would be included here: Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, The Who, Prince, The Jimi Hendrix Experience, The Byrds, and Talking Heads. But also here are cuts by Led Zeppelin, a group the magazine generally did not consider to be anything special. The collection includes one #1 hit single, "I Want to Know What Love Is" by Foreigner; many non-hits, such as "The Crystal Ship", the B-side of the Doors #1 smash, "Light My Fire" (which is not included in this collection); some well-regarded efforts that were only available as album tracks; and some selections that are unknown singles by unknown artists to most rock fans, such as "See No Evil" by Television. For most potential buyers it will include some selections they already have on a CD and others they've never heard before. It may even introduce them to some artists they will grow to love. By the way, the sound quality of this collection is uniformly excellent.
This collection retailed for $100.00 when first released in 1993.There has never been a better collection of Rock Classics -- probably never will be, what with the difficulties of gaining clearances and gathering the best materials. The seven CDs are divided into the years covered: 1967-69; 1969-70; 1971-73; 1973-77; 1977-82; 1982-86; 1986-92. Enclosed in each CD is a booklet with a capsule history of the music and a complete artist/title list. All of which contain from 15 to 17 tracks, for a total of 110.
A 7 CD, 110 song collection that includes Casey Jones and Touch of Grey by the Grateful Dead. Also includes tracks by Quicksilver Messenger Service, Jefferson Airplane, Big Brother & The Holding Company, Santana, Moby Grape, Bob Dylan, Sly & The Family Stone and the Steve Miller Band.....and MANY more!
Artists - Tracklist:
CD 1
1967 - 1969
01 Bob Dylan - Like A Rolling Stone
02 Buffalo Springfield - For What It's Worth
03 Moby Grape - Omaha
04 Quicksilver Messenger Service - Dino's Song
05 Donovan - Season Of The Witch
06 The Doors - Crystal Ship
07 The Jimi Hendrix Experience - Spanish Castle Magic
08 Cream - Crossroads
09 The Who - I Can See For Miles
10 The Jimi Hendrix Experience - All Along The Watchtower
11 Jeff Beck Group - Beck's Bolero
12 Big Brother & The Holding Company - Piece Of My Heart
13 The Band - The Weight
14 The Byrds - Wasn't Born To Follow
15 Johnny Winter - Highway 61 Revisited
16 Jefferson Airplane - 3/5 Of A Mile In 10 Seconds
17 Traffic - Dear Mr. Fantasy
CD 2
1969 - 1970
01 MC5 - Kick Out The Jams
02 Santana - Everybody's Everything
03 The Steve Miller Band - My Dark Hour
04 Neil Young - The Loner
05 Bob Dylan - Lay Lady Lay
06 Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young - Ohio
07 Boz Scaggs - Loan Me A Dime
08 The Jackson 5 - I Want You Back
09 Sly & The Family Stone - Thank You (Falletin Me Be Mice Elf Agin)
10 John Lennon and The Plastic Ono Band - Working Class Hero
11 Creedence Clearwater Revival - Fortunate Son
12 Eric Clapton - Blues Power
13 Grateful Dead - Casey Jones
14 The Allman Brothers Band - Dreams
15 Led Zeppelin - Friends
CD 3
1971 - 1973
01 Rod Stewart - Maggie May
02 The Who - Won't Get Fooled Again
03 Stevie Wonder - Superstition
04 Marvin Gaye - What's Going On
05 Joni Mitchell - California
06 Paul Simon - Mother And Child Reunion
07 Randy Newman - Sail Away
08 The Eagles - Take It Easy
09 Bonnie Raitt - Give It Up (Or Let Me Go)
10 Little Feat - Dixie Chicken
11 The Allman Brothers Band - Ramblin' Man
12 Derek & The Dominos - Bell Bottom Blues
13 Mott The Hoople - All The Young Dudes
14 Lou Reed - Walk On The Wild Side
15 Bob Dylan - Knockin' On Heaven's Door
CD 4
1973 - 1977
01 David Bowie - Rebel Rebel
02 Ry Cooder - It's All Over Now
03 Bob Marley & The Wailers - No Woman No Cry
04 Elton John - Daniel
05 James Taylor - Mexico
06 Bob Dylan - Simple Twist Of Fate
07 Neil Young - Tonight's The Night
08 Led Zeppelin - Trampled Under Foot
09 Bruce Springsteen - Born To Run
10 Graham Parker - Heat Treatment
11 The Ramones - Blitzkrieg Bop
12 Fleetwood Mac - Go Your Own Way
13 Bonnie Raitt - Runaway
14 Jackson Browne - The Pretender
15 The Eagles - Hotel California
16 Wings - Maybe I'm Amazed
CD 5
1977 - 1982
01 The Sex Pistols - God Save The Queen
02 Television - See No Evil
03 Elvis Costello - Watching The Detectives
04 The Patti Smith Group - We Three
05 Ian Dury And The Blockheads - Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll
06 Warren Zevon - Werewolves Of London
07 Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - Refugee
08 Ry Cooder - Little Sister
09 The Kinks - A Rock 'n' Roll Fantasy
10 Dire Straits - Sultans Of Swing
11 The Cars - Just What I Needed
12 The Clash - Train In Vain (Stand By Me)
13 The Pretenders - Brass In Pocket
14 U2 - I Will Follow
15 Prince - When U Were Mine
16 Richard And Linda Thompson - Wall Of Death
17 Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five - The Message
CD 6
1982 - 1986
01 Eurythmics - Sweet Dreams (Are Made Of This)
02 The J. Geils Band - Freeze Frame
03 Prince - Little Red Corvette
04 Talking Heads - Life During Wartime
05 Sting - If You Love Somebody Set Them Free
06 Don Henley - The Boys Of Summer
07 Prince - When Doves Cry
08 Bruce Springsteen - Born In The USA
09 U2 - Pride (In The Name Of Love)
10 Madonna - Borderline
11 Cyndi Lauper - She Bop
12 Paul Simon - Diamonds On The Soles Of Her Shoes
13 John Mellencamp - Rain On The Scarecrow
14 Jackson Browne - Lives In The Balance
15 Foreigner - I Want To Know What Love Is
CD 7
1986 - 1992
01 The Bangles - Manic Monday
02 Run D.M.C. - Walk This Way
03 Robert Cray Band, The - Smoking Gun
04 Living Colour - Cult Of Personality
05 The B-52's - Love Shack
06 Grateful Dead - Touch Of Grey
07 Don Henley - The End Of The Innocence
08 Tracy Chapman - Talkin' Bout A Revolution
09 Public Enemy - Fight The Power
10 The Vaughan Brothers - White Boots
11 Bonnie Raitt - Thing Called Love
12 The Black Crowes - Hard To Handle
13 R.E.M. - Losing My Religion
14 Robbie Robertson - Shake This Town
15 Spin Doctors - Little Miss Can't Be Wrong
Not everyone who was a rock music fan during at least part of the 25 years covered by the seven CDs in this collection will agree on what was the most "essential rock" of this era. Since this collection is associated with Rolling Stone magazine, you would be correct if you assumed that some of the magazine's favorite artists would be included here: Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, The Who, Prince, The Jimi Hendrix Experience, The Byrds, and Talking Heads. But also here are cuts by Led Zeppelin, a group the magazine generally did not consider to be anything special. The collection includes one #1 hit single, "I Want to Know What Love Is" by Foreigner; many non-hits, such as "The Crystal Ship", the B-side of the Doors #1 smash, "Light My Fire" (which is not included in this collection); some well-regarded efforts that were only available as album tracks; and some selections that are unknown singles by unknown artists to most rock fans, such as "See No Evil" by Television. For most potential buyers it will include some selections they already have on a CD and others they've never heard before. It may even introduce them to some artists they will grow to love. By the way, the sound quality of this collection is uniformly excellent.
This collection retailed for $100.00 when first released in 1993.There has never been a better collection of Rock Classics -- probably never will be, what with the difficulties of gaining clearances and gathering the best materials. The seven CDs are divided into the years covered: 1967-69; 1969-70; 1971-73; 1973-77; 1977-82; 1982-86; 1986-92. Enclosed in each CD is a booklet with a capsule history of the music and a complete artist/title list. All of which contain from 15 to 17 tracks, for a total of 110.
A 7 CD, 110 song collection that includes Casey Jones and Touch of Grey by the Grateful Dead. Also includes tracks by Quicksilver Messenger Service, Jefferson Airplane, Big Brother & The Holding Company, Santana, Moby Grape, Bob Dylan, Sly & The Family Stone and the Steve Miller Band.....and MANY more!
Artists - Tracklist:
CD 1
1967 - 1969
01 Bob Dylan - Like A Rolling Stone
02 Buffalo Springfield - For What It's Worth
03 Moby Grape - Omaha
04 Quicksilver Messenger Service - Dino's Song
05 Donovan - Season Of The Witch
06 The Doors - Crystal Ship
07 The Jimi Hendrix Experience - Spanish Castle Magic
08 Cream - Crossroads
09 The Who - I Can See For Miles
10 The Jimi Hendrix Experience - All Along The Watchtower
11 Jeff Beck Group - Beck's Bolero
12 Big Brother & The Holding Company - Piece Of My Heart
13 The Band - The Weight
14 The Byrds - Wasn't Born To Follow
15 Johnny Winter - Highway 61 Revisited
16 Jefferson Airplane - 3/5 Of A Mile In 10 Seconds
17 Traffic - Dear Mr. Fantasy
CD 2
1969 - 1970
01 MC5 - Kick Out The Jams
02 Santana - Everybody's Everything
03 The Steve Miller Band - My Dark Hour
04 Neil Young - The Loner
05 Bob Dylan - Lay Lady Lay
06 Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young - Ohio
07 Boz Scaggs - Loan Me A Dime
08 The Jackson 5 - I Want You Back
09 Sly & The Family Stone - Thank You (Falletin Me Be Mice Elf Agin)
10 John Lennon and The Plastic Ono Band - Working Class Hero
11 Creedence Clearwater Revival - Fortunate Son
12 Eric Clapton - Blues Power
13 Grateful Dead - Casey Jones
14 The Allman Brothers Band - Dreams
15 Led Zeppelin - Friends
CD 3
1971 - 1973
01 Rod Stewart - Maggie May
02 The Who - Won't Get Fooled Again
03 Stevie Wonder - Superstition
04 Marvin Gaye - What's Going On
05 Joni Mitchell - California
06 Paul Simon - Mother And Child Reunion
07 Randy Newman - Sail Away
08 The Eagles - Take It Easy
09 Bonnie Raitt - Give It Up (Or Let Me Go)
10 Little Feat - Dixie Chicken
11 The Allman Brothers Band - Ramblin' Man
12 Derek & The Dominos - Bell Bottom Blues
13 Mott The Hoople - All The Young Dudes
14 Lou Reed - Walk On The Wild Side
15 Bob Dylan - Knockin' On Heaven's Door
CD 4
1973 - 1977
01 David Bowie - Rebel Rebel
02 Ry Cooder - It's All Over Now
03 Bob Marley & The Wailers - No Woman No Cry
04 Elton John - Daniel
05 James Taylor - Mexico
06 Bob Dylan - Simple Twist Of Fate
07 Neil Young - Tonight's The Night
08 Led Zeppelin - Trampled Under Foot
09 Bruce Springsteen - Born To Run
10 Graham Parker - Heat Treatment
11 The Ramones - Blitzkrieg Bop
12 Fleetwood Mac - Go Your Own Way
13 Bonnie Raitt - Runaway
14 Jackson Browne - The Pretender
15 The Eagles - Hotel California
16 Wings - Maybe I'm Amazed
CD 5
1977 - 1982
01 The Sex Pistols - God Save The Queen
02 Television - See No Evil
03 Elvis Costello - Watching The Detectives
04 The Patti Smith Group - We Three
05 Ian Dury And The Blockheads - Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll
06 Warren Zevon - Werewolves Of London
07 Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - Refugee
08 Ry Cooder - Little Sister
09 The Kinks - A Rock 'n' Roll Fantasy
10 Dire Straits - Sultans Of Swing
11 The Cars - Just What I Needed
12 The Clash - Train In Vain (Stand By Me)
13 The Pretenders - Brass In Pocket
14 U2 - I Will Follow
15 Prince - When U Were Mine
16 Richard And Linda Thompson - Wall Of Death
17 Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five - The Message
CD 6
1982 - 1986
01 Eurythmics - Sweet Dreams (Are Made Of This)
02 The J. Geils Band - Freeze Frame
03 Prince - Little Red Corvette
04 Talking Heads - Life During Wartime
05 Sting - If You Love Somebody Set Them Free
06 Don Henley - The Boys Of Summer
07 Prince - When Doves Cry
08 Bruce Springsteen - Born In The USA
09 U2 - Pride (In The Name Of Love)
10 Madonna - Borderline
11 Cyndi Lauper - She Bop
12 Paul Simon - Diamonds On The Soles Of Her Shoes
13 John Mellencamp - Rain On The Scarecrow
14 Jackson Browne - Lives In The Balance
15 Foreigner - I Want To Know What Love Is
CD 7
1986 - 1992
01 The Bangles - Manic Monday
02 Run D.M.C. - Walk This Way
03 Robert Cray Band, The - Smoking Gun
04 Living Colour - Cult Of Personality
05 The B-52's - Love Shack
06 Grateful Dead - Touch Of Grey
07 Don Henley - The End Of The Innocence
08 Tracy Chapman - Talkin' Bout A Revolution
09 Public Enemy - Fight The Power
10 The Vaughan Brothers - White Boots
11 Bonnie Raitt - Thing Called Love
12 The Black Crowes - Hard To Handle
13 R.E.M. - Losing My Religion
14 Robbie Robertson - Shake This Town
15 Spin Doctors - Little Miss Can't Be Wrong
Wednesday, August 15, 2018
Various Artists - 1994 "Rock Instrumental Classics Vol. 4 Soul"
While the material on volume four of Rhino's rock instrumentals set chronologically preceded what was on the third volume, no soul, R&B, or even soul-jazz and funk fan should mind these 18 genuine classics, including two superb numbers from Booker T. and the MGs, seminal tracks by the Mar-Keys, Bar-Kays, and Cannonball Adderley, and great Latin tunes from Ray Barretto and Mongo Santamaria. There's absolutely no fluff, and the presence on CD of rare cuts like the Young Holt Trio's "Wack Wack" and Alvin Cash & the Crawlers' "Twine Time" is most welcome.
The most consistently enticing disc in the Rock Instrumental Classics series, this is both a great party and driving record and a window on the rhythms that powered soul music in the '60s (and early '70s, in two cases). In addition to some obvious choices (the four Booker T. & the MG's tracks, the Mar-Keys' "Last Night"), it also offers some left-field picks, such as the varied approaches to Latin music offered by Ray Barretto, Mongo Santamaria, and El Chicano. The stock of virtuoso performances here is all but endless: the bass-and-drums breakdown on Cliff Nobles and Co.'s "The Horse," the glinting guitar solo on the Bar-Kays' "Soul Finger," Hugh Masekela's questing trumpet on "Grazing in the Grass."
Rock Instrumental Classics, Volume 4 not only met my expectations, but surpassed them. I have enjoyed these classics for over forty years, and its terrific to now have them on one compact disc. The CD was in mint condition as advertised; it obviously was treated well. It arrived in a very timely fashion and has gotten a lot of "air time" in my car's CD player. The cuts included bring back beautiful memories of a decade that included a cornucopia of unforgettable music.
As with the other albums in this series (1.-the 50's, 2.-the 60's 3.-the 70's and 5.-Surf) Vol.4-Soul is yet another solid collection from Rhino Records. Hey, there's four Booker T and the MG's songs on this one CD! That alone make it worth it. Personally, I have been looking for Twine time by Alvin Cash and the Crawlers for 40 years! (Yea, I know-Old Guy) The Transfer quality is very good considering that the available master tapes are more than 40 years old. Bottom line: if you are looking for Soul instrumentals, stop looking. Your'e there.
Various Artists - 1994 "Rock Instrumental Classics Vol.3 The Seventies":
https://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/2015/09/various-artists-1994-rock-instrumental.html
Track Listing:
01. Green Onions - Booker T. and The Mg's
02. Grazing In The Grass (Single Version) - Hugh Masekela
03. The Horse (Single Version) - Cliff Nobles And Co.
04. Soul Twist - King Curtis And The Noble Knights
05. Last Night - Mar-Keys
06. The "In" Crowd - Ramsey Lewis Trio
07. Soul Finger - Bar-Kays
08. Soul Makossa - Manu Dibango
09. Twine Time (Single Version) - Alvin Cash and The Crawlers
10. Soulful Strut (Single Version) - Young-Holt Unlimited
11. Hang 'Em High - Booker T. and The Mg's
12. Mercy, Mercy, Mercy - Cannonball Adderley
13. El Watusi - Ray Barretto/Y Su Charanga Moderna
14. Watermelon Man - Mongo Santamaria Band
15. Viva Tirado, Pt. 1 - El Chicano
16. Hip Hug-Her - Booker T. and The Mg's
17. Wack Wack (Single Version) - The Young Holt Trio
18. Time Is Tight - Booker T. and The Mg's
The most consistently enticing disc in the Rock Instrumental Classics series, this is both a great party and driving record and a window on the rhythms that powered soul music in the '60s (and early '70s, in two cases). In addition to some obvious choices (the four Booker T. & the MG's tracks, the Mar-Keys' "Last Night"), it also offers some left-field picks, such as the varied approaches to Latin music offered by Ray Barretto, Mongo Santamaria, and El Chicano. The stock of virtuoso performances here is all but endless: the bass-and-drums breakdown on Cliff Nobles and Co.'s "The Horse," the glinting guitar solo on the Bar-Kays' "Soul Finger," Hugh Masekela's questing trumpet on "Grazing in the Grass."
Rock Instrumental Classics, Volume 4 not only met my expectations, but surpassed them. I have enjoyed these classics for over forty years, and its terrific to now have them on one compact disc. The CD was in mint condition as advertised; it obviously was treated well. It arrived in a very timely fashion and has gotten a lot of "air time" in my car's CD player. The cuts included bring back beautiful memories of a decade that included a cornucopia of unforgettable music.
As with the other albums in this series (1.-the 50's, 2.-the 60's 3.-the 70's and 5.-Surf) Vol.4-Soul is yet another solid collection from Rhino Records. Hey, there's four Booker T and the MG's songs on this one CD! That alone make it worth it. Personally, I have been looking for Twine time by Alvin Cash and the Crawlers for 40 years! (Yea, I know-Old Guy) The Transfer quality is very good considering that the available master tapes are more than 40 years old. Bottom line: if you are looking for Soul instrumentals, stop looking. Your'e there.
Various Artists - 1994 "Rock Instrumental Classics Vol.3 The Seventies":
https://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/2015/09/various-artists-1994-rock-instrumental.html
Track Listing:
01. Green Onions - Booker T. and The Mg's
02. Grazing In The Grass (Single Version) - Hugh Masekela
03. The Horse (Single Version) - Cliff Nobles And Co.
04. Soul Twist - King Curtis And The Noble Knights
05. Last Night - Mar-Keys
06. The "In" Crowd - Ramsey Lewis Trio
07. Soul Finger - Bar-Kays
08. Soul Makossa - Manu Dibango
09. Twine Time (Single Version) - Alvin Cash and The Crawlers
10. Soulful Strut (Single Version) - Young-Holt Unlimited
11. Hang 'Em High - Booker T. and The Mg's
12. Mercy, Mercy, Mercy - Cannonball Adderley
13. El Watusi - Ray Barretto/Y Su Charanga Moderna
14. Watermelon Man - Mongo Santamaria Band
15. Viva Tirado, Pt. 1 - El Chicano
16. Hip Hug-Her - Booker T. and The Mg's
17. Wack Wack (Single Version) - The Young Holt Trio
18. Time Is Tight - Booker T. and The Mg's
Friday, September 4, 2015
Various Artists - 2010 "Mahavishnu Re-Defined II": A Tribute To John McLaughlin & Mahavishnu Orchestra
As many of you know, back in 2008 ESC Records released "Mahavishnu Re-Defined". The two-disc set included tracks by Billy Cobham & The HR Big Band, Mitch Forman, Jim Beard, Dennis Chambers, The Mahavishnu Project and many others. The first set was such a success that ESC has now released a second volume. "Mahavishnu Re-Defined II" will feature another double CD compilation featuring tracks by incredible artists such as Surinder Sandhu featuring Steve Vai, Chris Massey, David Torn, Allen Hinds, George Colligan, Steve Topping, Kai Eckhardt, Michael Manring and others. This time around, The Mahavishnu Project has contributed their high intensity take on "One Word/Resolution" featuring vocalist Melissa Stylianou.
Second instalment of the Mahavishnu tribute series. Inspired 2CD set featuring tracks by various modern artists either creating their own dynamic arrangements of John McLaughlin and the Mahavishnu Orchestra - compositions or producing original sonic paintings based on Mahavishnu consciousness. This collection serves to enlighten neophytes, satisfy seasoned fans of the Mahavishnu Orchestra, and pay homage to one of the most deserving masters of the fusion genre with some stellar performances and interesting interpretations of McLaughlin?s compositions.
http://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/2015/09/various-artists-2008-mahavishnu-re.html
Tracks Listing
CD1:
The Dance Of The Maya (Kai Bruckner)
Starmaker Machinery (For John McLaughlin)
Miles Beyond (Christopher Schreiner, aka The Guy)
The Little Hindu (Surinder Sandhu/Steve Vai)
Are You The One? (Nat Janoff)
Setilla's Dance (Don Mock)
One Word (Resolution) (Mahavishnu Project)
Windchaser (John Stowell)
Gore (Chris Massey's Forever Sharp & Vivid/David Torn)
My Foolish Heart (Allen Hinds)
12 Tone Boogie (Bruce Arnold)
I Wonder (Mychael Pollard)
CD2:
Celestrial Terrestial Commuters (Ali Neander/Helmutt Hattler)
House Of Return (Jeff Gauthier Goatette)
Can't Stand The Funk (Bon Lazaga)
Keeping Pace Ruff (George Colligan & Mad Science)
The Life Divine (Steve Topping)
Thanks Mah (Bill Hart)
Hope (Mark Wingfield)
Snake Charmer (Rez Abassi)
Quiet Moves (Claude Pauly)
Hymn (Asaf Sirkis & The Inner Noise)
Mahvishnology (Gianfranco Continenza)
Vital Transformation (Trio Of Stridence)
Very Early (James Findlay)
Second instalment of the Mahavishnu tribute series. Inspired 2CD set featuring tracks by various modern artists either creating their own dynamic arrangements of John McLaughlin and the Mahavishnu Orchestra - compositions or producing original sonic paintings based on Mahavishnu consciousness. This collection serves to enlighten neophytes, satisfy seasoned fans of the Mahavishnu Orchestra, and pay homage to one of the most deserving masters of the fusion genre with some stellar performances and interesting interpretations of McLaughlin?s compositions.
http://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/2015/09/various-artists-2008-mahavishnu-re.html
Tracks Listing
CD1:
The Dance Of The Maya (Kai Bruckner)
Starmaker Machinery (For John McLaughlin)
Miles Beyond (Christopher Schreiner, aka The Guy)
The Little Hindu (Surinder Sandhu/Steve Vai)
Are You The One? (Nat Janoff)
Setilla's Dance (Don Mock)
One Word (Resolution) (Mahavishnu Project)
Windchaser (John Stowell)
Gore (Chris Massey's Forever Sharp & Vivid/David Torn)
My Foolish Heart (Allen Hinds)
12 Tone Boogie (Bruce Arnold)
I Wonder (Mychael Pollard)
CD2:
Celestrial Terrestial Commuters (Ali Neander/Helmutt Hattler)
House Of Return (Jeff Gauthier Goatette)
Can't Stand The Funk (Bon Lazaga)
Keeping Pace Ruff (George Colligan & Mad Science)
The Life Divine (Steve Topping)
Thanks Mah (Bill Hart)
Hope (Mark Wingfield)
Snake Charmer (Rez Abassi)
Quiet Moves (Claude Pauly)
Hymn (Asaf Sirkis & The Inner Noise)
Mahvishnology (Gianfranco Continenza)
Vital Transformation (Trio Of Stridence)
Very Early (James Findlay)
Wednesday, September 2, 2015
Various Artists - 2008 "Mahavishnu Re-Defined": A Tribute To John Mclaughlin And Mahavishnu Orchestra
With guitar icon John McLaughlin's greater visibility, thanks to recent tours with his 4th Dimension group and Five Peace Band collaboration with pianist Chick Corea, there's been a flurry of reassessment of his vast and vital output as a repertory source. Drummer Gregg Bendian's Mahavishnu Project delivered first-time performances with Return to the Emerald Beyond (Cuneiform, 2007), guitarist Jeff Richman's Visions of an Inner Mounting Apocalypse (Tone Center, 2005) recruited name guitarists to rework classic Mahavishnu Orchestra (MO) material, 4th Dimension keyboardist/percussionist Gary Husband delivered a deeply personal solo piano tribute with A Meeting of the Spirits and radio.string.quartet.vienna unleashed the remarkable Celebrating the Mahavishnu Orchestra, where MO's raw power was reworked for a far-from-conventional chamber group.
Many of these artists and more appear on Mahavishnu Redefined: A Tribute to John McLaughlin and the Mahavishnu Orchestra, a generous double-disc of music written or inspired by McLaughlin that, in its broad range, demonstrates just how pervasive the guitarist's reach is. There are tracks from existing tributes, including Husband's reverent yet harmonically reworked "Celestial Terrestrial Commuters," from MO's classic Birds of Fire (Columbia, 1973) and radio.string.quartet.vienna's remarkable version of "Meeting of the Spirits," originally on MO's debut, Inner Mounting Flame (Columbia, 1971)—a sound that shook the world, and here retains its raw electricity, even while unplugged. Bendian has provided previously unreleased live recordings from his annual VishnuFest, including his 11-piece incarnation working a potent extended version of Birds of Fire's "Sanctuary," as well as two songs featuring the group's string quartet and vocalist Melissa Stylianou.
Equally, there are unique reworks of McLaughlin material, ranging from acoustic guitarist Pascal Bournet's challenging look at "Guardian Angels," from McLaughlin's Electric Dreams (Columbia, 1978) and, in duet with cellist Enrique Alberti, a joyous version of Birds of Fire's countrified "Open Country Joy," to MO drummer Billy Cobham
's HR Big Band collaboration on a swinging version of the 1975 Columbia date, Visions of the Emerald Beyond's "Eternity's Breath."
The most revealing music on Mahavishnu Redefined is, however, the original music, where McLaughlin's deep influence can be felt, even as the artists assert their own individuality. Guitarist Nguyên Lê's "Dding Dek" takes McLaughlin's Indo-centricity farther east to Vietnam, yet the ascending chords that form the basis of his solo are unmistakable. Keyboardist Jim Beard's distinctive octet of woodwinds and strings create the beautiful "In All Her Finery," while Trinity Xperiment's "Visions of Fire" possesses unmistakable references to early MO. Drummer Dennis Chambers
references the structure of "New York on My Mind," from McLaughlin's Electric Guitarist (Columbia, 1978), with guitarist Jon Herington's "Paris on Mine." In a once-removed reference, drummer Ron Thaler's quartet reworks the title track to John Abercrombie's Timeless (ECM, 1975) an album over which the spirit of McLaughlin loomed large.
Just as Mysterious Voyages (ESC, 2005) demonstrated the enduring nature and influence of Weather Report
, so too does Mahavishnu Redefined prove that McLaughlin's legacy—while still far from complete—has reached more than one generation of musician and, no doubt, will continue to influence many more.
http://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/2015/09/various-artists-2010-mahavishnu-re.html
Tracks Listing
CD1:
Celestial Terrestrial Commuters (Gary Husband)
Dding Dek (Nguyên Lê)
Thousand Island Park (Mitchel Forman)
Guardian Angels (Pascal Bournet)
Eternity's Breath Pt. 1 + 2 (HR Big Band feat. Billy Cobham)
Some Timeless (Ron Thaler)
Sanctuary (Mahavishnu Project)
In All Her Finery (Jim Beard)
JM (Pete McCann)
A Lotus on Irish Streams (John Stowell)
Visions of Fire (Trinity Xperiment)
The Wish (Lucas Pickford & Steve Hunt)
The Same Day (Gustavo Assis-Brasil)
CD2:
Trilogy (Wild Strings Quartet)
Way Down (John Bruschini)
Meeting of the Spirits (Radio String Quartet Vienna)
Paris on My Mine (Dennis Chambers)
Do You Hear the Voices You Left Behind (Göran Klinghagen Trio)
La Mere De La Mer / Smile of the Beyond (Mahavishnu Project String Quartet)
Would you like to dance? (Vic Stevens)
John's Blues (Kimo Williams & Kimotion)
Open Country Joy (Pascal Bournet & Enrique Alberti)
One Word (Gianfranco Continenza)
Song to John (Mads Tolling)
Cosmic Strut (Richard Smith)
Personnel:
Gary Husband: piano and "in piano" percussion (CD1#1); Nguyên Lê: guitar (CD1#2); Renaud Garcia-Fons: vbass (CD1#2); Tino di Geraldo: drums and percussion (CD1#2); Kudsi Erguner: ney flute (CD1#2); Illya Amar: marimba and tuned gongs (CD1#2); Mitchel Forman: keyboards (CD1#3); Trey Henry: bass (CD1#3); Ray Brinker: drums (CD1#3); Pascal Bournet: acoustic guitar (CD1#4); Heinz Dieter Sauerborn: alto saxophone (CD1#5); Oliver Leicht: alto and soprano saxophones (CD1#5); Harry Petersen: tenor saxophone (CD1#5); Johannes Enders: tenor saxophone (CD1#5); Rainer Heute: baritone saxophone (CD1#5); Tobias Weidinger: trumpet (CD1#5); Martin Auer: trumpet (CD1#5); Thomas Vogel: trumpet (CD1#5); Günter Bollmann: trombone (CD1#5); Peter Feil: trombone (CD1#5); Christian Jaksjo: trombone (CD1#5); Manfred Honetschlager: bass trombone (CD1#5); Martine Scales: guitar (CD1#5); Peter Reiter: piano, Rhodes and keyboards (CD1#5); Thomas Heidepriem: electric bass (CD1#5); Billy Cobham: drums (CD1#5); Colin Towns: arrangements (CD1#5); Ron Thaler: drums (CD1#6); Chris Clark: keyboards (CD1#6); Ron Bertolet: alto saxophone (CD1#6); Jeff Carney: bass (CD1#6); Gregg Bendian: drums (CD1#7); Glenn Alexander: guitar (CD1#7); Zach Brock: violin (CD1#7); Adam Holzmann: keyboards (CD1#7); Dave Johnson: bass (CD1#7); Matt Szemela: violin (CD1#7, CD2#6); Jeremy Kittel: violin (CD1#7, CD2#6); Jon Weber: viola (CD1#7, CD2#6); Leigh Stuart: cello (CD1#7, CD2#6); Melissa Stylianou: voice (CD1#7, CD2#6); Premik Russell Tubbs: alto flute and soprano saxophone (CD1#7); Jim Beard: keyboards (CD1#8), Hammond B3 (CD2#4), acoustic piano (CD2#4); Marc Quinones: percussion (CD1#8); Aaron Heick: flute, clarinet, English horn and oboe (CD1#8); Stan Harrison: flute and clarinet (CD1#8); Todd Reynolds: violin (CD1#8); Erik Friedlander: cello (CD1#8); John Patitucci: double-bass (CD1#8); Billy Ward: drums (CD1#8); Pete McCann: guitar (CD1#9); John O'Gallagher: saxophone (CD1#9); John Herbert: bass (CD1#9); Mark Ferber: drums (CD1#9); Mike Holober: piano (CD1#9); John Stowell: acoustic guitar (CD1#10); Franz Holtmann: guitar (CD1#11); Mathias Krauss: Rhodes, organ, keys and programming (CD1#11); Gudze: bass (CD1#11); Jost Nickel: drums (CD1#11); Lucas Pickford: bass and sarod (CD1#12); Steve Hunt: synths and programming (CD1#12); Vinay Kantak: tablas, tambourine and shaker (CD1#12); Gustavo Assis-Brasil: guitar (CD1#13); José Pienasola: bass (CD1#13); Mauricio Zottarelli: drums (CD1#13); Marco Anderson: six and twelve string guitars (CD2#1); Philip Gibbs: guitar and tenor guitar (CD2#1); Ale Fernandez: guitar (CD2#1); Peter Evans: violin and string samples (CD2#1); Ron Savage: acoustic bass (CD2#1); John Bruschini: guitar (CD2#2); Robert Aires: keyboards (CD2#2); Jim Nolet: viola (CD2#2); Kip Reed: bass (CD2#2); Jeff Hirshfield: drums (CD2#2); Bernie Mallinger: violin (CD2#3); Johannes Dickbauer: violin (CD2#3); Cynthia Liao: viola (CD2#3); Asja Valcic: cello (CD2#3); Jon Herington: guitar (CD2#4); Bob Malach: tenor saxophone (CD2#4); Matthew Garrison: bass (CD2#4); Michael Davis: trombone (CD2#4); Dennis Chambers: drums (CD2#4); Göran Klinghagen: guitar (CD2#5); Christian Spering: bass (CD2#5); Leroy Lowe: drums (CD2#5); David Fiuczynski: guitar (CD2#7); Percy Jones: bass (CD2#7); Demetrios Pappas: keyboards (CD2#7); Vic Stevens: drums (CD2#7); Vinnie Colaiuta: drums (CD2#8); Larry Kohut: bass (CD2#8); Ben Lewis: keyboards (CD2#8); Chris Siebold: guitar (CD2#8); Kirk Garrison: trumpet (CD2#8); Matt Lewis: trumpet (solo) (CD2#8); Willie Murillo: trumpet (CD2#8); Tuim Rubottom: trumpet (CD2#8); John Mose: trombone (solo) (CD2#8); Jim Boltinghouse: trombone (CD2#8); Peter Brockmann: trombone (CD2#8); Dave Ryan: trombone (CD2#8); Mitch Paliga: tenor saxophone (CD2#8); Roger Neuman: tenor saxophone (CD2#8); Jim Ogdren: alto saxophone (CD2#8); Paul McGinely: alto saxophone (CD2#8); Ted Hogarth: baritone saxophone (CD2#8); Scot Breadman: percussion (CD2#8); Kimo Williams: arrangements (CD2#8); Pascal Bournet: acoustic guitar (CD2#9); Enrique Alberti: cello (CD2#9); Gianfranco Continenza: guitar (CD2#10); Alessandro Centofanti: keyboards (CD2#10); Mark Egan: bass (CD2#10); Walter Martino: drums (CD2#10); Mads Tolling: violin (CD2#11); Mike Abraham: guitar (CD2#11); George Ban-Weiss: acoustic and electric bass (CD2#11); Richard Smith: guitars (CD2#12); Hans Zermuehlen: keyboards (CD2#12).
Many of these artists and more appear on Mahavishnu Redefined: A Tribute to John McLaughlin and the Mahavishnu Orchestra, a generous double-disc of music written or inspired by McLaughlin that, in its broad range, demonstrates just how pervasive the guitarist's reach is. There are tracks from existing tributes, including Husband's reverent yet harmonically reworked "Celestial Terrestrial Commuters," from MO's classic Birds of Fire (Columbia, 1973) and radio.string.quartet.vienna's remarkable version of "Meeting of the Spirits," originally on MO's debut, Inner Mounting Flame (Columbia, 1971)—a sound that shook the world, and here retains its raw electricity, even while unplugged. Bendian has provided previously unreleased live recordings from his annual VishnuFest, including his 11-piece incarnation working a potent extended version of Birds of Fire's "Sanctuary," as well as two songs featuring the group's string quartet and vocalist Melissa Stylianou.
Equally, there are unique reworks of McLaughlin material, ranging from acoustic guitarist Pascal Bournet's challenging look at "Guardian Angels," from McLaughlin's Electric Dreams (Columbia, 1978) and, in duet with cellist Enrique Alberti, a joyous version of Birds of Fire's countrified "Open Country Joy," to MO drummer Billy Cobham
's HR Big Band collaboration on a swinging version of the 1975 Columbia date, Visions of the Emerald Beyond's "Eternity's Breath."
The most revealing music on Mahavishnu Redefined is, however, the original music, where McLaughlin's deep influence can be felt, even as the artists assert their own individuality. Guitarist Nguyên Lê's "Dding Dek" takes McLaughlin's Indo-centricity farther east to Vietnam, yet the ascending chords that form the basis of his solo are unmistakable. Keyboardist Jim Beard's distinctive octet of woodwinds and strings create the beautiful "In All Her Finery," while Trinity Xperiment's "Visions of Fire" possesses unmistakable references to early MO. Drummer Dennis Chambers
references the structure of "New York on My Mind," from McLaughlin's Electric Guitarist (Columbia, 1978), with guitarist Jon Herington's "Paris on Mine." In a once-removed reference, drummer Ron Thaler's quartet reworks the title track to John Abercrombie's Timeless (ECM, 1975) an album over which the spirit of McLaughlin loomed large.
Just as Mysterious Voyages (ESC, 2005) demonstrated the enduring nature and influence of Weather Report
, so too does Mahavishnu Redefined prove that McLaughlin's legacy—while still far from complete—has reached more than one generation of musician and, no doubt, will continue to influence many more.
http://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/2015/09/various-artists-2010-mahavishnu-re.html
Tracks Listing
CD1:
Celestial Terrestrial Commuters (Gary Husband)
Dding Dek (Nguyên Lê)
Thousand Island Park (Mitchel Forman)
Guardian Angels (Pascal Bournet)
Eternity's Breath Pt. 1 + 2 (HR Big Band feat. Billy Cobham)
Some Timeless (Ron Thaler)
Sanctuary (Mahavishnu Project)
In All Her Finery (Jim Beard)
JM (Pete McCann)
A Lotus on Irish Streams (John Stowell)
Visions of Fire (Trinity Xperiment)
The Wish (Lucas Pickford & Steve Hunt)
The Same Day (Gustavo Assis-Brasil)
CD2:
Trilogy (Wild Strings Quartet)
Way Down (John Bruschini)
Meeting of the Spirits (Radio String Quartet Vienna)
Paris on My Mine (Dennis Chambers)
Do You Hear the Voices You Left Behind (Göran Klinghagen Trio)
La Mere De La Mer / Smile of the Beyond (Mahavishnu Project String Quartet)
Would you like to dance? (Vic Stevens)
John's Blues (Kimo Williams & Kimotion)
Open Country Joy (Pascal Bournet & Enrique Alberti)
One Word (Gianfranco Continenza)
Song to John (Mads Tolling)
Cosmic Strut (Richard Smith)
Personnel:
Gary Husband: piano and "in piano" percussion (CD1#1); Nguyên Lê: guitar (CD1#2); Renaud Garcia-Fons: vbass (CD1#2); Tino di Geraldo: drums and percussion (CD1#2); Kudsi Erguner: ney flute (CD1#2); Illya Amar: marimba and tuned gongs (CD1#2); Mitchel Forman: keyboards (CD1#3); Trey Henry: bass (CD1#3); Ray Brinker: drums (CD1#3); Pascal Bournet: acoustic guitar (CD1#4); Heinz Dieter Sauerborn: alto saxophone (CD1#5); Oliver Leicht: alto and soprano saxophones (CD1#5); Harry Petersen: tenor saxophone (CD1#5); Johannes Enders: tenor saxophone (CD1#5); Rainer Heute: baritone saxophone (CD1#5); Tobias Weidinger: trumpet (CD1#5); Martin Auer: trumpet (CD1#5); Thomas Vogel: trumpet (CD1#5); Günter Bollmann: trombone (CD1#5); Peter Feil: trombone (CD1#5); Christian Jaksjo: trombone (CD1#5); Manfred Honetschlager: bass trombone (CD1#5); Martine Scales: guitar (CD1#5); Peter Reiter: piano, Rhodes and keyboards (CD1#5); Thomas Heidepriem: electric bass (CD1#5); Billy Cobham: drums (CD1#5); Colin Towns: arrangements (CD1#5); Ron Thaler: drums (CD1#6); Chris Clark: keyboards (CD1#6); Ron Bertolet: alto saxophone (CD1#6); Jeff Carney: bass (CD1#6); Gregg Bendian: drums (CD1#7); Glenn Alexander: guitar (CD1#7); Zach Brock: violin (CD1#7); Adam Holzmann: keyboards (CD1#7); Dave Johnson: bass (CD1#7); Matt Szemela: violin (CD1#7, CD2#6); Jeremy Kittel: violin (CD1#7, CD2#6); Jon Weber: viola (CD1#7, CD2#6); Leigh Stuart: cello (CD1#7, CD2#6); Melissa Stylianou: voice (CD1#7, CD2#6); Premik Russell Tubbs: alto flute and soprano saxophone (CD1#7); Jim Beard: keyboards (CD1#8), Hammond B3 (CD2#4), acoustic piano (CD2#4); Marc Quinones: percussion (CD1#8); Aaron Heick: flute, clarinet, English horn and oboe (CD1#8); Stan Harrison: flute and clarinet (CD1#8); Todd Reynolds: violin (CD1#8); Erik Friedlander: cello (CD1#8); John Patitucci: double-bass (CD1#8); Billy Ward: drums (CD1#8); Pete McCann: guitar (CD1#9); John O'Gallagher: saxophone (CD1#9); John Herbert: bass (CD1#9); Mark Ferber: drums (CD1#9); Mike Holober: piano (CD1#9); John Stowell: acoustic guitar (CD1#10); Franz Holtmann: guitar (CD1#11); Mathias Krauss: Rhodes, organ, keys and programming (CD1#11); Gudze: bass (CD1#11); Jost Nickel: drums (CD1#11); Lucas Pickford: bass and sarod (CD1#12); Steve Hunt: synths and programming (CD1#12); Vinay Kantak: tablas, tambourine and shaker (CD1#12); Gustavo Assis-Brasil: guitar (CD1#13); José Pienasola: bass (CD1#13); Mauricio Zottarelli: drums (CD1#13); Marco Anderson: six and twelve string guitars (CD2#1); Philip Gibbs: guitar and tenor guitar (CD2#1); Ale Fernandez: guitar (CD2#1); Peter Evans: violin and string samples (CD2#1); Ron Savage: acoustic bass (CD2#1); John Bruschini: guitar (CD2#2); Robert Aires: keyboards (CD2#2); Jim Nolet: viola (CD2#2); Kip Reed: bass (CD2#2); Jeff Hirshfield: drums (CD2#2); Bernie Mallinger: violin (CD2#3); Johannes Dickbauer: violin (CD2#3); Cynthia Liao: viola (CD2#3); Asja Valcic: cello (CD2#3); Jon Herington: guitar (CD2#4); Bob Malach: tenor saxophone (CD2#4); Matthew Garrison: bass (CD2#4); Michael Davis: trombone (CD2#4); Dennis Chambers: drums (CD2#4); Göran Klinghagen: guitar (CD2#5); Christian Spering: bass (CD2#5); Leroy Lowe: drums (CD2#5); David Fiuczynski: guitar (CD2#7); Percy Jones: bass (CD2#7); Demetrios Pappas: keyboards (CD2#7); Vic Stevens: drums (CD2#7); Vinnie Colaiuta: drums (CD2#8); Larry Kohut: bass (CD2#8); Ben Lewis: keyboards (CD2#8); Chris Siebold: guitar (CD2#8); Kirk Garrison: trumpet (CD2#8); Matt Lewis: trumpet (solo) (CD2#8); Willie Murillo: trumpet (CD2#8); Tuim Rubottom: trumpet (CD2#8); John Mose: trombone (solo) (CD2#8); Jim Boltinghouse: trombone (CD2#8); Peter Brockmann: trombone (CD2#8); Dave Ryan: trombone (CD2#8); Mitch Paliga: tenor saxophone (CD2#8); Roger Neuman: tenor saxophone (CD2#8); Jim Ogdren: alto saxophone (CD2#8); Paul McGinely: alto saxophone (CD2#8); Ted Hogarth: baritone saxophone (CD2#8); Scot Breadman: percussion (CD2#8); Kimo Williams: arrangements (CD2#8); Pascal Bournet: acoustic guitar (CD2#9); Enrique Alberti: cello (CD2#9); Gianfranco Continenza: guitar (CD2#10); Alessandro Centofanti: keyboards (CD2#10); Mark Egan: bass (CD2#10); Walter Martino: drums (CD2#10); Mads Tolling: violin (CD2#11); Mike Abraham: guitar (CD2#11); George Ban-Weiss: acoustic and electric bass (CD2#11); Richard Smith: guitars (CD2#12); Hans Zermuehlen: keyboards (CD2#12).
Saturday, September 12, 2015
Various Artists - 1997 "Jazz Fusion Volume 1"
The first of two CDs covering the fusion years is mostly not in
chronological order but generally predates Vol. 2; all but one selection
is from 1970-78. Rather than being a "best of" collection, this is
really just an overview of the style, a dozen strong selections from a
variety of formerly released albums by some of the pacesetters of the
music. Included is a selection apiece from Larry Coryell, Tony Williams Lifetime, Joe Zawinul ("In a Silent Way"), Coryell's Eleventh House, Herbie Hancock, Return to Forever (the original version of "Spain"), Billy Cobham, Mike Mainieri (1981's "Flying Colours"), the duo of Jerry Goodman & Jan Hammer, the Cobham-George Duke Band, Narada Michael Walden and Jean-Luc Ponty ("Cosmic Messenger"). Among the sidemen in these overlapping groups are John McLaughlin, Miroslav Vitous, Randy Brecker, Alphonse Mouzon, Joe Farrell, Flora Purim, John Scofield and the Brecker Brothers. Both sets are worth picking up as introductions to the style.
The word Fusion has been so liberally used since the late '60s that it's become almost meaningless. Fusion's original definition was best: a mixture of jazz improvisation with the power and rhythms of rock. Up until around 1967, the worlds of jazz and rock were nearly completely separate. But as rock became more creative and its musicianship improved, and as some in the jazz world became bored with hard bop and did not want to play strictly avant-garde music, the two different idioms began to trade ideas and occasionally combine forces. By the early '70s, fusion had its own separate identity as a creative jazz style (although snubbed by many purists) and such major groups as Return to Forever, Weather Report, the Mahavishnu Orchestra, and Miles Davis' various bands were playing high-quality fusion that mixed some of the best qualities of jazz and rock. Unfortunately, as it became a money-maker and as rock declined artistically from the mid-'70s on, much of what was labeled fusion was actually a combination of jazz with easy-listening pop music and lightweight R&B. The promise of fusion went unfulfilled to an extent, although it continued to exist in groups such as Tribal Tech and Chick Corea's Elektric Band.
http://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/2017/11/various-artists-1997-jazz-fusion-volume.html
Track Listings
1. Space (Infinite) - Larry Coryell
2. Allah Be Praised - The Tony Williams Lifetime
3. In A Silent Way - Joe Zawinul
4. Birdfingers - The Elventh House
5. Quasar - Herbie Hancock
6. Spain - Chick Corea & Return To Forever
7. Stratus - Billy Cobham
8. Flying Colours - Mike Mainieri
9. Country And Eastern Music - Jerry Goodman & Jam Hammer
10. Sweet Wine - The Billy Cobham - George Duke Band
11. The Sun Is Dancing - Narada Michael Walden
12. Cosmic Messenger - Jean-Luc Ponty
The word Fusion has been so liberally used since the late '60s that it's become almost meaningless. Fusion's original definition was best: a mixture of jazz improvisation with the power and rhythms of rock. Up until around 1967, the worlds of jazz and rock were nearly completely separate. But as rock became more creative and its musicianship improved, and as some in the jazz world became bored with hard bop and did not want to play strictly avant-garde music, the two different idioms began to trade ideas and occasionally combine forces. By the early '70s, fusion had its own separate identity as a creative jazz style (although snubbed by many purists) and such major groups as Return to Forever, Weather Report, the Mahavishnu Orchestra, and Miles Davis' various bands were playing high-quality fusion that mixed some of the best qualities of jazz and rock. Unfortunately, as it became a money-maker and as rock declined artistically from the mid-'70s on, much of what was labeled fusion was actually a combination of jazz with easy-listening pop music and lightweight R&B. The promise of fusion went unfulfilled to an extent, although it continued to exist in groups such as Tribal Tech and Chick Corea's Elektric Band.
http://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/2017/11/various-artists-1997-jazz-fusion-volume.html
Track Listings
1. Space (Infinite) - Larry Coryell
2. Allah Be Praised - The Tony Williams Lifetime
3. In A Silent Way - Joe Zawinul
4. Birdfingers - The Elventh House
5. Quasar - Herbie Hancock
6. Spain - Chick Corea & Return To Forever
7. Stratus - Billy Cobham
8. Flying Colours - Mike Mainieri
9. Country And Eastern Music - Jerry Goodman & Jam Hammer
10. Sweet Wine - The Billy Cobham - George Duke Band
11. The Sun Is Dancing - Narada Michael Walden
12. Cosmic Messenger - Jean-Luc Ponty
Monday, October 5, 2015
Various Artists - 1996 "Sometimes God Hides" Young Persons Guide To Discipline Vol. I
Sometimes God Hides is a musical stew made up of guitar-laden progressive and jazz-rock tracks, mainly from King Crimson and their solo members. With the likes of Adrian Belew and Robert Fripp leading the way, this sampler from the DGM label offers a kaleidoscopic journey through the amazing guitar craft of these talented musicians, along with some excitingly vivid excursions from Trey Gunn and the California Guitar Trio and a peculiar mix of new age and ambient from the Europa String Choir. Subtitled "The Young Persons' Guide to Discipline," these 23 tracks open up a whole new world of guitar and string manipulation, fusing familiar techniques with aberrant rhythms, electronic pastiches, and appealing yet incongruous string arrangements. Cuts such as Belew's "Burned By the Fire We Make" and King Crimson's "Red" (from an official bootleg album out of Argentina) tread on cordial rock ground but are still entertaining while, at the other end of the spectrum, tracks like Peter Hammill's haunting a cappella entitled "A Better Time" and "Voices of Ancient Children" from Los Gauchos Alemanes swoop and soar with a blend of new age mystery and modernized ambience. While the focal point of most of the songs is the guitar, the surrounding atmosphere of trancelike keyboard runs and unique string applications creates a multi-dimensional effect throughout each track. Moody and eccentric, this sampler makes for a truly peculiar instrumental journey.
This CD is a VERY GOOD sampler of the various artists signed to Discipline Global Mobile (Robert Fripp's label). It features 23 long clips of the music by those artists, and focuses mainly (as should be expected) on Fripp's bands and offshoots.
The "flow" of the album is very good, and actually works as an album, even if it is only a sampler.
The thing about King Crimson's/Robert Fripp's music is that after you discover it, and begin digging for the music that's "near" to it (band member's solo careers, Fripp's other bands), you find a LOT of great music. This CD is a great way of having a general view of all that music.
An excellent overview of music available on Robert Fripp's "Discipline Global Mobile" label. If you've already expanded your mind with King Crimson, this may blow your mind.
Track listing / Personnel:
01. Cage - King Crimson
02. Red - King Crimson
03. Burned By The Fire We Make - Adrian Belew
04. Sleepwalk - California Guitar Trio
05. Mingled Roots - Tony Levin
06. Midnight Blue - Robert Fripp
07. Hope - Robert Fripp String Quintet
08. THRaKaTTaK I - King Crimson
09. Radiophonic II - Robert Fripp
10. Voices Of Ancient Children - Los Gauchos Alemanes
11. A Better Time (Acapella) - Peter Hammill
12. 2006 - Robert Fripp
13. Train To Lamy Suite - California Guitar Trio
14. The Last Three Minutes - Ten Seconds
15. The Third Star - Trey Gunn
16. Sermon On The Mount - Europa String Choir
17. Be Longing - Gitbox
18. Scanning II - Robert Fripp
19. Inductive Resonance - League of Gentlemen
20. Real Life - Trey Gunn
21. A Connecticut Yankee In The Court Of King Arthur - Robert Fripp & The League Of Crafty Guitarists
22. Epitaph - King Crimson
23. Sometimes God Hides - Robert Fripp
Friday, February 15, 2019
Various Artists - 1989 "Jazz Club - Drums"
This compilation includes performances by Art Blakey, Max Roach, Shelly Manne, Billy Cobham and Philly Joe Jones.
Back when the '80s jazz renaissance was in full swing, Polygram got the think tank rolling and put out the neophyte-friendly yet respectable Jazz Club series -- yes, imagine yourself smoking Gauloises in a basement club as the band hits its stride. Marketing illusions aside, the drum edition of the lot features a thorough mix that ranges from bebop and hard bop to free jazz and fusion. Culling the booty from the deep Verve and Mercury vaults, the producers have chosen wisely, from classics by Bird (Kenny Clarke), Sonny Stitt (Jo Jones), and Clifford Brown (Max Roach) to some latter-day funkiness plied by Billy Cobham and Alphonse Mouzon. And let's not forget plenty of skin alchemy by the likes of Billy Higgins, Philly Joe Jones, and Shelly Manne. If rhythm is the thing in jazz, then this disc certainly makes for some essential listening.
https://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/2017/06/various-artists-1989-jazz-club-bass.html
Artist/Track listing:
1 –Art Blakey Jazz Messengers* Blues March 6:16
2 –Jo Jones With Sonny Stitt Norman's Blues 2:38
3 –Kenny Clarke With Charlie Parker Si Si 2:38
4 –Max Roach With Clifford Brown - Max Roach Quintet* Jordu 7:46
5 –Shelly Manne With Bill Evans Trio* Let's Go Back To The Waltz 4:29
6 –Elvin Jones With The Jones Brothers (4) Three And One 4:52
7 –Philly Joe Jones* With Bill Evans Trio* Gone With The Wind 5:36
8 –Billy Higgins With The Pentagon (3) D.B. Blues 4:35
9 –Dannie Richmond With Charles Mingus Do Nothin' Till You Hear From Me/I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart 3:33
10 –Billy Cobham With George Benson Billie's Bounce 6:31
11 –Alphonse Mouzon The Ram And The Scorpio 5:53
12 –Gene Krupa & Buddy Rich Drum Battle 3:20
13 –Tony Williams* Big Nick 2:43
14 –Shelly Manne, Louis Bellson, Paul Humphrey, Willie Bobo One Score And Four Drummers Ago 2:53
Back when the '80s jazz renaissance was in full swing, Polygram got the think tank rolling and put out the neophyte-friendly yet respectable Jazz Club series -- yes, imagine yourself smoking Gauloises in a basement club as the band hits its stride. Marketing illusions aside, the drum edition of the lot features a thorough mix that ranges from bebop and hard bop to free jazz and fusion. Culling the booty from the deep Verve and Mercury vaults, the producers have chosen wisely, from classics by Bird (Kenny Clarke), Sonny Stitt (Jo Jones), and Clifford Brown (Max Roach) to some latter-day funkiness plied by Billy Cobham and Alphonse Mouzon. And let's not forget plenty of skin alchemy by the likes of Billy Higgins, Philly Joe Jones, and Shelly Manne. If rhythm is the thing in jazz, then this disc certainly makes for some essential listening.
https://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/2017/06/various-artists-1989-jazz-club-bass.html
Artist/Track listing:
1 –Art Blakey Jazz Messengers* Blues March 6:16
2 –Jo Jones With Sonny Stitt Norman's Blues 2:38
3 –Kenny Clarke With Charlie Parker Si Si 2:38
4 –Max Roach With Clifford Brown - Max Roach Quintet* Jordu 7:46
5 –Shelly Manne With Bill Evans Trio* Let's Go Back To The Waltz 4:29
6 –Elvin Jones With The Jones Brothers (4) Three And One 4:52
7 –Philly Joe Jones* With Bill Evans Trio* Gone With The Wind 5:36
8 –Billy Higgins With The Pentagon (3) D.B. Blues 4:35
9 –Dannie Richmond With Charles Mingus Do Nothin' Till You Hear From Me/I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart 3:33
10 –Billy Cobham With George Benson Billie's Bounce 6:31
11 –Alphonse Mouzon The Ram And The Scorpio 5:53
12 –Gene Krupa & Buddy Rich Drum Battle 3:20
13 –Tony Williams* Big Nick 2:43
14 –Shelly Manne, Louis Bellson, Paul Humphrey, Willie Bobo One Score And Four Drummers Ago 2:53
Monday, November 20, 2017
Various Artists - 1997 "Jazz Fusion Volume 2"
The second of two Rhino CDs mostly covers the 1975-1984 period (with Miles Davis' "Mr. Pastorius" dating from 1989). One of the most interesting aspects to this reissue is that it not only has examples of jazz musicians playing rock, but rock musicians coming closer to performing jazz. The second volume has one selection apiece from the Brecker Brothers ("Some Skunk Funk"), Brand X, Jean-Luc Ponty, Bruford, Ronnie Montrose, Dixie Dregs, Larry Carlton, John McLaughlin ("Belo Horizonte"), Steve Khan, Miles Davis, Allan Holdsworth, and Steve Morse. Most of the performances are quite fiery and the instrumental music is consistently exciting. Although the two Rhino volumes are not quite definitive (some groups are missing and the selections are not strictly in chronological order), they do offer listeners an excellent overview of the much-maligned music.
Here's a refreshingly varied collection of some of the best jazz-rock fusion music from Rhino, who are really masters at digging up little-known gems to put beside the more famous ones in their compilations. This collection is much better than Jazz Fusion Volume 1 at displaying the true hormonal magic and utterly unique musical plane that can result when, rare enough though it is, all the elements come together in a virtuoso jazz-fusion group. Where else can you find hard-to-find stuff like Steve Khan's Casa Loco, to go along with Miles Davis's brilliant late-period "Mr. Pastorious," Jean-Luc Ponty's classic Enigmatic Ocean, parts I to IV, Bill Bruford's Hell's Bells, Ronnie Montrose, The Brecker Bros. and the Dixie Dregs' "Take it Off the Top" on the same CD? And if all that still doesn't kick your mule sore, turbo-charge you hormones and make you macho, here's something even more gaucho: just play "Nuclear Burn" by Phil Collins' monster '70s fusion group Brand X with the volume knob at 11, and call me if your brain isn't an omelette after you're done. Rounding out the diverse appearnces are the legendary "Point It Up" guitar solo from Larry Carlton, and, as a sort of breather from all the fire-breathing, John Mclaughlin's gorgeous and ultra-sophisticated flamenco-jazz-Brazilian-fusion acoustic piece "Belo Horizonte." So, if you can put your envy aside and just accept the fact that you'll probably never be able to play your instrument half as good as any of these guys (the skin-flute excluded), there is some extremely good music to be discovered in the much despised and ignored "Jazz Fusion" genre. This disc is a great place to start.
http://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/2015/09/various-artists-1997-jazz-fusion-volume.html
Track Listing:
01. Some Skunk Funk - The Brecker Bros.
02. Nuclear Burn - Brand X
03. Enigmatic Ocean, Parts I-IV - Jean-Luc Ponty
04. Hell's Bells - Bruford
05. Town Without Pity - Ronnie Montrose
06. Take It Off The Top - Dixie Dregs
07. Point It Up - Larry Carlton
08. Belo Horizonte - John Mc Laughlin
09. Casa Loco - Steve Khan
10. Mr. Pastorius - Miles Davis
11. Three Sheets To The Wind - Allan Holdsworth
12. The Introduction - Steve Morse Band
Personnel:
Guitar - Bob Mann, John Goodsall, Ronnie Montrose, Steve Morse, Larry Carlton, Allan Holdsworth, Steve Khan, John McLaughlin, Daryl Stuermer
Drums - Harvey Mason, Sr., Jeff Porcaro, Rick Shlosser, Steve Jordan, Chad Wackerman, Tommy Campbell, Al Foster, Bill Bruford, Phil Collins, Steve Smith
Bass - Marcus Miller, Jerry Peek, Andy West, Jeff Berlin, Ralphe Armstrong, Jean Paul Celea, Alan Fitzgerald, Anthony Jackson, Percy Jones, Abraham Laboriel, Will Lee
Keyboards - Mark Parrish, Allan Zavod, Dave Stewart, Francois Couturier, Robin Lumley, Don Grolnick, Greg Mathieson
Percussion - Steve Sheman, Ralph MacDonald, Manolo Badrena, Jean-Pierre Drouet
Violin - Allen Sloan, Jean-Luc Ponty
Synthesizer - Katia Labeque
Flugelhorn, Trumpet - Randy Brecker
Piano - Edgar Winter
Sax (Tenor) - Michael Brecker
Trumpet - Miles Davis
Sax (Alto) - David Sanborn
Here's a refreshingly varied collection of some of the best jazz-rock fusion music from Rhino, who are really masters at digging up little-known gems to put beside the more famous ones in their compilations. This collection is much better than Jazz Fusion Volume 1 at displaying the true hormonal magic and utterly unique musical plane that can result when, rare enough though it is, all the elements come together in a virtuoso jazz-fusion group. Where else can you find hard-to-find stuff like Steve Khan's Casa Loco, to go along with Miles Davis's brilliant late-period "Mr. Pastorious," Jean-Luc Ponty's classic Enigmatic Ocean, parts I to IV, Bill Bruford's Hell's Bells, Ronnie Montrose, The Brecker Bros. and the Dixie Dregs' "Take it Off the Top" on the same CD? And if all that still doesn't kick your mule sore, turbo-charge you hormones and make you macho, here's something even more gaucho: just play "Nuclear Burn" by Phil Collins' monster '70s fusion group Brand X with the volume knob at 11, and call me if your brain isn't an omelette after you're done. Rounding out the diverse appearnces are the legendary "Point It Up" guitar solo from Larry Carlton, and, as a sort of breather from all the fire-breathing, John Mclaughlin's gorgeous and ultra-sophisticated flamenco-jazz-Brazilian-fusion acoustic piece "Belo Horizonte." So, if you can put your envy aside and just accept the fact that you'll probably never be able to play your instrument half as good as any of these guys (the skin-flute excluded), there is some extremely good music to be discovered in the much despised and ignored "Jazz Fusion" genre. This disc is a great place to start.
http://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/2015/09/various-artists-1997-jazz-fusion-volume.html
Track Listing:
01. Some Skunk Funk - The Brecker Bros.
02. Nuclear Burn - Brand X
03. Enigmatic Ocean, Parts I-IV - Jean-Luc Ponty
04. Hell's Bells - Bruford
05. Town Without Pity - Ronnie Montrose
06. Take It Off The Top - Dixie Dregs
07. Point It Up - Larry Carlton
08. Belo Horizonte - John Mc Laughlin
09. Casa Loco - Steve Khan
10. Mr. Pastorius - Miles Davis
11. Three Sheets To The Wind - Allan Holdsworth
12. The Introduction - Steve Morse Band
Personnel:
Guitar - Bob Mann, John Goodsall, Ronnie Montrose, Steve Morse, Larry Carlton, Allan Holdsworth, Steve Khan, John McLaughlin, Daryl Stuermer
Drums - Harvey Mason, Sr., Jeff Porcaro, Rick Shlosser, Steve Jordan, Chad Wackerman, Tommy Campbell, Al Foster, Bill Bruford, Phil Collins, Steve Smith
Bass - Marcus Miller, Jerry Peek, Andy West, Jeff Berlin, Ralphe Armstrong, Jean Paul Celea, Alan Fitzgerald, Anthony Jackson, Percy Jones, Abraham Laboriel, Will Lee
Keyboards - Mark Parrish, Allan Zavod, Dave Stewart, Francois Couturier, Robin Lumley, Don Grolnick, Greg Mathieson
Percussion - Steve Sheman, Ralph MacDonald, Manolo Badrena, Jean-Pierre Drouet
Violin - Allen Sloan, Jean-Luc Ponty
Synthesizer - Katia Labeque
Flugelhorn, Trumpet - Randy Brecker
Piano - Edgar Winter
Sax (Tenor) - Michael Brecker
Trumpet - Miles Davis
Sax (Alto) - David Sanborn
Thursday, December 31, 2015
Various Artists - 1988 CTI - "Masters Of The Guitar"
This is probably the most widely played jazz-guitar CD in my collection. I originally got this CD in 1988. This purchase was my second copy, since my first copy got scratched. I loved it in '88, I still love it now. Timeless music.
I'm amazed at the efficiency of the market. Not enough people know about this gem. You can buy this for a buck. Wow. CTI, during the period represented by this compilation, had a stable of outstanding players, all of whom would go on to make names for themselves in the emerging world of commercial jazz.
Note, I didn't say smooth jazz. Rather, this was real jazz played to a growing, cross-over audience. Music molded by Creed Taylor (the CT in CTI) to move people deeper into the jazz mainstream. George Benson, before he became a singer. John McLauglin as a side-man on Joe Farrell's gig. Grant Green mapping the territory for jam bands which would arrive a decade and-a-half later. Joe Beck introducing a then-unknown David Sanborn, and the definitive Jim Hall collaborating with Art Farmer. And more.
Track Listing / Personnel:
CTI MASTERS OF THE GUITAR
Various Artists
Recorded 1971-1978. Issued 1988.
01. El Mar - George Benson (from WHITE RABBIT) - 10:47 remix
02. Black Gold - Phil Upchurch (from UPCHURCH/TENNYSON) - 3:29
03. Rock Steady - as by "Eric Gale"
(from WILD HORSES ROCK STEADY) - 6:44
04. Brothers & Others - Joe Beck (from BECK) - 6:26
05. God Bless The Child - Kenny Burrell (from GOD BLESS THE CHILD) - 8:00
06. I Remember Wes - as by "George Benson" (from GIANT BOX) - 4:08
07. Big Blues - as by "Jim Hall" (from BIG BLUES) - 7:21
08. Creature - Grant Green (from THE MAIN ATTRACTION) - 10:18
09. It's So Hard To Say Goodbye - Gabor Szabo (from RAMBLER) - 4:41
10. Follow Your Heart - as by "John McLaughlin"
(from JOE FARRELL QUARTET) - 6:46 remix
11. Ballad Of The Sad Young Men - Kenny Burrell
(from GOD BLESS THE CHILD) - 2:14
I'm amazed at the efficiency of the market. Not enough people know about this gem. You can buy this for a buck. Wow. CTI, during the period represented by this compilation, had a stable of outstanding players, all of whom would go on to make names for themselves in the emerging world of commercial jazz.
Note, I didn't say smooth jazz. Rather, this was real jazz played to a growing, cross-over audience. Music molded by Creed Taylor (the CT in CTI) to move people deeper into the jazz mainstream. George Benson, before he became a singer. John McLauglin as a side-man on Joe Farrell's gig. Grant Green mapping the territory for jam bands which would arrive a decade and-a-half later. Joe Beck introducing a then-unknown David Sanborn, and the definitive Jim Hall collaborating with Art Farmer. And more.
Track Listing / Personnel:
CTI MASTERS OF THE GUITAR
Various Artists
Recorded 1971-1978. Issued 1988.
01. El Mar - George Benson (from WHITE RABBIT) - 10:47 remix
02. Black Gold - Phil Upchurch (from UPCHURCH/TENNYSON) - 3:29
03. Rock Steady - as by "Eric Gale"
(from WILD HORSES ROCK STEADY) - 6:44
04. Brothers & Others - Joe Beck (from BECK) - 6:26
05. God Bless The Child - Kenny Burrell (from GOD BLESS THE CHILD) - 8:00
06. I Remember Wes - as by "George Benson" (from GIANT BOX) - 4:08
07. Big Blues - as by "Jim Hall" (from BIG BLUES) - 7:21
08. Creature - Grant Green (from THE MAIN ATTRACTION) - 10:18
09. It's So Hard To Say Goodbye - Gabor Szabo (from RAMBLER) - 4:41
10. Follow Your Heart - as by "John McLaughlin"
(from JOE FARRELL QUARTET) - 6:46 remix
11. Ballad Of The Sad Young Men - Kenny Burrell
(from GOD BLESS THE CHILD) - 2:14
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
Various Artists - 1986 "Atlantic Jazz Fusion"
Various Artists - 1986 Atlantic Jazz Fusion
This compilation starts off with "Freedom Jazz Dance" from Miroslav Vitous. This song was recorded before Bitches Brew from Miles Davis but it bears the mark of Davis' early electric jazz works. There is a total free-wheeling rhythm and playing from all instruments (piano, guitar, drums, bass and sax). It has a very improvised feel complete with a bass solo!
"Beaux J. Pooboo" from Les McCann follows. It's a moody and fairly relaxed piece of jazz fusion. Les is very good at creating a warm atmosphere with his electric piano and this song is no exception. It's a long song clocking in well over ten minutes and the mellowest on the album. Next is the most frenetic and rocking song. "Quadrant 4" from Billy Cobham off his awesome solo debut LP Spectrum blows you away with it's explosion of sound. Guitar, drums, electric piano and synthesizers assail you with their fury. Very energetic song. The shortest and arguably least remarkable cut on the album is next. "Beneath the Earth" is a fairly straight forward guitar fusion song from Larry Coryell and Alphonse Mouzon. Good drumming from Mouzon keeps the song from being just average. The next song is my personal favorite. After I heard this song, I ran out to the store to buy any Passport I could find. Unfortunately at the time (around 1990), I could not find any new stuff so I had to buy a used LP. "Homunculus" is a fantastic jazz/fusion song by Passport. For me it incorporates just about all that I love about the genre: Complex drumming (with an intricate 6/8 time rhythm), tasty (but not overly prevailing or obtrusive) horns, elegant electric piano flourishes and a melody that permeates the whole song even during the soloing or experimentation. If you love progressive rock or jazz fusion and have not sampled any Passport, I absolutely recommend you do so. The last song is another fantastic example of rock/fusion jazz. "Egocentric Molecules" by Jean-Luc Ponty is a funky slice of space fusion that pleases the ears.
Overall this is a great compilation. Hard to find now but a great starter for anyone new to or interested in fusion.
Tracklist / Artist:
A2 –Les McCann Beaux J. Pooboo 13:05
B1 –Billy Cobham Quadrant 4 4:18
B2 –Larry Coryell, Alphonse Mouzon Beneath The Earth 3:00
B3 –Passport (2) Homunculus 6:09
B4 –Jean-Luc Ponty Egocentric Molecules 5:44
Various Artists - 1993 "Guitar On The Edge Vol 1 No 4"
Various Artists - 1993 Guitar On The Edge Vol 1 No 4
Track listing / Personnel:
- 1 Greg Howe - No Place Like Home 4:21
- 2 Lanny Cordola - The Obstinant Toy Soldiers 5:13
- 3 Carl Verhayen - Tango 5:49
- 4 Ron Thal - Bumblefoot 3:42
- 5 Dana Rasch - First Light and Turn Green 3:13
- 6 The Prodigy - Schizoid 2:33
- 7 Dave LaRue - Police Work 3:39
- 8 Glen Alexander - The Black Line 6:42
- 9 Glen Sherman - Ala Florida Jam 2:38
- 10 Scott Boland - Grasshopper Lives 3:40
- 11 Ernie Jackson - Divided We Groove / United We Jam 4:45
- 12 Guthrie Govan - Rhode Island Shred 2:07
- 13 Howard Hart - The Margin 4:07
- 14 Darryl Gabel - Blue Fingers 3:50
- 15 Wayne Krantz - Is Something I Don't Understand Yet 4:32
- 16 Paul Hanson - Downswing 4:32
- 17 Guthrie Govan - Waves 4:12
- 18 Milan Polak - Absolutely Positive 4:41
Saturday, December 2, 2017
Various Artists - 2011 "The New Universe Music Festival 2010" Live
More than a celebration of some of fusion's current undisputed cream—featuring, in addition to White's group and McLaughlin's current Fourth Dimension lineup, sets by guitarists Jimmy Herring, Alex Machacek and Wayne Krantz, Indian drummer Ranjit Barot, and the first live appearance by fusion supergroup-in-the-making Human Element—it was also a chance to see just how far Dutta's Abstract Logix has come, since it morphed from web-based fusion storefront to record label. Starting modestly with just one release, Project Z's Lincoln Memorial (2005), AL has grown to become the premiere imprint for today's fusion, the "Little Label That Could," against the many challenges facing Indies today. The New Universe Music Festival 2010: Abstract Logix Live! isn't quite like being there but, at just over two hours, it's a compelling condensation of the many highlights (there were many more) that took place over two days in November, 2010—an expansive picture window into what made the festival a great experience and tremendous success.
With tracks culled from each of the seven groups' performances, spread across two discs, it captures the essence and variety of each set, from Machacek's knotty writing, almost unfathomable voicings and cerebral yet searing work with the same lineup as The Official Triangle Session (Abstract Logix, 2009)—powerhouse drummer Jeff Sipe and the lesser-known, but equally deserving bassist, Neal Fountain—to Herring's more groove-driven but no less contextually challenging quartet, also with Fountain and Sipe, along with another surprise of the festival, keyboardist Matt Slocum.
Herring's set was one of the best of a thoroughly high bar festival, so it's appropriate that he receives nearly as much time as McLaughlin—who gets the most focus at over 26 minutes—demonstrating his good ol' boy combination of Jeff Beck-worthy tone, southern lyricism and undeniably monster chops on Sipe's high-velocity "Rainbow," and his own dark ballad, "Gray Day," from Lifeboat (Abstract Logix, 2008). Herring's thundering version of George Harrison's "Within You, Without You" dovetails perfectly with the Indo-centricities of Barot's set, where a remarkable duo with violinist Bala Bhaskar ("Vignesh Kirtanam") sets up "Origin," the fiery closer to the drummer's AL debut, Bada Boom (2010), here performed by members of Human Element, along with guest guitarist Krantz, who delivers a characteristically quirky, visceral and gritty solo.
Human Element's release had been delayed until April, 2011, so keyboardist Scott Kinsey, über-bassist Matthew Garrison and percussionist/vocalist/puckish mischief-maker Arto Tuncboyaciyan—with Barot subbing, with complete confidence and commitment, for regular drummer Gary Novak—gave a preview of what was to come, as Kinsey's "Essaouira" and the more incendiary "Sometimes I..." demonstrate the quartet's sonic blend of Joe Zawinul-informed landscapes, world music concerns and Tribal Tech-like displays of unbridled improvisational power.
Krantz, in addition to longtime drummer Cliff Almond, brought another bass legend to the festival. Anthony Jackson's 2010 AL debut, Interspirit, may not have been represented at the event, but his contribution to Krantz's trio more than made up for it. Krantz offers a different kind of cerebralism than Machacek, one driven more aggressively by groove, and a knottier disposition towards unexpected time changes, as "Why" clearly demonstrates, shifting gears halfway into a high velocity free-for-all that builds to a fever pitch.
White's AL debut, Anomaly (2010), was a cast of thousands (well, 23) affair, but his touring band brings the album's material into sharper focus. With Herring—a sometimes member of the band—guesting with the current quartet lineup, White has a tremendous frontline that also includes New York guitarist Tom Guarna, stepping away from his own more mainstream recordings, and bassist Richie Goods, who's new to the AL family but from whom more will hopefully be heard, kicking the swinging blues at the core of "Door #3" into high gear, with Herring and Guarna turning the heat up with a series of nuclear-burn trade-offs that lead to White's closing solo, which starts quietly, and ends even more so ("How about that," White quipped, at the show, "a quiet drum solo."). Keyboardist Vince Evans, a regular White alum, is another new face to AL, but his combination of Jan Hammer-like synth lines and, in particular, his Rhodes solo on the up-tempo "Gazelle"—ambiguous voicings combining with a seemingly endless flow of thematic ideas, as he weaves through the song's knotty changes—makes him another player worth following.
"Recovery," from To The One (Abstract Logix, 2010), demonstrates how much McLaughlin's Fourth Dimension group has evolved since its 2007 North American tour, documented on Official Pirate (Abstract Logix, 2007). With bassist Etienne Mbappe replacing young firebrand Hadrien Feraud, keyboardist/drummer Gary Husband and drummer Mark Mondesir are able to breathe a little more. The music is no less incendiary when it needs to be, but there's a greater sense of fluidity at the bottom end, and a more unshakable anchor, making a short but sweet version of "Recovery" the perfect, succinct representation where the group is now.
But it's the closer to McLaughlin's set that's the greatest peak amongst so many others. "Mother Tongues," a longtime McLaughlin closer, is stretched to over 21 minutes and features a lengthy, mid-song duo between McLaughlin and surprise guest, tablaist Zakir Hussain, that proves the undying strength of musical friendships forged as strongly as that of these two masters. They haven't played together for many years—since the last time Remember Shakti toured—but the bond they share clearly hasn't weakened one iota, as McLaughlin and Hussain push, pull and work off each other, the guitarist's rhythmic roots in Indian classicism on full display, as Hussain moves into a three-way trade-off with Husband and Mondesir that has everyone on their toes, creating the kind of fireworks that drove the audience into a frenzy.
Rumors are there's going to be another New Universe Music Festival in 2012, and with a growing roster that now includes guitarist Chris Taylor, and a second installment of Husband's Dirty & Beautiful Volume One (Abstract Logix, 2010) hopefully coming up—leading to hopes that the keyboardist/drummer will get the chance to front his own band—there's every chance that the next festival will repeat and expand upon the successes of the first installment. For a first-time event, spearheaded by the Duttas and their seemingly tireless Director of Operations, John Angello, the 2010 New Universe Music Festival went off with very few hitches—putting many festivals that have been around a lot longer to shame.
n November 20 and 21, 2010, maverick record label Abstract Logix hosted a series of spectacular performances, featuring an array of artists who handily defy genre categorization in favor of unbridled expression. The first New Universe Festival was a die-hard music lover’s dream, defined by artists who seamlessly mingle compositional ingenuity and improvisational grace and fervor. This coming September, Abstract Logix will release a 2 DVD set, featuring a generous selection of festival performances and bonus material (additional performances, interviews, and more), filmed in high-definition throughout the event.
Among the featured musicians were pioneering guitarist John McLaughlin and his current band the 4th Dimension with special guest, world music legend tabla maestro Zakir Hussain; Widespread Panic guitar hero Jimmy Herring with his electric band; Return to Forever Drummer Lenny White; the all-star quartet Human Element (keyboardist Scott Kinsey, bassist Matt Garrison, percussionist Arto Tunçboyaciyan; fearless guitarist and improviser Wayne Krantz appearing with the amazing Anthony Jackson on bass; visionary Indian composer and drummer Ranjit Barot; and emerging guitar visionary Alex Machacek.
“I feel honored to participate,” says festival headliner John McLaughlin, while on tour promoting his Grammy-nominated album To the One. “My life has been dedicated to my instrument and music, and I continue to devote myself to music in order to be worthy of such a privilege. You will hear the kind of complicity that exists between us all – this is a very special element, and frankly essential for making good music.”
Jimmy Herring very succinctly put it, “This is real music played by real people, happening in real time. We’re up there listening and reacting to one another, and people genuinely respond to the risks we take. This is human music in a mechanized age.”
On the face of it, this live double-album is an expert genuflection to jazz-rock fusion, with five guitarists and a crop of punchy drummers (including Return to Forever's Lenny White and percussion virtuoso Zakir Hussain) to confirm it. But the playing of the seven bands is anything but predictable. The members sit in with each other here, and their embrace of risk and the pleasure they take in spontaneous performance are palpable. John McLaughlin and the 4th Dimension have Hussain sit in for usual drummer Ranjit Barot in two fiercely vivacious pieces, including an infectious, choppy, 20-minute Hussein showcase, Mother Tongues. Barot leads a violin-dominated Indian-inflected sextet featuring the New York guitar maverick Wayne Krantz as a guest; Krantz also appears with an edgy avant-fusion trio. The chord-crunching, metal-inspired guitarist Alex Machacek opens proceedings with a fast-moving group extensively featuring electric bassist Neal Fountain.
It was a veritable smorgasbord of fusion, with many of the top-notch artists in the genre coming together for a series of performances. Jazz-rock fans attending the inaugural event heard legends like John McLaughlin and Lenny White, established names such as Wayne Krantz, Human Element and Jimmy Herring, as well as up-and-comers like Alex Machacek and Ranjit Barot. From start to finish, the music was electric, even when it was being played acoustically. There was also a palpable sense of community as artists generously participated in listening sessions and sat in with each other throughout the event. I highly recommend this festival and look forward to seeing and hearing its second incarnation in 2012.
– Lee Mergner, Editor in Chief, JazzTimes
The New Universe Music Festival brought together an astonishing roster of legendary and upcoming jazz-fusion musicians—especially guitarists—in an intimate setting charged with excitement. As might be expected, the music was superb, culminating in a heartfelt tribute to fusion and world music pioneer John McLaughlin. I look forward to attending the next NUMF, though the first one will be very tough to top.
– Barry Cleveland, Guitar Player
http://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/search?q=Various+Artists
Track listing:
CD1:
1. Strafe;
2. Very Sad;
3. Vignesh;
4. Origin;
5. Essaouira;
6. Sometimes I...;
7. Rainbow;
8. Gray Day;
9. Within You, Without You.
CD2:
1. Why;
2. Door#3;
3. Gazelle;
4. Recovery;
5. Mother Tongues.
Personnel:
Alex Machacek: guitar (CD1#1-2);
Neal Fountain: bass (CD1#1-2, CD1#7-9);
Jeff Sipe: drums (CD1#1-2, CD1#7-9);
Ranjit Barot: drums (CD1#3-7), voice (CD1#3-4);
Bala Bhaskar: violin (CD1#3-4);
Scott Kinsey: keyboards (CD1#3-7);
Matthew Garrison: bass (CD1#3-7);
Arto Tunçboyacian: percussion and voice (CD1#3-7);
Wayne Krantz: guitar (CD1#3-4, CD2#1);
Jimmy Herring: guitar (CD1#7-9, CD2#-2-3);
Matt Slocum: keyboards (CD1#7-9);
Anthony Jackson: bass (CD2#1);
Cliff Almond: drums (CD2#1);
Lenny White: drums (CD2#2-3);
Tom Guarna: guitar (CD2#2-3);
Richie Goods: bass (CD2#2-3);
Vince Evans: keyboards (CD2#2-3);
John McLaughlin: guitar (CD2#4-5);
Etienne M'Bappe: bass (CD2#4-5);
Gary Husband: keyboards and drums (CD2#4-5);
Mark Mondesir: drums (CD2#4-5);
Zakir Hussain: table ((CD2#5).
Monday, December 25, 2017
Various Artists - 1997 "Yule Be Boppin'", Bluenote
This is one of the better Christmas jazz collections available. The 15 selections each utilize different artists and were recorded especially for this CD. Kurt Elling's version of Steve Allen's "Cool Yule," and Pat Martino's "Santa Claus Is Coming to Town," Javon Jackson's "Santa Baby," Bobby Watson and Jack Walrath on "Cristo Redentor," and Charlie Hunter's solo guitar version of "Christmas Time Is Here" are highlights. Other featured players include Dianne Reeves ("Jingle Bells"), Eliane Elias (romping on "I've Got My Love to Keep Me Warm"), Bob Dorough (remaking "Blue X-Mas"), Fareed Haque, Sweet Daddy Lowe, Judi Silvano, Jacky Terrasson, Benny Green, Miles Griffith, Rachelle Ferrell and Joe Lovano. An excellent set of mostly offbeat versions of seasonal favorites.
For that hardened jazz boho on your list, this 15-piece slab serves up a lot of cool yule trimmings. There are goodies for baddies here, including Javon Jackson, who takes you on a drum-lead, saxophone-improv trip during "Santa Baby," exploring all the nooks and crannies of Santa's workshop. Bob Dorough reprises the cynical classic "Blue X-Mas" while Sweet Daddy Love and the Blue Note Ad Hoc Orchestra revisit that beatnik staple "Bebop Santa Claus." Other noteworthy tracks include Jacky Terrasson soulfully welding "Adeste Fideles" and "Little Drummer Boy" in a groovin' orgy of organ-chased gospel rhythms and sprite piano riffs. No hip set would be complete without "Zat You, Santa Claus?", here handled admirably by Benny Green and Miles Griffith (although no one can lay a finger on Louis Armstrong's version). Cool stuff, even for nonjazz stiffs.
A later Blue Note take on the Holiday sound – but one that features some surprisingly nice numbers by artists who were on the label's roster during the 90s! There's a spirit here that takes us back to older Holiday jazz albums – a feel that's never too slick or gimmicky, and which shows a genuine feel for the music without tricking it out too much. Titles include "Christmastime Is Here" by Charlie Hunter, "Peace On Earth" by Rachelle Ferrell, "Cristo Redentor" by Bobby Watson, "Carol Of The Bells" by Joe Lovano, "Blue X-Mas" by Bob Dorough, "Zat You Santa Claus" by Benny Green, "Santa Baby" by Javon Jackson, and "Cool Yule" by Kurt Elling. (Out of print.)
Track listing:
01 –Kurt Elling Cool Yule 3:27
02 –Pat Martino Santa Claus Is Coming To Town 4:27
03 –Dianne Reeves Jingle Bells 2:09
04 –Eliane Elias I've Got My Love To Keep Me Warm 4:28
05 –Bob Dorough Blue X-mas 5:37
06 –Fareed Haque You're A Mean One Mr. Grinch 5:25
07 –Javon Jackson Santa Baby 4:19
08 –Sweet Daddy Lowe And The Blue Note Ad Hoc Orchestra Be-Bop Santa Claus 4:28
09 –Judi Silvano I'd Like You For Christmas 4:49
10 –Jacky Terrasson 'Adeste Fideles / Little Drummer Boy' Jam 3:27
11 –Benny Green featuring Miles Griffith Zat You Santa Claus 3:33
12 –Bobby Watson (2) / Jack Walrath Cristo Redentor 7:18
13 –Rachelle Ferrell Peace On Earth 4:19
14 –Charlie Hunter Christmas Time Is Here 4:04
15 –Joe Lovano Carol Of The Bells 4:35
For that hardened jazz boho on your list, this 15-piece slab serves up a lot of cool yule trimmings. There are goodies for baddies here, including Javon Jackson, who takes you on a drum-lead, saxophone-improv trip during "Santa Baby," exploring all the nooks and crannies of Santa's workshop. Bob Dorough reprises the cynical classic "Blue X-Mas" while Sweet Daddy Love and the Blue Note Ad Hoc Orchestra revisit that beatnik staple "Bebop Santa Claus." Other noteworthy tracks include Jacky Terrasson soulfully welding "Adeste Fideles" and "Little Drummer Boy" in a groovin' orgy of organ-chased gospel rhythms and sprite piano riffs. No hip set would be complete without "Zat You, Santa Claus?", here handled admirably by Benny Green and Miles Griffith (although no one can lay a finger on Louis Armstrong's version). Cool stuff, even for nonjazz stiffs.
A later Blue Note take on the Holiday sound – but one that features some surprisingly nice numbers by artists who were on the label's roster during the 90s! There's a spirit here that takes us back to older Holiday jazz albums – a feel that's never too slick or gimmicky, and which shows a genuine feel for the music without tricking it out too much. Titles include "Christmastime Is Here" by Charlie Hunter, "Peace On Earth" by Rachelle Ferrell, "Cristo Redentor" by Bobby Watson, "Carol Of The Bells" by Joe Lovano, "Blue X-Mas" by Bob Dorough, "Zat You Santa Claus" by Benny Green, "Santa Baby" by Javon Jackson, and "Cool Yule" by Kurt Elling. (Out of print.)
Track listing:
01 –Kurt Elling Cool Yule 3:27
02 –Pat Martino Santa Claus Is Coming To Town 4:27
03 –Dianne Reeves Jingle Bells 2:09
04 –Eliane Elias I've Got My Love To Keep Me Warm 4:28
05 –Bob Dorough Blue X-mas 5:37
06 –Fareed Haque You're A Mean One Mr. Grinch 5:25
07 –Javon Jackson Santa Baby 4:19
08 –Sweet Daddy Lowe And The Blue Note Ad Hoc Orchestra Be-Bop Santa Claus 4:28
09 –Judi Silvano I'd Like You For Christmas 4:49
10 –Jacky Terrasson 'Adeste Fideles / Little Drummer Boy' Jam 3:27
11 –Benny Green featuring Miles Griffith Zat You Santa Claus 3:33
12 –Bobby Watson (2) / Jack Walrath Cristo Redentor 7:18
13 –Rachelle Ferrell Peace On Earth 4:19
14 –Charlie Hunter Christmas Time Is Here 4:04
15 –Joe Lovano Carol Of The Bells 4:35
Sunday, October 9, 2016
Various Artists - 1993 Sacred Sources 1 - "Live Forever"
Any compilation put together by Carlos Santana has got obvious potential, and Sacred Sources I: Live Forever manages to live up to the hype of its title as well as Hal Miller's preachy liner notes. A collection of live material from a diverse bunch of legendary musicians -- Jimi Hendrix, Bob Marley, Marvin Gaye, Stevie Ray Vaughan, and John Coltrane -- Live Forever ranges in audio quality from clean (the Hendrix and Vaughan
cuts) to very, very spotty (Coltrane's "Ogunde"), but all is forgiven
with the high standard of the performances, most of which were
previously unreleased until now. While purists may fret over the
stylistic degrees of separation between, say, Coltrane and Vaughan,
Live Forever has a remarkably continuous feel to it, and that's exactly
Santana's point: eventually, the lines between jazz, blues, rock,
reggae, and R&B begin to blur and the music is just plain good.
Santana Pays His Respects.
Intriguing release from Carlos Santana’s short-lived boutique label, Guts & Grace. According to the liner notes, Santana himself petitioned the estates of the participants to secure these, at-the-time, previously unreleased (in their entirety, anyway) live recordings. You get about 10 minutes from each artist, less from Coltrane, more from Hendrix. The sound quality is a varied bag, however, with Coltrane’s “Ogunde” faring the worst. The Stevie Ray track comes from his final 1990 tour, while readers tell us the Hendrix comes from 1970, at the Berkeley Community Theatre. It’s all obviously a labor of love for Santana, as he gathers together some of the inspirations that have gone into his own heady fusion of jazz, blues & rock. Sadly, a Vol. 2 never appeared.
Carlos Santana is unusual both for the passion of his music making, and also for the voraciousness of his listening. Carlos is a music junkie. He collects tapes from street musicians and jazz icons alike - anything, as Carlos puts it, "from the heart, for the heart." His knowledge is extensive - as is his collection - and devoid of pretention.
We get the benefit of both with Live Forever. The first release on Carlos' Guts & Grace label, it's also the first in his personally curated anthology series, Sacret Sources. With Live Forever, Carlos decided to compile outstanding concert performances from the last tours of Jimi Hendrix, Marvin Gaye, Bob Marley, Stevie Ray Vaughan and John Coltrane.
With the exception of Marvin's "Joy", none of this music has ever been released in its entirety. About a minute of "Ogunde" and two minutes of "I don't live today" have been available on CD and video respectively. All the rest is only available on this collection. In several cases, the music was entrusted directly to Carlos by the artists' heirs. In others, fellow collectors sent tapes, which Carlos the cleared with the relevant estates. And finally, in all cases, the artists' record companies gave their gracious permission for this release to occur.
The recording quality is occasionally far from perfect - several selections were mastered from mixing-board cassettes - but the emotional qualities are unassailable throughout.
Since Carlos has more great anthology ideas, there will be more volumes of Sacred Sources. Live Forever makes a spectacular beginning.
For us hardcore Stevie Ray Vaughan fans, there's a great live version of "Riviera Paradise" on here. Since a live version appears nowhere else on CD, this is a must. Source is from his last tour in 1990. Also will please Hendrix, Bob Marley fans alike.
Great performances of all the late great legends! Some rough sounding recordings but overall worth the money for the cd itself.
Tracklist:
1. Jimi Hendrix - Message to love 4:56
2. Jimi Hendrix - Fire 3:47
3. Jimi Hendrix - I don't live today 5:10
4. Marvin Gaye - Joy 5:14
5. Marvin Gaye - What's going on 5:50
6. Bob Marley - Natural mystic 4:49
7. Bob Marley - Exodus 6:58
8. Stevie Ray Vaughan - Riviera Paradise 8:41
9. John Coltrane - Ogunde 5:27
Santana Pays His Respects.
Intriguing release from Carlos Santana’s short-lived boutique label, Guts & Grace. According to the liner notes, Santana himself petitioned the estates of the participants to secure these, at-the-time, previously unreleased (in their entirety, anyway) live recordings. You get about 10 minutes from each artist, less from Coltrane, more from Hendrix. The sound quality is a varied bag, however, with Coltrane’s “Ogunde” faring the worst. The Stevie Ray track comes from his final 1990 tour, while readers tell us the Hendrix comes from 1970, at the Berkeley Community Theatre. It’s all obviously a labor of love for Santana, as he gathers together some of the inspirations that have gone into his own heady fusion of jazz, blues & rock. Sadly, a Vol. 2 never appeared.
Carlos Santana is unusual both for the passion of his music making, and also for the voraciousness of his listening. Carlos is a music junkie. He collects tapes from street musicians and jazz icons alike - anything, as Carlos puts it, "from the heart, for the heart." His knowledge is extensive - as is his collection - and devoid of pretention.
We get the benefit of both with Live Forever. The first release on Carlos' Guts & Grace label, it's also the first in his personally curated anthology series, Sacret Sources. With Live Forever, Carlos decided to compile outstanding concert performances from the last tours of Jimi Hendrix, Marvin Gaye, Bob Marley, Stevie Ray Vaughan and John Coltrane.
With the exception of Marvin's "Joy", none of this music has ever been released in its entirety. About a minute of "Ogunde" and two minutes of "I don't live today" have been available on CD and video respectively. All the rest is only available on this collection. In several cases, the music was entrusted directly to Carlos by the artists' heirs. In others, fellow collectors sent tapes, which Carlos the cleared with the relevant estates. And finally, in all cases, the artists' record companies gave their gracious permission for this release to occur.
The recording quality is occasionally far from perfect - several selections were mastered from mixing-board cassettes - but the emotional qualities are unassailable throughout.
Since Carlos has more great anthology ideas, there will be more volumes of Sacred Sources. Live Forever makes a spectacular beginning.
For us hardcore Stevie Ray Vaughan fans, there's a great live version of "Riviera Paradise" on here. Since a live version appears nowhere else on CD, this is a must. Source is from his last tour in 1990. Also will please Hendrix, Bob Marley fans alike.
Great performances of all the late great legends! Some rough sounding recordings but overall worth the money for the cd itself.
Tracklist:
1. Jimi Hendrix - Message to love 4:56
2. Jimi Hendrix - Fire 3:47
3. Jimi Hendrix - I don't live today 5:10
4. Marvin Gaye - Joy 5:14
5. Marvin Gaye - What's going on 5:50
6. Bob Marley - Natural mystic 4:49
7. Bob Marley - Exodus 6:58
8. Stevie Ray Vaughan - Riviera Paradise 8:41
9. John Coltrane - Ogunde 5:27
Monday, August 31, 2015
Various Artists - A Brief History of Ambient Volume 2: 1993 "Imaginary Landscapes" (1974-1993)
Ambient 2: Imaginary Landscapes is a 1993 compilation album released on the Virgin Records label, part of its Ambient series. The compilation was issued as a double CD.
In December of 1993, Virgin Records released a second two-disc collection of ambient music as a follow-up to the commercially and critically successful first volume in the series A Brief History of Ambient. Interestingly, the liner notes state that the series title is "an affectionate nod in the direction of Stephen Hawking."
Once again culled exclusively from the Virgin vaults, this second collection is a bit more narrowly focused than its predecessor. On some level, though, it is mostly "more of the same," with many of the same artists (Brian Eno, Amorphous Androgynous, Tangerine Dream, David Sylvian, The Grid, Robert Fripp, Gong, Edgar Froese and Holger Czukay) making another appearance. 'Course, "more of the same" with artists of this caliber isn't really a bad thing. While Volume 1 did feature a track by Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, it is Volume 2 that sports a more international roster, with tracks by Baaba Maal [Senegal], Ryuichi Sakamoto [Japan], The Guo Brothers [China], Prince Far I [Jamaica], The Dmitri Pokrovski Ensemble [Russia] and The Tsinandali Choir [Georgia]. Fans of the bands Gong and Soft Cell will be interested to note the solo track by founding member Daevid Allen. Also of probable interest to some is a track by U2's guitarist The Edge from the soundtrack to the obscure Euro thriller Captive.
Track listing / Artist:
Disc One
01. "Call to Prayer" Baaba Maal 3:52
02. "Tal Coat" Brian Eno 5:06
03. "In Mind" Amorphorous Androgynous 5:26
04. "Rubycon, Pt. 2" (Edit) Tangerine Dream 6:32
05. "The Healing Place" David Sylvian 5:16
06. "Crystal Clear" (The Orb Remix: Clear, Like An Unmuddied Lake) The Grid 6:12
07. "Nuages" Ryuichi Sakamoto 2:08
08. "Wind on Water" Fripp/Eno 5:15
09. "Wildlife" Penguin Cafe Orchestra 8:11
10. "When Things Dream" Jansen/Barbieri 2:39
11. "Magick Mother Invocation" Allen, Gong 1:33
12. "Bringing Down the Light" Sylvian/Fripp 8:14
13. "Not Another" Jah Wobble 3:12
14. "One Flower" The Guo Brothers & Shung Tian 1:31
15. "Black Jesus" God 6:34
16. "Mountain of Needles" Eno/Byrne 2:33
Disc Two
01. "You Are Here" Phil Manzanera 1:46
02. "Bendel Dub" Prince Far I 3:05
03. "Slow Kaliuki" (Edit) The Dimitri Pokrovsky Ensemble 0:29
04. "Euterpe Gratitude Piece" Daevid Allen 9:21
05. "Water Music" Fripp 1:16
06. "New Moon at Red Deer Wallow" Rain Tree Crow 5:01
07. "Attack of the 50 Foot Drum Demon" Bass-O-Matic 4:14
08. "Mekong" Jam Nation 5:09
09. "Endless Life" The Verve 5:15
10. "Nachtmusik Schattenhaft" Klaus Schulze 6:31
11. "Arrival" (Edit) Voyager 7:14
12. "Specific Gravity of Smile" Edgar Froese 9:29
13. "Orovela" The Tsinandali Choir 4:54
14. "Dance #3" Laraaji 3:02
15. "Premonition (Giant Empty Iron Vessel)" Sylvian/Czukay 6:37
16. "Island" The Edge 6:37
In December of 1993, Virgin Records released a second two-disc collection of ambient music as a follow-up to the commercially and critically successful first volume in the series A Brief History of Ambient. Interestingly, the liner notes state that the series title is "an affectionate nod in the direction of Stephen Hawking."
Once again culled exclusively from the Virgin vaults, this second collection is a bit more narrowly focused than its predecessor. On some level, though, it is mostly "more of the same," with many of the same artists (Brian Eno, Amorphous Androgynous, Tangerine Dream, David Sylvian, The Grid, Robert Fripp, Gong, Edgar Froese and Holger Czukay) making another appearance. 'Course, "more of the same" with artists of this caliber isn't really a bad thing. While Volume 1 did feature a track by Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, it is Volume 2 that sports a more international roster, with tracks by Baaba Maal [Senegal], Ryuichi Sakamoto [Japan], The Guo Brothers [China], Prince Far I [Jamaica], The Dmitri Pokrovski Ensemble [Russia] and The Tsinandali Choir [Georgia]. Fans of the bands Gong and Soft Cell will be interested to note the solo track by founding member Daevid Allen. Also of probable interest to some is a track by U2's guitarist The Edge from the soundtrack to the obscure Euro thriller Captive.
Track listing / Artist:
Disc One
01. "Call to Prayer" Baaba Maal 3:52
02. "Tal Coat" Brian Eno 5:06
03. "In Mind" Amorphorous Androgynous 5:26
04. "Rubycon, Pt. 2" (Edit) Tangerine Dream 6:32
05. "The Healing Place" David Sylvian 5:16
06. "Crystal Clear" (The Orb Remix: Clear, Like An Unmuddied Lake) The Grid 6:12
07. "Nuages" Ryuichi Sakamoto 2:08
08. "Wind on Water" Fripp/Eno 5:15
09. "Wildlife" Penguin Cafe Orchestra 8:11
10. "When Things Dream" Jansen/Barbieri 2:39
11. "Magick Mother Invocation" Allen, Gong 1:33
12. "Bringing Down the Light" Sylvian/Fripp 8:14
13. "Not Another" Jah Wobble 3:12
14. "One Flower" The Guo Brothers & Shung Tian 1:31
15. "Black Jesus" God 6:34
16. "Mountain of Needles" Eno/Byrne 2:33
Disc Two
01. "You Are Here" Phil Manzanera 1:46
02. "Bendel Dub" Prince Far I 3:05
03. "Slow Kaliuki" (Edit) The Dimitri Pokrovsky Ensemble 0:29
04. "Euterpe Gratitude Piece" Daevid Allen 9:21
05. "Water Music" Fripp 1:16
06. "New Moon at Red Deer Wallow" Rain Tree Crow 5:01
07. "Attack of the 50 Foot Drum Demon" Bass-O-Matic 4:14
08. "Mekong" Jam Nation 5:09
09. "Endless Life" The Verve 5:15
10. "Nachtmusik Schattenhaft" Klaus Schulze 6:31
11. "Arrival" (Edit) Voyager 7:14
12. "Specific Gravity of Smile" Edgar Froese 9:29
13. "Orovela" The Tsinandali Choir 4:54
14. "Dance #3" Laraaji 3:02
15. "Premonition (Giant Empty Iron Vessel)" Sylvian/Czukay 6:37
16. "Island" The Edge 6:37
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