Along with more session work ( Come On in My Kitchen Delaney & Bonnie; Push Push Herbie Mann; Dirty Old Man Lulu; It Ain't Fair Aretha Franklin; You Reap What You Sow Otis Rush; Matchbox Ronnie Hawkins), Vol. 2 has Duane's Happily Married Man; No Money Down , and Going Up the Country ; Allman Brothers gems (including an unissued live Midnight Rider ), and more!
The session work with other players here isn't quite as good as the material on the first anthology, but An Anthology, Vol. 2 does feature a live cut by Delaney & Bonnie, plus a pair of what were then previously unissued Allman Brothers Band live tracks (among them "Midnight Rider" from the Fillmore East in June 1971). There's another good Duane Allman solo number and a good Hour Glass track ("Been Gone Too Long"), more session work with Aretha Franklin and King Curtis, Ronnie Hawkins ("Matchbox"), Wilson Pickett ("Born to Be Wild"), Johnny Jenkins, Boz Scaggs, Sam Samudio, and Otis Rush. The annotation here isn't as thorough as it was on the first volume, but anyone who owns the first double-CD set will almost certainly have to own this one as well, and for a mid-priced set there's a lot of very good music.
It's rumored that Duane once said, while watching and listening to a Johnny Winter concert, I can cut him anytime. Duane was a highly sought session man, as you will hear in volume II. He blended in and then he stood out. You'll hear the 1969 nucleus of the Allman Brothers Band yet to come on the first cut. From Ronnie Hawkins to Aretha Franklin to King Curtis to Boz Scaggs, to Delaney and Bonnie, Duane backed them all and sounded good. Try it, bet you'll like it, and if you do, get Duane Allman Anthology, you'll definitely enjoy the jam "Loan Me A Dime" with Boz Scaggs on this one as well as the ballad "Please Be With Me" with "Cowboy".
The Duane Allman Anthology Volume 2 brings together an eclectic mix of musicians and Allman's superior guitar skills. The range of music on this two-disc set displays Allman's versatility. Blues, Motown, southern rock, straight rock 'n roll, funky jazz, Creole rock - all manner of R&B - you find it all here.
In addition to his work with the Allmans Brothers Band, Allman was a session musician. Most of the songs here feature someone other than Allman such as King Curtis, Aretha Franklin, Herbie Mann, Otis Rush, Dr. John Creaux, Wilson Pickett, Lulu, Boz Scaggs, Delaney & Bonnie, and Ronnie Hawkins.
(Pickett's 'Born to be Wild' was one of the anthems of a generation - looking back from middle-aged parenthood I can only imagine how thrilled my parents were to hear that song blaring!)
The album goes from one triumph to another. 'Walk on Gilded Splinters' featuring Dr. John is worth the purchase price all by itself. Likewise, 'The Weight' by King Curtis and 'Push Push' by Herbie Mann.
There's also plenty to satisfy Allman Brothers Band aficionados. 'Done Somebody Wrong' and 'Midnight Rider' (live from the Fillmore East) as well as 'Leave My Blues at Home' all feature the full band.
Allman's carefree nature is on display in 'The Happily Married Man' (refrain: I ain't seen my wife in 2 or 3 years, I'm a happily married man) and 'No Money Down', a Chuck Berry song about trading in his 'broke-down raggedy Ford' for a Cadillac with a nuclear reactor, railroad air horn, and psychedelic strobe spot.
Blistering good music. Highest recommendation.
Credits - Track listing:
CD 1
01 –Duane Allman Happily Married Man 2:40
02 –Aretha Franklin It Ain't Fair 3:20
03 –King Curtis The Weight 2:48
04 –Otis Rush You Reap What You Sow 4:54
05 –Ronnie Hawkins Matchbox 3:06
06 –Wilson Pickett Born To Be Wild 2:44
07 –Duane Allman No Money Down 3:25
08 –Hourglass* Been Gone Too Long 3:10
09 –Arthur Conley Stuff You Gotta Watch 2:12
10 –Lulu Dirty Old Man 2:18
11 –Herbie Mann Push Push 9:55
CD 2
01 –Johnny Jenkins Walk On Guilded Splinters 5:23
02 –Boz Scaggs Waiting For A Train 2:40
03 –Ronnie Hawkins Don't Tell Me Your Troubles 2:14
04 –Sam Samudio Goin' Upstairs 5:06
05 –Delaney And Bonnie* Come On In My Kitchen 3:36
06 –The Allman Brothers Band Dimples 5:05
07 –The Duck And The Bear Goin' Up The Country 2:35
08 –The Allman Brothers Band Done Somebody Wrong 4:05
09 –The Allman Brothers Band Leave My Blues At Home 4:15
10 –The Allman Brothers Band Midnight Rider 2:56
Sunday, June 30, 2019
Friday, June 28, 2019
Frank Zappa - 1974 [1995] "Apostrophe(')"
Apostrophe (’) is the eighteenth album by Frank Zappa, released in March 1974 in both stereo and quadraphonic formats. An edited version of its lead-off track, "Don't Eat the Yellow Snow", was the first of Zappa's three Billboard Top 100 hits, ultimately peaking at number 86.
Apostrophe (’) remains Zappa's most commercially successful album in the United States. It was certified gold by the RIAA on April 7, 1976 and peaked at number 10 (a career-high placement) on the Billboard 200 chart in 1974. Continuing from the commercial breakthrough of Over-Nite Sensation (1973), this album is a similar mix of short songs showcasing Zappa's humor and musical arrangements. The record's lyrical themes are often bizarre or obscure, with the exception of "Uncle Remus", which is an extension of Zappa's feelings on racism featured on his earlier song "Trouble Every Day".
The first half of the album loosely follows a continuing theme. "Don't Eat the Yellow Snow" and "Nanook Rubs It" tell of a dream the singer had where he saw himself as an Eskimo named Nanook. It continues into "St. Alfonzo's Pancake Breakfast," which Zappa said was inspired by a television commercial for Imperial margarine.
As was the case with many of Zappa's albums, Apostrophe (’) was a melange of archival and recent recordings; side one of Apostrophe (’) (1974) and Over-Nite Sensation (1973) were recorded simultaneously. The tracks on side two originate from various 1972 sessions with overdubs recorded in 1973 and 1974, except for "Excentrifugal Forz", where the drum track (played by Johnny Guerin) originally came from the Hot Rats sessions in 1969 (along with the bass and drum tracks for "Lemme Take You to the Beach" on Studio Tan (1978) and Läther (1996), although in the case of "Excentrifugal Forz" this is not actually noted in either the album liner notes or official correspondence), and "Stinkfoot", where the basic track, possibly originally known as "The Bass & Drums Song", dates from the Chunga's Revenge sessions in early 1970.
"Apostrophe (’)" is an instrumental featuring bassist Jack Bruce and session drummer Jim Gordon, who was on tour with Zappa's band at the time of the session in November 1972. Bruce is credited on the album cover with bass guitar and co-writing the title song. However, in an interview for Polish rock magazine Tylko Rock he said that he had not played any bass guitar parts or done any co-writing on "Apostrophe (’)", only the cello intro. He reminisced, "So I turned up in a NY studio with my cello, I'm listening to [Zappa's] music, pretty awful, and just don't know what to do with myself, and Frank [Zappa] says to me: "Listen, I would like you to play a sound, like this... whaaaaaang!!!" So I did what he asked me to do. Whaaaaaang!!! That was all. That was my input to Frank Zappa's most popular record! [laughs]" Bruce had studied the instrument at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama and performed with it on some of his other recordings.
However, Zappa has referred to Bruce playing bass on the song in an interview: "Well, that was just a jam thing that happened because he was a friend of (drummer) Jim Gordon. I found it very difficult to play with him; he's too busy. He doesn't really want to play the bass in terms of root functions; I think he has other things on his mind. But that's the way jam sessions go.
The musically similar follow-up to the commercial breakthrough of Over-Nite Sensation, Apostrophe (') became Frank Zappa's second gold and only Top Ten album with the help of the "doggy wee-wee" jokes of "Don't Eat the Yellow Snow," Zappa's first chart single (a longer, edited version that used portions of other songs on the LP). The first half of the album is full of nonsensical shaggy-dog story songs that segue into one another without seeming to finish themselves first; their dirty jokes are generally more subtle and veiled than the more notorious cuts on Over-Nite Sensation. The second half contains the instrumental title cut, featuring Jack Bruce on bass; "Uncle Remus," an update of Zappa's critique of racial discord on "Trouble Every Day"; and a return to the album's earlier silliness in "Stink-Foot." Apostrophe (') has the narrative feel of a concept album, but aside from its willful absurdity, the concept is difficult to decipher; even so, that doesn't detract from its entertainment value.
https://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/search?q=frank+zappa
Track listing:
01. Don't Eat The Yellow Snow 2:06
02. Nanook Rubs It 4:37
03. St. Alfonzo's Pancake Breakfast 1:52
05. Father O'Blivion 2:18
06. Cosmik Debris 4:10
07. Excentrifugal Forz 1:31
08. Apostrophe' 5:53
09. Uncle Remus 2:54
10. Stink-Foot 6:35
Personnel:
Frank Zappa – vocals, guitar, bass, bouzouki
Lynn (Linda Sims) – vocals, backing vocals
Robert "Frog" Camarena – vocals, backing vocals
Ruben Ladron de Guevara – vocals, backing vocals
Debbie – vocals, backing vocals
Ray Collins – backing vocals
Sue Glover – backing vocals
Kerry McNabb – backing vocals, engineer, remixing
Sal Marquez – trumpet
Ian Underwood – saxophone
Napoleon Murphy Brock – saxophone, backing vocals
Bruce Fowler – trombone
Don "Sugarcane" Harris – violin
Jean-Luc Ponty – violin
Ruth Underwood – percussion
George Duke – keyboards, backing vocals
Tony Duran – rhythm guitar
Tom Fowler – bass guitar
Erroneous (Alex Dmochowski) – bass guitar
Jack Bruce – bass on "Apostrophe'" (see controversy presented above)
Ralph Humphrey – drums (side one)
Johnny Guerin – drums on "Excentrifugal Forz"
Aynsley Dunbar – drums on "Uncle Remus" and "Stink-Foot"
Jim Gordon – drums on "Apostrophe"
Apostrophe (’) remains Zappa's most commercially successful album in the United States. It was certified gold by the RIAA on April 7, 1976 and peaked at number 10 (a career-high placement) on the Billboard 200 chart in 1974. Continuing from the commercial breakthrough of Over-Nite Sensation (1973), this album is a similar mix of short songs showcasing Zappa's humor and musical arrangements. The record's lyrical themes are often bizarre or obscure, with the exception of "Uncle Remus", which is an extension of Zappa's feelings on racism featured on his earlier song "Trouble Every Day".
The first half of the album loosely follows a continuing theme. "Don't Eat the Yellow Snow" and "Nanook Rubs It" tell of a dream the singer had where he saw himself as an Eskimo named Nanook. It continues into "St. Alfonzo's Pancake Breakfast," which Zappa said was inspired by a television commercial for Imperial margarine.
As was the case with many of Zappa's albums, Apostrophe (’) was a melange of archival and recent recordings; side one of Apostrophe (’) (1974) and Over-Nite Sensation (1973) were recorded simultaneously. The tracks on side two originate from various 1972 sessions with overdubs recorded in 1973 and 1974, except for "Excentrifugal Forz", where the drum track (played by Johnny Guerin) originally came from the Hot Rats sessions in 1969 (along with the bass and drum tracks for "Lemme Take You to the Beach" on Studio Tan (1978) and Läther (1996), although in the case of "Excentrifugal Forz" this is not actually noted in either the album liner notes or official correspondence), and "Stinkfoot", where the basic track, possibly originally known as "The Bass & Drums Song", dates from the Chunga's Revenge sessions in early 1970.
"Apostrophe (’)" is an instrumental featuring bassist Jack Bruce and session drummer Jim Gordon, who was on tour with Zappa's band at the time of the session in November 1972. Bruce is credited on the album cover with bass guitar and co-writing the title song. However, in an interview for Polish rock magazine Tylko Rock he said that he had not played any bass guitar parts or done any co-writing on "Apostrophe (’)", only the cello intro. He reminisced, "So I turned up in a NY studio with my cello, I'm listening to [Zappa's] music, pretty awful, and just don't know what to do with myself, and Frank [Zappa] says to me: "Listen, I would like you to play a sound, like this... whaaaaaang!!!" So I did what he asked me to do. Whaaaaaang!!! That was all. That was my input to Frank Zappa's most popular record! [laughs]" Bruce had studied the instrument at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama and performed with it on some of his other recordings.
However, Zappa has referred to Bruce playing bass on the song in an interview: "Well, that was just a jam thing that happened because he was a friend of (drummer) Jim Gordon. I found it very difficult to play with him; he's too busy. He doesn't really want to play the bass in terms of root functions; I think he has other things on his mind. But that's the way jam sessions go.
The musically similar follow-up to the commercial breakthrough of Over-Nite Sensation, Apostrophe (') became Frank Zappa's second gold and only Top Ten album with the help of the "doggy wee-wee" jokes of "Don't Eat the Yellow Snow," Zappa's first chart single (a longer, edited version that used portions of other songs on the LP). The first half of the album is full of nonsensical shaggy-dog story songs that segue into one another without seeming to finish themselves first; their dirty jokes are generally more subtle and veiled than the more notorious cuts on Over-Nite Sensation. The second half contains the instrumental title cut, featuring Jack Bruce on bass; "Uncle Remus," an update of Zappa's critique of racial discord on "Trouble Every Day"; and a return to the album's earlier silliness in "Stink-Foot." Apostrophe (') has the narrative feel of a concept album, but aside from its willful absurdity, the concept is difficult to decipher; even so, that doesn't detract from its entertainment value.
https://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/search?q=frank+zappa
Track listing:
01. Don't Eat The Yellow Snow 2:06
02. Nanook Rubs It 4:37
03. St. Alfonzo's Pancake Breakfast 1:52
05. Father O'Blivion 2:18
06. Cosmik Debris 4:10
07. Excentrifugal Forz 1:31
08. Apostrophe' 5:53
09. Uncle Remus 2:54
10. Stink-Foot 6:35
Personnel:
Frank Zappa – vocals, guitar, bass, bouzouki
Lynn (Linda Sims) – vocals, backing vocals
Robert "Frog" Camarena – vocals, backing vocals
Ruben Ladron de Guevara – vocals, backing vocals
Debbie – vocals, backing vocals
Ray Collins – backing vocals
Sue Glover – backing vocals
Kerry McNabb – backing vocals, engineer, remixing
Sal Marquez – trumpet
Ian Underwood – saxophone
Napoleon Murphy Brock – saxophone, backing vocals
Bruce Fowler – trombone
Don "Sugarcane" Harris – violin
Jean-Luc Ponty – violin
Ruth Underwood – percussion
George Duke – keyboards, backing vocals
Tony Duran – rhythm guitar
Tom Fowler – bass guitar
Erroneous (Alex Dmochowski) – bass guitar
Jack Bruce – bass on "Apostrophe'" (see controversy presented above)
Ralph Humphrey – drums (side one)
Johnny Guerin – drums on "Excentrifugal Forz"
Aynsley Dunbar – drums on "Uncle Remus" and "Stink-Foot"
Jim Gordon – drums on "Apostrophe"
Frank Zappa - 1973 [1995] "Over-nite Sensation"
Over-Nite Sensation is a studio album by Frank Zappa and The Mothers of Invention, released in September 1973. It was followed by Zappa's solo album Apostrophe (') (1974), which was recorded during the same sessions.
Love it or hate it, Over-Nite Sensation was a watershed album for Frank Zappa, the point where his post-'60s aesthetic was truly established; it became his second gold album, and most of these songs became staples of his live shows for years to come. Whereas the Flo and Eddie years were dominated by rambling, off-color comedy routines, Over-Nite Sensation tightened up the song structures and tucked sexual and social humor into melodic, technically accomplished heavy guitar rock with jazzy chord changes and funky rhythms; meanwhile, Zappa's growling new post-accident voice takes over the storytelling. While the music is some of Zappa's most accessible, the apparent callousness and/or stunning sexual explicitness of "Camarillo Brillo," "Dirty Love," and especially "Dinah-Moe Humm" leave him on shaky aesthetic ground.
Zappa often protested that the charges of misogyny leveled at such material missed out on the implicit satire of male stupidity, and also confirmed intellectuals' self-conscious reticence about indulging in dumb fun; however, the glee in his voice as he spins his adolescent fantasies can undermine his point. Indeed, that enjoyment, also evident in the silly wordplay, suggests that Zappa is throwing his juvenile crassness in the face of critical expectation, asserting his right to follow his muse even if it leads him into blatant stupidity (ironic or otherwise). One can read this motif into the absurd shaggy-dog story of a dental floss rancher in "Montana," the album's indisputable highlight, which features amazing, uncredited vocal backing from Tina Turner and the Ikettes. As with much of Zappa's best '70s and '80s material, Over-Nite Sensation could be perceived as ideologically problematic (if you haven't got the constitution for FZ's humor), but musically, it's terrific.
One of Zappa’s most popular albums of the 70s (and indeed, of his entire career), Over-Nite Sensation featured one of Zappa’s most talented touring bands, as well as some of his most enduring concert staples, such as “I’m the Slime,” “Dinah-Moe Humm” and “Montana.”
It has recurring themes of seediness and filth, as illustrated on the cover and implied, really, in the name of the album itself. An “overnight sensation” is a sudden success; spelling it “nite” suggests a cheapness by calling into American insta-culture cf. “lite” and “e-z”. But it’s also, coming from Zappa, a reference to sensations felt at night, i.e., sexual ones.
Forty years ago, Frank Zappa reminded us once again of his status as rock's top arch-ironist by naming his 17th album 'Over-nite Sensation.' Of far greater significance, however, the record represents a comeback of sorts for Zappa, who struggled a bit in the early part of the '70s.
By the time of the album's release in September 1973, a decade had passed since Zappa and his self-described "repulsive teen combo" the Mothers of Invention started flipping the rock establishment on its head with their genre-defying music and caustic social commentary.
But after controversially disbanding the original Mothers in 1969, and then being attacked on a London stage two years later, a wheelchair-bound Zappa had spent the better part of 1972 composing instrumental, orchestral and big-band music for what became known as 'The Grand Wazoo.'
So it wasn't until the sessions for 'Over-nite Sensation' began, in March 1973, that an almost fully recovered Zappa started behaving like his old self again, revealing itself in the album's updated interpretation of the old Mothers aesthetic -- even though only multi-instrumentalist Ian Underwood remained from the '60s lineup. Alongside his wife and percussionist Ruth, keyboardist-vocalist George Duke and a new generation of supporting musicians, Underwood was unknowingly serving Zappa's vision for defining the sound that would carry him through much of the '70s.
That sound pushed Zappa's formidable guitar playing to the fore, along with his increasingly graphic sexual comedy (in contrast to the politicized lyrics of the '60s), while his typically adventurous, genre-crossing creations were performed by professionally trained, sight-reading musicians capable of executing whatever Zappa threw at them with the utmost ensemble precision (something the original Mothers could never do to their leader's satisfaction).
All of these qualities permeate 'Over-nite Sensation' favorites like 'Camarillo Brillo,' 'Dirty Love' and 'Dina Moe Humm,' and struck a chord with younger, mostly male fans who could relate to songs so radically torn between the conservatory and the gutter. Meanwhile, other tunes like 'Zomby Woof,' 'Montana' and the especially memorable 'I Am the Slime' gleefully traffic in varying depths of absurdity, supported by uncredited background vocals from the spectacular Tina Turner and her Ikettes.
Fed up with the lack of financial means his career had brought him so far, in 1973 Zappa took a new approach to his albums, that was much more in line with what the general public expected of a rock artist. Instead of the recent albums, most of them either instrumental or bizarre story telling pieces, Zappa adapted the normal compiling of an album: a set of songs with lyrics, limited in size, without lengthy soloing. Besides that he took more sight of the spotlights by starting to sing most of his songs himself as far as his voice allowed him to do so. Because he had a limited vocal range, the more versatile parts still had to be sung by others. This, with a lot of deviation allowed, remained the course for the coming years. Thus in 1973 appeared "Overnite sensation" (deliberately spelled wrongly) followed by "Apostrophe (')" in the next year, both selling well. Apart from being commercially successfull, Zappa personally also seemed to be fond of these albums. Most of their tracks exist in live variants as well and he kept including songs from these two albums in every tour since they premiered.
Of course not all fans were happy about these developments -- namely those partial to the Mothers of Invention and Zappa's more erudite output. But the typical rock-music consumer had spoken, or was about to, as the following year's 'Apostrophe' album (largely recorded during the same sessions, with the same musicians and same musical hallmarks) soon rode 'Over-nite Sensation's' momentum to the Top 10 and to Zappa's first gold sales certification.
Frank Zappa wanted to use backup singers on the songs "I'm the Slime", "Dirty Love", "Zomby Woof", "Dinah-Moe Humm" and "Montana". His road manager suggested The Ikettes, and Ike & Tina Turner were contacted. Ike Turner insisted that Zappa pay the singers, including Tina Turner, no more than $25 per song. However, an invoice shows that they were actually paid $25 per hour, and in total $187.50 each for 7 1/2 hours of service. During the recording sessions, Tina brought Ike into the studio to hear the highly difficult middle section of "Montana" which had taken the Ikettes a few days to learn and master. Ike listened to the tape and responded "What is this shit?" before leaving the studio. Ike later insisted that Zappa not credit the Ikettes on the released album.
https://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/search?q=frank+zappa
Track listing:
1 Camarillo Brillo 3:59
2 I'm The Slime 3:34
3 Dirty Love 2:58
4 Fifty-Fifty 6:09
5 Zombie Woof 5:10
6 Dina-Moe Humm 6:01
7 Montana 6:35
Personnel:
Arranged By, Conductor, Producer – Frank Zappa
Guitar – Frank Zappa
Bass – Tom Fowler
Drums – Ralph Humphrey
Flute, Clarinet, Saxophone [Alto, Tenor] – Ian Underwood
Keyboards, Synthesizer – George Duke
Marimba, Vibraphone, Percussion – Ruth Underwood
Trombone – Bruce Fowler (3)
Trumpet – Sal Marquez
Violin, Violin [Baritone] – Jean-Luc Ponty
Love it or hate it, Over-Nite Sensation was a watershed album for Frank Zappa, the point where his post-'60s aesthetic was truly established; it became his second gold album, and most of these songs became staples of his live shows for years to come. Whereas the Flo and Eddie years were dominated by rambling, off-color comedy routines, Over-Nite Sensation tightened up the song structures and tucked sexual and social humor into melodic, technically accomplished heavy guitar rock with jazzy chord changes and funky rhythms; meanwhile, Zappa's growling new post-accident voice takes over the storytelling. While the music is some of Zappa's most accessible, the apparent callousness and/or stunning sexual explicitness of "Camarillo Brillo," "Dirty Love," and especially "Dinah-Moe Humm" leave him on shaky aesthetic ground.
Zappa often protested that the charges of misogyny leveled at such material missed out on the implicit satire of male stupidity, and also confirmed intellectuals' self-conscious reticence about indulging in dumb fun; however, the glee in his voice as he spins his adolescent fantasies can undermine his point. Indeed, that enjoyment, also evident in the silly wordplay, suggests that Zappa is throwing his juvenile crassness in the face of critical expectation, asserting his right to follow his muse even if it leads him into blatant stupidity (ironic or otherwise). One can read this motif into the absurd shaggy-dog story of a dental floss rancher in "Montana," the album's indisputable highlight, which features amazing, uncredited vocal backing from Tina Turner and the Ikettes. As with much of Zappa's best '70s and '80s material, Over-Nite Sensation could be perceived as ideologically problematic (if you haven't got the constitution for FZ's humor), but musically, it's terrific.
One of Zappa’s most popular albums of the 70s (and indeed, of his entire career), Over-Nite Sensation featured one of Zappa’s most talented touring bands, as well as some of his most enduring concert staples, such as “I’m the Slime,” “Dinah-Moe Humm” and “Montana.”
It has recurring themes of seediness and filth, as illustrated on the cover and implied, really, in the name of the album itself. An “overnight sensation” is a sudden success; spelling it “nite” suggests a cheapness by calling into American insta-culture cf. “lite” and “e-z”. But it’s also, coming from Zappa, a reference to sensations felt at night, i.e., sexual ones.
Forty years ago, Frank Zappa reminded us once again of his status as rock's top arch-ironist by naming his 17th album 'Over-nite Sensation.' Of far greater significance, however, the record represents a comeback of sorts for Zappa, who struggled a bit in the early part of the '70s.
By the time of the album's release in September 1973, a decade had passed since Zappa and his self-described "repulsive teen combo" the Mothers of Invention started flipping the rock establishment on its head with their genre-defying music and caustic social commentary.
But after controversially disbanding the original Mothers in 1969, and then being attacked on a London stage two years later, a wheelchair-bound Zappa had spent the better part of 1972 composing instrumental, orchestral and big-band music for what became known as 'The Grand Wazoo.'
So it wasn't until the sessions for 'Over-nite Sensation' began, in March 1973, that an almost fully recovered Zappa started behaving like his old self again, revealing itself in the album's updated interpretation of the old Mothers aesthetic -- even though only multi-instrumentalist Ian Underwood remained from the '60s lineup. Alongside his wife and percussionist Ruth, keyboardist-vocalist George Duke and a new generation of supporting musicians, Underwood was unknowingly serving Zappa's vision for defining the sound that would carry him through much of the '70s.
That sound pushed Zappa's formidable guitar playing to the fore, along with his increasingly graphic sexual comedy (in contrast to the politicized lyrics of the '60s), while his typically adventurous, genre-crossing creations were performed by professionally trained, sight-reading musicians capable of executing whatever Zappa threw at them with the utmost ensemble precision (something the original Mothers could never do to their leader's satisfaction).
All of these qualities permeate 'Over-nite Sensation' favorites like 'Camarillo Brillo,' 'Dirty Love' and 'Dina Moe Humm,' and struck a chord with younger, mostly male fans who could relate to songs so radically torn between the conservatory and the gutter. Meanwhile, other tunes like 'Zomby Woof,' 'Montana' and the especially memorable 'I Am the Slime' gleefully traffic in varying depths of absurdity, supported by uncredited background vocals from the spectacular Tina Turner and her Ikettes.
Fed up with the lack of financial means his career had brought him so far, in 1973 Zappa took a new approach to his albums, that was much more in line with what the general public expected of a rock artist. Instead of the recent albums, most of them either instrumental or bizarre story telling pieces, Zappa adapted the normal compiling of an album: a set of songs with lyrics, limited in size, without lengthy soloing. Besides that he took more sight of the spotlights by starting to sing most of his songs himself as far as his voice allowed him to do so. Because he had a limited vocal range, the more versatile parts still had to be sung by others. This, with a lot of deviation allowed, remained the course for the coming years. Thus in 1973 appeared "Overnite sensation" (deliberately spelled wrongly) followed by "Apostrophe (')" in the next year, both selling well. Apart from being commercially successfull, Zappa personally also seemed to be fond of these albums. Most of their tracks exist in live variants as well and he kept including songs from these two albums in every tour since they premiered.
Of course not all fans were happy about these developments -- namely those partial to the Mothers of Invention and Zappa's more erudite output. But the typical rock-music consumer had spoken, or was about to, as the following year's 'Apostrophe' album (largely recorded during the same sessions, with the same musicians and same musical hallmarks) soon rode 'Over-nite Sensation's' momentum to the Top 10 and to Zappa's first gold sales certification.
Frank Zappa wanted to use backup singers on the songs "I'm the Slime", "Dirty Love", "Zomby Woof", "Dinah-Moe Humm" and "Montana". His road manager suggested The Ikettes, and Ike & Tina Turner were contacted. Ike Turner insisted that Zappa pay the singers, including Tina Turner, no more than $25 per song. However, an invoice shows that they were actually paid $25 per hour, and in total $187.50 each for 7 1/2 hours of service. During the recording sessions, Tina brought Ike into the studio to hear the highly difficult middle section of "Montana" which had taken the Ikettes a few days to learn and master. Ike listened to the tape and responded "What is this shit?" before leaving the studio. Ike later insisted that Zappa not credit the Ikettes on the released album.
https://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/search?q=frank+zappa
Track listing:
1 Camarillo Brillo 3:59
2 I'm The Slime 3:34
3 Dirty Love 2:58
4 Fifty-Fifty 6:09
5 Zombie Woof 5:10
6 Dina-Moe Humm 6:01
7 Montana 6:35
Personnel:
Arranged By, Conductor, Producer – Frank Zappa
Guitar – Frank Zappa
Bass – Tom Fowler
Drums – Ralph Humphrey
Flute, Clarinet, Saxophone [Alto, Tenor] – Ian Underwood
Keyboards, Synthesizer – George Duke
Marimba, Vibraphone, Percussion – Ruth Underwood
Trombone – Bruce Fowler (3)
Trumpet – Sal Marquez
Violin, Violin [Baritone] – Jean-Luc Ponty
Mike Stern - 2001 "Voices"
Voices is an album by Mike Stern, released in 2001 through Atlantic Records. The album reached a peak position of number twenty-three on Billboard's Top Jazz Albums chart.
How does a guitar hero re-invent himself? After nine albums of awe-inspiring chops, melodic and lyrical phrasing and sizzling six-string statements in all manner of contexts, what is there left to say? Mike Stern answered that question by digging deep and coming up with the album that has been inside of him for years. Voices, his tenth recording for Atlantic Jazz, is easily his most inspired outing to date. By organically melding his formidable guitar prowess into the fabric of engaging, uplifting vocal tunes, Stern stands poised to bring his own signature six-string voice to a wider audience in much the same way that Carlos Santana re-introduced himself to contemporary pop audiences with Supernatural. Stern's killer guitar work - previously heard on recordings by Miles Davis, Steps Ahead, and the Brecker Brothers band - is still very much intact on Voices. It's just in the service of the celebratory grooves and remarkably expressive voices that grace this world beat flavored project.
"I've always wanted to do a record with voices", says the Grammy-nominated guitarist. "Some of the tunes that I've written in the past, with tricky kind of beboppish heads, are just unsingable. But then there are some tunes of mine that singers have always mentioned to me that they liked very much... the more singable, lyrical tunes. And so I always thought it would be cool to hook up with singers and explore that further."
One of the primary inspirations for the project was Cameroonian bassist and vocalist extraordinaire Richard Bona, whom Mike had met some years back at a jazz festival in Israel. "I was there with the Mike Stern/Bob Berg Band and he was there playing with the Zawinul Syndicate. We ended up jamming that night back at the hotel room and later when he moved to New York we talked about getting together on a project. And we've just kept in touch over the years until we were finally able to realize this collaboration."
Through multiple overdubbing, Bona creates a triumphant vocal choir on the buoyant opener, One World. Mike responds in kind with a typically heroic guitar solo, wailing freely within the densely woven fabric of this well-crafted piece. Bona also lends his appealing vocals to the relaxed groove of The River, which is underscored by producer Jim Beard's churchy piano playing and sparked by Stern's earthy blues phrasing. Other singers who appear on Voices are Elizabeth Kontomanou, Arto Tuncboyaciyan and Philip Hamilton, formerly of Full Circle, a popular world beat group from the 80's. "The kind of voices that Richard, Arto and Philip have really appealed to me for this project", explains Stern. "They all can sing in a kind of falsetto voice that is so beautiful, like a soprano sax but, of course, better. There's no comparison to the human voice but I like that high register for these kind of melodies. And Elizabeth, interestingly enough, has a very low voice for a woman. So it's really a rich, soulful voice, which added another quality to the record."
Given the exotic tendencies of the featured singers on Voices, the tunes ended up lending themselves toward a world beat vibe, which actually surprised and pleased Stern. "Naturally, the tunes with Richard have an African sounding vibe to them", he says. "And then there's one called Way Out East, which is a play on Sonny Rollins' famous album title Way Out West. That one features Arto on vocals and it's got a distinctly Middle Eastern quality to it, like something you might associate with Morocco or Turkey."
"We went for more of a live approach than layering it all in the studio", says Stern. "We could've done this with sequencers and stuff but then you lose the burn factor from the live performance. We wanted to just play. And actually, it all went down smoothly in three days - two days with Vinnie Colaiuta and one day with Dennis Chambers. The only things I overdubbed was one tune where I broke a string in the middle of the solo and another tune where a microphone fell from one of my amps during my solo, so I had to play that one over. Everything else is just live. And that's really what I wanted for this album - the live vibe with real drums and piano in the same room and a little bit of leakage so that it sounds real."
Much like Carlos Santana did with Supernatural, Stern is re-inventing himself with Voices. The purpose of this CD is to bring Stern a wider audience. It does! A technical genius, whose phrasing and sizzling guitar riffs have made him a much sought after jazz-rock-fusion guitarslinger, Stern has appeared on albums by an eclectic group of artists. The Brecker Brothers, Steps Ahead and Miles Davis to name but a few, have all benefited from Mike Sterns guitar wizardry. Stern was also a member of Blood, Sweat & Tears.
Voices is much more than just the new Mike Stern CD. It is a celebration of music and the feelings that music (and vocals) can convey. Stern, along with guest musicians Michael Brecker and Bob Franseschini on saxophones, Dennis Chambers on drums , bassist Chris Doky, drummer Vinnie Colaiuta, Jon Herington on guitar and Lincoln Goines on additional basses have created a vibe that is both inspirational and uplifting.
https://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/search?q=mike+stern
Track listing:
1. "One World" 6:25
2. "The River (Tongo)" 6:29
3. "Slow Change" 7:15
4. "Wishing Well" 6:12
5. "Still There" 7:33
6. "Spirit" 6:38
7. "What Might Have Been" 5:33
8. "Leni's Smile" 5:33
9. "Way Out East" 7:05
Total length: 58:43
Personnel:
Mike Stern – guitar
Michael Brecker – saxophone
Jon Herington – rhythm guitar
Richard Bona – bass, kalimba, vocals
Chris Minh Doky – double bass
Lincoln Goines – bass guitar
Dennis Chambers – drums
Vinnie Colaiuta – drums
Bob Franceschini – saxophone
Philip Hamilton – vocals
Elisabeth Kontomanou – vocals
Arto Tuncboyaciyan – percussion, vocals
Jim Beard – production, keyboards
How does a guitar hero re-invent himself? After nine albums of awe-inspiring chops, melodic and lyrical phrasing and sizzling six-string statements in all manner of contexts, what is there left to say? Mike Stern answered that question by digging deep and coming up with the album that has been inside of him for years. Voices, his tenth recording for Atlantic Jazz, is easily his most inspired outing to date. By organically melding his formidable guitar prowess into the fabric of engaging, uplifting vocal tunes, Stern stands poised to bring his own signature six-string voice to a wider audience in much the same way that Carlos Santana re-introduced himself to contemporary pop audiences with Supernatural. Stern's killer guitar work - previously heard on recordings by Miles Davis, Steps Ahead, and the Brecker Brothers band - is still very much intact on Voices. It's just in the service of the celebratory grooves and remarkably expressive voices that grace this world beat flavored project.
"I've always wanted to do a record with voices", says the Grammy-nominated guitarist. "Some of the tunes that I've written in the past, with tricky kind of beboppish heads, are just unsingable. But then there are some tunes of mine that singers have always mentioned to me that they liked very much... the more singable, lyrical tunes. And so I always thought it would be cool to hook up with singers and explore that further."
One of the primary inspirations for the project was Cameroonian bassist and vocalist extraordinaire Richard Bona, whom Mike had met some years back at a jazz festival in Israel. "I was there with the Mike Stern/Bob Berg Band and he was there playing with the Zawinul Syndicate. We ended up jamming that night back at the hotel room and later when he moved to New York we talked about getting together on a project. And we've just kept in touch over the years until we were finally able to realize this collaboration."
Through multiple overdubbing, Bona creates a triumphant vocal choir on the buoyant opener, One World. Mike responds in kind with a typically heroic guitar solo, wailing freely within the densely woven fabric of this well-crafted piece. Bona also lends his appealing vocals to the relaxed groove of The River, which is underscored by producer Jim Beard's churchy piano playing and sparked by Stern's earthy blues phrasing. Other singers who appear on Voices are Elizabeth Kontomanou, Arto Tuncboyaciyan and Philip Hamilton, formerly of Full Circle, a popular world beat group from the 80's. "The kind of voices that Richard, Arto and Philip have really appealed to me for this project", explains Stern. "They all can sing in a kind of falsetto voice that is so beautiful, like a soprano sax but, of course, better. There's no comparison to the human voice but I like that high register for these kind of melodies. And Elizabeth, interestingly enough, has a very low voice for a woman. So it's really a rich, soulful voice, which added another quality to the record."
Given the exotic tendencies of the featured singers on Voices, the tunes ended up lending themselves toward a world beat vibe, which actually surprised and pleased Stern. "Naturally, the tunes with Richard have an African sounding vibe to them", he says. "And then there's one called Way Out East, which is a play on Sonny Rollins' famous album title Way Out West. That one features Arto on vocals and it's got a distinctly Middle Eastern quality to it, like something you might associate with Morocco or Turkey."
"We went for more of a live approach than layering it all in the studio", says Stern. "We could've done this with sequencers and stuff but then you lose the burn factor from the live performance. We wanted to just play. And actually, it all went down smoothly in three days - two days with Vinnie Colaiuta and one day with Dennis Chambers. The only things I overdubbed was one tune where I broke a string in the middle of the solo and another tune where a microphone fell from one of my amps during my solo, so I had to play that one over. Everything else is just live. And that's really what I wanted for this album - the live vibe with real drums and piano in the same room and a little bit of leakage so that it sounds real."
Much like Carlos Santana did with Supernatural, Stern is re-inventing himself with Voices. The purpose of this CD is to bring Stern a wider audience. It does! A technical genius, whose phrasing and sizzling guitar riffs have made him a much sought after jazz-rock-fusion guitarslinger, Stern has appeared on albums by an eclectic group of artists. The Brecker Brothers, Steps Ahead and Miles Davis to name but a few, have all benefited from Mike Sterns guitar wizardry. Stern was also a member of Blood, Sweat & Tears.
Voices is much more than just the new Mike Stern CD. It is a celebration of music and the feelings that music (and vocals) can convey. Stern, along with guest musicians Michael Brecker and Bob Franseschini on saxophones, Dennis Chambers on drums , bassist Chris Doky, drummer Vinnie Colaiuta, Jon Herington on guitar and Lincoln Goines on additional basses have created a vibe that is both inspirational and uplifting.
https://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/search?q=mike+stern
Track listing:
1. "One World" 6:25
2. "The River (Tongo)" 6:29
3. "Slow Change" 7:15
4. "Wishing Well" 6:12
5. "Still There" 7:33
6. "Spirit" 6:38
7. "What Might Have Been" 5:33
8. "Leni's Smile" 5:33
9. "Way Out East" 7:05
Total length: 58:43
Personnel:
Mike Stern – guitar
Michael Brecker – saxophone
Jon Herington – rhythm guitar
Richard Bona – bass, kalimba, vocals
Chris Minh Doky – double bass
Lincoln Goines – bass guitar
Dennis Chambers – drums
Vinnie Colaiuta – drums
Bob Franceschini – saxophone
Philip Hamilton – vocals
Elisabeth Kontomanou – vocals
Arto Tuncboyaciyan – percussion, vocals
Jim Beard – production, keyboards
Thursday, June 27, 2019
Allman Brothers - 1972 [1986] "Eat A Peach"
Eat a Peach is the third studio album by American rock band the Allman Brothers Band. Produced by Tom Dowd, the album was released on February 12, 1972, in the United States by Capricorn Records. Following their artistic and commercial breakthrough with the release of the live album At Fillmore East (1971), the Allman Brothers Band got to work on their third studio album. Many in the band were struggling, however, with heroin addictions, and checked into rehab to confront these problems. Shortly after leaving rehab, group leader and founder Duane Allman was killed in a motorcycle accident in the band's home of Macon, Georgia, making it the final album to feature the guitarist.
Eat a Peach was a mix of studio recordings—both with and without Duane Allman—and recordings from the band's famed 1971 Fillmore East performances. The album contains the extended half-hour-long "Mountain Jam," which was long enough to take up two full sides of the original double-LP. Other highlights include vocalist Gregg Allman's performance of his brother's favorite song, "Melissa," plus Dickey Betts' "Blue Sky", which went on to become a classic rock radio staple.
The album artwork was created by W. David Powell and J. F. Holmes at Wonder Graphics, and depicts the band's name on a peach truck, in addition to a large gatefold mural of mushrooms and fairies. The album's title came from a quote by Duane Allman: "You can't help the revolution, because there's just evolution ... Every time I'm in Georgia, I eat a peach for peace ... the two-legged Georgia variety."
Issued as a double album in February 1972, Eat a Peach was an immediate success and peaked at number four on Billboard's Top 200 Pop Albums chart. The album was later certified platinum and remains a top seller in the band's discography.
A tribute to the dearly departed Duane, Eat a Peach rambles through two albums, running through a side of new songs, recorded post-Duane, spending a full album on live cuts from the Fillmore East sessions, then offering a round of studio tracks Duane completed before his death. On the first side, they do suggest the mellowness of the Dickey Betts-led Brothers and Sisters, particularly on the lovely "Melissa," and this stands in direct contrast with the monumental live cuts that dominate the album. They're at the best on the punchier covers of "One Way Out" and "Trouble No More," both proof of the group's exceptional talents as a roadhouse blues-rock band, but Duane does get his needed showcase on "Mountain Jam," a sprawling 33-minute jam that may feature a lot of great playing, but is certainly a little hard for anyone outside of diehards to sit through. Apart from that cut, the record showcases the Allmans at their peak, and it's hard not to feel sad as the acoustic guitars of "Little Martha" conclude the record, since this tribute isn't just heartfelt, it offers proof of Duane Allman's immense talents and contribution to the band
Track listing:
1 Ain't Wastin' Time No More 3:37
2 Les Brers In A Minor 9:00
3 Melissa 3:52
4 Mountain Jam 33:40
5 One Way Out 4:57
6 Trouble No More 3:43
7 Stand Back 3:20
8 Blue Sky 5:08
9 Little Martha 2:07
Personnel:
Duane Allman – slide guitar, lead guitar, acoustic guitar on all tracks except "Ain't Wastin' Time No More", "Les Brers in A Minor" and "Melissa"
Dickey Betts – lead guitar, lead vocals on "Blue Sky"
Gregg Allman – lead vocals, Hammond organ, piano, Fender Rhodes electric piano, acoustic guitar
Berry Oakley – bass guitar
Jai Johanny Johanson – drums, congas
Butch Trucks – drums, percussion, timpani, gong, vibes, tambourine
Eat a Peach was a mix of studio recordings—both with and without Duane Allman—and recordings from the band's famed 1971 Fillmore East performances. The album contains the extended half-hour-long "Mountain Jam," which was long enough to take up two full sides of the original double-LP. Other highlights include vocalist Gregg Allman's performance of his brother's favorite song, "Melissa," plus Dickey Betts' "Blue Sky", which went on to become a classic rock radio staple.
The album artwork was created by W. David Powell and J. F. Holmes at Wonder Graphics, and depicts the band's name on a peach truck, in addition to a large gatefold mural of mushrooms and fairies. The album's title came from a quote by Duane Allman: "You can't help the revolution, because there's just evolution ... Every time I'm in Georgia, I eat a peach for peace ... the two-legged Georgia variety."
Issued as a double album in February 1972, Eat a Peach was an immediate success and peaked at number four on Billboard's Top 200 Pop Albums chart. The album was later certified platinum and remains a top seller in the band's discography.
A tribute to the dearly departed Duane, Eat a Peach rambles through two albums, running through a side of new songs, recorded post-Duane, spending a full album on live cuts from the Fillmore East sessions, then offering a round of studio tracks Duane completed before his death. On the first side, they do suggest the mellowness of the Dickey Betts-led Brothers and Sisters, particularly on the lovely "Melissa," and this stands in direct contrast with the monumental live cuts that dominate the album. They're at the best on the punchier covers of "One Way Out" and "Trouble No More," both proof of the group's exceptional talents as a roadhouse blues-rock band, but Duane does get his needed showcase on "Mountain Jam," a sprawling 33-minute jam that may feature a lot of great playing, but is certainly a little hard for anyone outside of diehards to sit through. Apart from that cut, the record showcases the Allmans at their peak, and it's hard not to feel sad as the acoustic guitars of "Little Martha" conclude the record, since this tribute isn't just heartfelt, it offers proof of Duane Allman's immense talents and contribution to the band
Track listing:
1 Ain't Wastin' Time No More 3:37
2 Les Brers In A Minor 9:00
3 Melissa 3:52
4 Mountain Jam 33:40
5 One Way Out 4:57
6 Trouble No More 3:43
7 Stand Back 3:20
8 Blue Sky 5:08
9 Little Martha 2:07
Personnel:
Duane Allman – slide guitar, lead guitar, acoustic guitar on all tracks except "Ain't Wastin' Time No More", "Les Brers in A Minor" and "Melissa"
Dickey Betts – lead guitar, lead vocals on "Blue Sky"
Gregg Allman – lead vocals, Hammond organ, piano, Fender Rhodes electric piano, acoustic guitar
Berry Oakley – bass guitar
Jai Johanny Johanson – drums, congas
Butch Trucks – drums, percussion, timpani, gong, vibes, tambourine
John Abercrombie and John Scofield - 1984 [1996] Solar ''the bebop album''
Solar is a studio album by jazz guitarists John Abercrombie and John Scofield. It was initially released in 1984 by Palo Alto Records and reissued in 2001 by West Wind.
Guitarists John Abercrombie and John Scofield join forces for these early-'80s sessions, mostly duets while occasionally adding bassist George Mraz and drummer Peter Donald. They delve into the jazz canon with an intricate duet of "Solar," a driving, Latin-fused take of "Four on Six" (in which Abercrombie overdubs an electric mandolin), and a dreamy duo interpretation of "If You Could See Me Now." The sole standard, "I Should Care," fares just as well in their hands, which settles into a relaxed exchange between the two players as if they are playing for themselves alone. Scofield's "Small Wonder" is scored for the quartet, a bristling post-bop vehicle with a feature for Mraz as well. Abercrombie's introspective "Sing Song" best contrasts the styles of the two leaders, with the composer a bit more melodic and Scofield with a more brittle attack. This is an enjoyable CD that has stood the test of time very well.
I'm a huge Abercrombie fan and this album is one of my favorites. Scofield and Abercrombie dig down deep into some jazzy blues lines that make these two guitar players undeniably some of the most creative to ever play the guitar. Abercrombie is magical as always and Scofield is young, bold, and worthy to share the light with this jazz god. I feel like Abercrombie is passing the torch on to another generation. The album [Timeless] materialized the jazz-rock-fusion era by crossing boundaries and steering music into new directions (an unbeatable accomplishment.) This has been handed off to Scofield who has ever since been attempting to move jazz onto a new canvas.
Abercrombie was second only to McLaughlin among the guitarists of this epoch, to my taste; Scofield was not far behind. Both men had it over the great J Mac in that they played better with others. And this is a great interaction, not "two stars that can't play together", to quote Jelly Roll Morton. Figments of Pat Metheny are floating around here, and the harmonies are the harmonies we remember from Jarrett, ECM and the other masters of this period. I won't deny that there's a certain power of nostalgia at work here, but it's like a wine that never ages into superannuation.
A beautiful as the record was (original date was 1984, so I'm not sure whether it was issued on vinyl or CD - I have a cassette), it might have been stronger if all tracks had been dual electric, with no bass + drums. No criticism of those supporting musicians; just that my memory is a of a downright magical guitar duo.
This duo works as well together as Herb Ellis & Joe Pass, with the same amount of skill and taste. Definitely great listening at home, relaxing after a long day at work. The mood is subdued yet warm and enveloping. This makes me wish that they had worked together for more than just this one disc.
https://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/search?q=john+abercrombie
https://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/search?q=john+scofield
Track listing:
1. "Solar" Miles Davis 4:10
2. "Even Steven" Abercrombie 6:51
3. "Four on Six" Wes Montgomery 6:25
4. "Sing Song" Abercrombie 6:22
5. "Small Wonder" John Scofield 6:21
6. "I Should Care" Sammy Cahn, Axel Stordahl, Paul Weston 6:39
7. "If You Could See Me Now" Tadd Dameron, Carl Sigman 6:02
Total length: 42:35
Personnel:
John Abercrombie – guitar, electric mandolin, co-producer
John Scofield – guitar, co-producer
George Mraz – bass
Peter Donald – drums
Guitarists John Abercrombie and John Scofield join forces for these early-'80s sessions, mostly duets while occasionally adding bassist George Mraz and drummer Peter Donald. They delve into the jazz canon with an intricate duet of "Solar," a driving, Latin-fused take of "Four on Six" (in which Abercrombie overdubs an electric mandolin), and a dreamy duo interpretation of "If You Could See Me Now." The sole standard, "I Should Care," fares just as well in their hands, which settles into a relaxed exchange between the two players as if they are playing for themselves alone. Scofield's "Small Wonder" is scored for the quartet, a bristling post-bop vehicle with a feature for Mraz as well. Abercrombie's introspective "Sing Song" best contrasts the styles of the two leaders, with the composer a bit more melodic and Scofield with a more brittle attack. This is an enjoyable CD that has stood the test of time very well.
I'm a huge Abercrombie fan and this album is one of my favorites. Scofield and Abercrombie dig down deep into some jazzy blues lines that make these two guitar players undeniably some of the most creative to ever play the guitar. Abercrombie is magical as always and Scofield is young, bold, and worthy to share the light with this jazz god. I feel like Abercrombie is passing the torch on to another generation. The album [Timeless] materialized the jazz-rock-fusion era by crossing boundaries and steering music into new directions (an unbeatable accomplishment.) This has been handed off to Scofield who has ever since been attempting to move jazz onto a new canvas.
Abercrombie was second only to McLaughlin among the guitarists of this epoch, to my taste; Scofield was not far behind. Both men had it over the great J Mac in that they played better with others. And this is a great interaction, not "two stars that can't play together", to quote Jelly Roll Morton. Figments of Pat Metheny are floating around here, and the harmonies are the harmonies we remember from Jarrett, ECM and the other masters of this period. I won't deny that there's a certain power of nostalgia at work here, but it's like a wine that never ages into superannuation.
A beautiful as the record was (original date was 1984, so I'm not sure whether it was issued on vinyl or CD - I have a cassette), it might have been stronger if all tracks had been dual electric, with no bass + drums. No criticism of those supporting musicians; just that my memory is a of a downright magical guitar duo.
This duo works as well together as Herb Ellis & Joe Pass, with the same amount of skill and taste. Definitely great listening at home, relaxing after a long day at work. The mood is subdued yet warm and enveloping. This makes me wish that they had worked together for more than just this one disc.
https://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/search?q=john+abercrombie
https://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/search?q=john+scofield
Track listing:
1. "Solar" Miles Davis 4:10
2. "Even Steven" Abercrombie 6:51
3. "Four on Six" Wes Montgomery 6:25
4. "Sing Song" Abercrombie 6:22
5. "Small Wonder" John Scofield 6:21
6. "I Should Care" Sammy Cahn, Axel Stordahl, Paul Weston 6:39
7. "If You Could See Me Now" Tadd Dameron, Carl Sigman 6:02
Total length: 42:35
Personnel:
John Abercrombie – guitar, electric mandolin, co-producer
John Scofield – guitar, co-producer
George Mraz – bass
Peter Donald – drums
Saturday, June 22, 2019
Grant Green - 1965 [1990] "Matador"
Matador is an album by American jazz guitarist Grant Green featuring performances recorded in 1964 but not released on the Japanese Blue Note label until 1979. The album was finally reissued in the U.S. on CD in 1990 with one bonus track. It was also reissued on vinyl in 2010, with a different cover.
Grant Green recorded so much high-quality music for Blue Note during the first half of the '60s that a number of excellent sessions went unissued at the time. Even so, it's still hard to figure out why 1964's Matador was only released in Japan in 1979, prior to its U.S. CD reissue in 1990 -- it's a classic and easily one of Green's finest albums. In contrast to the soul-jazz and jazz-funk for which Green is chiefly remembered, Matador is a cool-toned, straight-ahead modal workout that features some of Green's most advanced improvisation, even more so than his sessions with Larry Young. Part of the reason for that is that Green is really pushed by his stellar backing unit: pianist McCoy Tyner, bassist Bob Cranshaw, and drummer Elvin Jones. Not only is Green leading a group that features one-half of the classic Coltrane Quartet, but he even takes on Coltrane's groundbreaking arrangement of "My Favorite Things" -- and more than holds his own over ten-plus minutes. In fact, every track on the album is around that length; there are extended explorations of two Green originals ("Green Jeans" and the title track) and Duke Pearson's Middle Eastern-tinged "Bedouin," plus the bonus cut "Wives and Lovers," a swinging Bacharach pop tune not on the Japanese issue. The group interplay is consistently strong, but really the spotlight falls chiefly on Green, whose crystal-clear articulation flourishes in this setting. And, for all of Matador's advanced musicality, it ends up being surprisingly accessible. This sound may not be Green's claim to fame, but Matador remains one of his greatest achievements.
The record teams Green with two-thirds of saxophonist John Coltrane's rhythm section of the time—pianist McCoy Tyner and drummer Elvin Jones—plus bassist Bob Cranshaw. The result is nothing less than Green's best album.
The quartet kicks off with the Green original, "Matador," a tune of tempered momentum with Green spinning off his trademark crisp, biting lines over the easy swinging rhythm section. The warm, energetic yet controlled mood may have inspired the tune's title, although the repeated theme at open and close also rumbles with an impressionistic Spanish feel, recalling the bullfight's pasodoble. (Green seemed somewhat enthused with—or, at least, fascinated by—bullfighting at the time, penning the likewise exotic, though more heated, "Plaza de Toros" for organist Larry Young's Into Somethin' album, recorded in November 1964, which also features Green's playing.) Tyner sweeps the sands with his trademark dusting of keys on the number—fleet, supple high-end runs, punctuated by the shifting of deep chordal blocks—creating a fluid, calming effect. And, in spots, hinting at the melody to come on track 2.
If there's an aspect that pushes Matador toward the infamous, it's this second tune: a go at the Coltrane "theme," "My Favorite Things," with half of the saxophonist's band in tow. It took some chutzpah not only to attempt it, but for Green to make the tune his own in this setting without charging decidedly and awkwardly into some far off field of free-jazz experimentation. Green's tone is full, his feel relaxed, as he breezes through the melodic turns before attacking his solo with increased grit and chop, while never losing the comfortable rhythmic feel. His solo stretches out bar after bar, building its intensity unhurriedly through waves of repeatedly sketched chordal figures and bluesy, two-note hammering—a wholly satisfying, sustained and strong release of emotion that culminates naturally with a return to the melody. The Tyner solo that follows is more lively and fluid than his turn on the 1961 Coltrane recording, implying an active engagement with these favorite things rather than the heavy, harmonic clang felt from things lost or slipping away. Still, the tune is almost impossible to cover without relaying something of the anxiety that knits into the feelings we attach to that which we possess, or would like to.
"Green Jeans," another of the guitarist's originals, moves the record into lighter, more amiable fare. Both Green and Tyner solo more freely than on the previous two tracks—Green jangling even in a fit of joyous momentum—to stretch the playful melody to its fullest effect. Duke Pearson's "Bedouin," however, returns the mood to somberness for the close, invoking, as Michael Cuscuna indicates in the liner notes, the Asiatic feel of the nomadic Bedouins. Green's solo here reprises the repetition of arpeggiated figures used to such fine effect in "My Favorite Things." But the highlight is Jones' lone solo of the album, stepping directly from Tyner's sweeping fluidity to craft a wholly musical, polyrhythmic statement that follows an organic progression—or regression—into the most elemental of drumming's voices, ending in a tom-tom beat that wholly deconstructs the tune. When the group joins Jones to restate the theme the melody feels rejuvenated, recreated.
https://jazz-rock-fusion-guitar.blogspot.com/search?q=grant+green
Track listing:
"Matador" (Green) – 10:51
"My Favorite Things" (Oscar Hammerstein II, Richard Rodgers) – 10:23
"Green Jeans" (Green) – 9:10
"Bedouin" (Pearson) – 11:41
"Wives and Lovers" (Bacharach, David) – 9:01 Bonus track on CD reissue
Recorded on May 20 (tracks 1-4) & June 12 (track 5), 1964.
Personnel:
Grant Green - guitar
McCoy Tyner - piano
Bob Cranshaw - bass
Elvin Jones - drums
Grant Green recorded so much high-quality music for Blue Note during the first half of the '60s that a number of excellent sessions went unissued at the time. Even so, it's still hard to figure out why 1964's Matador was only released in Japan in 1979, prior to its U.S. CD reissue in 1990 -- it's a classic and easily one of Green's finest albums. In contrast to the soul-jazz and jazz-funk for which Green is chiefly remembered, Matador is a cool-toned, straight-ahead modal workout that features some of Green's most advanced improvisation, even more so than his sessions with Larry Young. Part of the reason for that is that Green is really pushed by his stellar backing unit: pianist McCoy Tyner, bassist Bob Cranshaw, and drummer Elvin Jones. Not only is Green leading a group that features one-half of the classic Coltrane Quartet, but he even takes on Coltrane's groundbreaking arrangement of "My Favorite Things" -- and more than holds his own over ten-plus minutes. In fact, every track on the album is around that length; there are extended explorations of two Green originals ("Green Jeans" and the title track) and Duke Pearson's Middle Eastern-tinged "Bedouin," plus the bonus cut "Wives and Lovers," a swinging Bacharach pop tune not on the Japanese issue. The group interplay is consistently strong, but really the spotlight falls chiefly on Green, whose crystal-clear articulation flourishes in this setting. And, for all of Matador's advanced musicality, it ends up being surprisingly accessible. This sound may not be Green's claim to fame, but Matador remains one of his greatest achievements.
The record teams Green with two-thirds of saxophonist John Coltrane's rhythm section of the time—pianist McCoy Tyner and drummer Elvin Jones—plus bassist Bob Cranshaw. The result is nothing less than Green's best album.
The quartet kicks off with the Green original, "Matador," a tune of tempered momentum with Green spinning off his trademark crisp, biting lines over the easy swinging rhythm section. The warm, energetic yet controlled mood may have inspired the tune's title, although the repeated theme at open and close also rumbles with an impressionistic Spanish feel, recalling the bullfight's pasodoble. (Green seemed somewhat enthused with—or, at least, fascinated by—bullfighting at the time, penning the likewise exotic, though more heated, "Plaza de Toros" for organist Larry Young's Into Somethin' album, recorded in November 1964, which also features Green's playing.) Tyner sweeps the sands with his trademark dusting of keys on the number—fleet, supple high-end runs, punctuated by the shifting of deep chordal blocks—creating a fluid, calming effect. And, in spots, hinting at the melody to come on track 2.
If there's an aspect that pushes Matador toward the infamous, it's this second tune: a go at the Coltrane "theme," "My Favorite Things," with half of the saxophonist's band in tow. It took some chutzpah not only to attempt it, but for Green to make the tune his own in this setting without charging decidedly and awkwardly into some far off field of free-jazz experimentation. Green's tone is full, his feel relaxed, as he breezes through the melodic turns before attacking his solo with increased grit and chop, while never losing the comfortable rhythmic feel. His solo stretches out bar after bar, building its intensity unhurriedly through waves of repeatedly sketched chordal figures and bluesy, two-note hammering—a wholly satisfying, sustained and strong release of emotion that culminates naturally with a return to the melody. The Tyner solo that follows is more lively and fluid than his turn on the 1961 Coltrane recording, implying an active engagement with these favorite things rather than the heavy, harmonic clang felt from things lost or slipping away. Still, the tune is almost impossible to cover without relaying something of the anxiety that knits into the feelings we attach to that which we possess, or would like to.
"Green Jeans," another of the guitarist's originals, moves the record into lighter, more amiable fare. Both Green and Tyner solo more freely than on the previous two tracks—Green jangling even in a fit of joyous momentum—to stretch the playful melody to its fullest effect. Duke Pearson's "Bedouin," however, returns the mood to somberness for the close, invoking, as Michael Cuscuna indicates in the liner notes, the Asiatic feel of the nomadic Bedouins. Green's solo here reprises the repetition of arpeggiated figures used to such fine effect in "My Favorite Things." But the highlight is Jones' lone solo of the album, stepping directly from Tyner's sweeping fluidity to craft a wholly musical, polyrhythmic statement that follows an organic progression—or regression—into the most elemental of drumming's voices, ending in a tom-tom beat that wholly deconstructs the tune. When the group joins Jones to restate the theme the melody feels rejuvenated, recreated.
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Track listing:
"Matador" (Green) – 10:51
"My Favorite Things" (Oscar Hammerstein II, Richard Rodgers) – 10:23
"Green Jeans" (Green) – 9:10
"Bedouin" (Pearson) – 11:41
"Wives and Lovers" (Bacharach, David) – 9:01 Bonus track on CD reissue
Recorded on May 20 (tracks 1-4) & June 12 (track 5), 1964.
Personnel:
Grant Green - guitar
McCoy Tyner - piano
Bob Cranshaw - bass
Elvin Jones - drums