Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Joe Henderson-Mode For Joe




Great record for vibraphone enthusiasts. "Mode For Joe" is the third Henderson-led session released as part of the outstanding RVG remaster series, and the last session he recorded for Blue Note Records.
For this date, Henderson assembled a seven-piece band -- a fairly large band by his standards. The players include big names like Lee Morgan, Curtis Fuller, Bobby Hutcherson, Ron Carter and Joe Chambers. But it is pianist Cedar Walton who is the standout player on this session. Every one of his solo makes you stop and take notice.


Three of the 6 master takes are bona-fide classics: "A Shade of Jade", "Mode For Joe", and "Carribean Fire Dance". This makes Mode For Joe an excellent record.
Link 1
Link 2

Tracks:
1. A Shade Of Jade
2. Mode For Joe
3. Black
4. Caribbean Fire Dance
5. Granted
6. Free Wheelin'
7. Black - (alternate take, CD only)

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Grateful Dead-Truckin' up to Buffalo


I figured I'd post this today.  Its Brent Mydland's birthday and his playing on this album/show is definately something to talk about.  Its too bad he is gone and he could have done alot more with this band.  For me, he was the best keyboardist they had.  Great vocals and great songwrting.  After 1980 The Grateful Dead were on a downward decline.  When they hired Brent it put a spark into this band that never will be forgotten.  Thanks Brent. we miss you.



Disc 1
1. Bertha
2. Greatest Story Ever Told
3. Cold Rain and Snow
4. Walkin' Blues
5. Row Jimmy
6. When I Paint My Masterpiece
7. Stagger Lee
8. Looks Like Rain
9. Deal
10. Touch of Grey
11. Man Smart, Woman Smarter



Disc 2
1. Ship Of Fools
2. Playing in the Band
3. Terrapin Station
4. Drums
5. Space
6. I Will Take You Home
7. All Along the Watchtower
8. Morning Dew
9. Not Fade Away
10. U.S. Blues
Link

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Kiss-First Demos 1973


Its almost Halloween........so why not?
By the way these demos sound better than their albums




Kiss:
Paul, Peter, Ace and that bass player.

1. Deuce
2. Cold Gin
3. Strutter
4. Watchin You
5. Black Diamond
6. Let Me Know (Bell Sound Studios)
7. 100,000 Years (Bell Sound Studios)
8. Let Me Go, Rock 'N' Roll (Bell Sound Studios)
9. Firehouse (Bell Sound Studios)

and now you can watch the bass player catch his hair on fire.

Fragile-Phantom


The 9th album from this Japanese power trio band. Their initial gigs being at the famed Roppongi Pit-inn jazz club in Japan. They definately sound like they were influenced by Tribal Tech and Scott Henderson. There is very little information I can find on this band. The trio can really make some colorful sounds and is heavy on the synthesizer. Kind of sounds like Cyber fusion. They are virtually unknown to any other country besides Japan. They came out in 1992 and had a small following. Guitarist Mike Stern was the engineer for the album "No Wet" and that was recorded in NYC. The guitar player for this band, Koichi Yabori, is a self-name Pat Metheny freak and often will imitate Pat's tone's on stage.  This is a good album.  Grab it.

Link 1
Link 2
Link 3



Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Steve Hackett - Time Lapse

This live album is a good introduction to ex-Genesis guitarist Steve Hackett's solo career. Half was recorded in 1981 and half in 1990. Hackett's best solo work had sort of an uber-Genesis sound--he built a wall of sound from keyboards and then sliced through it with a wailing guitar. Most of Hackett's "greatest hits" are here: "Spectral Mornings", "Every Day", "The Steppes", and "Ace of Wands". The only missing track that really SHOULD be here is "Narnia". Only three of the 14 tracks include vocals, and one of those, "Hope I Don't Wake", is the weakest track here. These renditions don't vary much from the studio versions. One that does is a run through the first half of Genesis' "In That Quiet Earth", with extended guitar, synthesizer, and flute solos.  Excellent Album.



Steve Hackett-Guitars, Vocals
John Hackett-Flute, Guitar, Bass Pedals
Ian Ellis-Bass
Julian Colbeck-Keys
Fudge Smith-Drums
Chas Cronk-Bass
Nick Magnus-Keys
Ian Mosley-Drums

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Joe Cocker-Live In LA


This album is a selection of the best live recordings of concerts performed by Joe Cocker in 1972.
This is an immense album. How can so many fantastic songs, all sung to a level unmatched, be huddled together into one package. "Early in the Morning" Cocker's voice comes through grunting and singing real blues. "St. James Infirmary" amazing. great guitar solo. "Midnight Rider" and "Love the one you're with" two great covers that he changes up very nice.


If you understand the blues, you'll understand the album. Without doubt, this album is equal to Mad Dogs and therefore there has never been a better album than
this.

Password-zinhof

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Aretha Franklin-Live at the Fillmore West (Deluxe)



Aretha Franklin had been a major R&B voice since her first Atlantic album, and was considered a major star, after Grammy awards and TV appearances, but the 3 night booking at the Fillmore was designed to cement her "crossover appeal to Rock audiences.
Those 3 February 1971 nights in San Francisco came as Aretha was fighting back from both professional and personal low points - sales had slumped as Aretha went through a divorce from Ted White in late 1969, losing both her husband and manager as a result. They were to provide a springboard which saw Aretha fly as high as ever, with the single release of "Bridge Over Troubled Water" in April 1971, which went Gold.



Atlantic recorded all 3 nights, taking most of the original album from the first night, other than the encore from the final performance when Ray Charles joins Aretha for a duet on "Spirit In the Dark". All those tracks are here on disc one, plus the songs that didn't make the final cut and alternate versions on disc 2. In fact, there was another live album culled from these sessions for King Curtis, who was both opening act and support for Aretha. When you add in the Memphis Horns as further backing for the Queen of Soul, it is hardly surprising that she conquered the Fillmore.
Tracklist Disc: 1 (Original Album)
1. Respect
2. Love The One You're With
3. Bridge Over Troubled Water
4. Eleanor Rigby
5. Make It With You
6. Don't Play That Song
7. Dr Feelgood
8. Spirit In The Dark
9. Spirit In The Dark (Ft. Ray Charles)
10. Reach Out And Touch (Somebody's Hand)

Tracklist Disc: 2 (Alternate Takes and Unused Songs)
1. Respect
2. Call Me
3. Mixed Up Girl
4. Love The One You're With
5. Bridge Over Troubled Water
6. Share Your Love With Me
7. Eleanor Rigby
8. Make It With You
9. You're All I Need To Get By
10. Don't Play That Song
11. Dr Feelgood
12. Spirit In The Dark
13. Spirit In The Dark (Reprise)
Link

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Trio Beyond: Saudades

Guitar: John Scofield
Organ: Larry Goldings
Drums: Jack Dejohnette

Three superb musicians in top form, in an excellent tribute to the great Tony Williams. I particularly enjoyed hearing Larry Goldings in this band; he plays more aggressively and "outside" in this setting than what I have heard from him previously.

Nothing can touch the original Tony Williams Lifetime, but in today's world, this recording is a very exciting breath of fresh air. This is strong stuff, not made for a lot of analysis. Turn it up loud and sit back.
Part 1 Part 2

Monday, October 4, 2010

School Of The Arts-with T Lavitz, Frank Gambale, Steve Morse, Jerry Goodman, John Patitucci and Dave Weckl


T Lavitz - Piano
Frank Gambale - Acoustic Guitar
Steve Morse - Acoustic Guitar
Jerry Goodman - Violin
John Patitucci - Acoustic and Electric Bass
Dave Weckl - Drums and Percussion

The brainchild of keyboardist extraordinaire T Lavitz (Dixie Dregs, Jazz Is Dead), SOTA culls the supreme talents of such fusion and progressive instrumental music heavyweights as drummer Dave Weckl (Chick Corea) bassist John Patitucci (Corea, Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter), guitarist Frank Gambale (Corea, Vital Information), electric violinist Jerry Goodman of Mahavishnu Orchestra, Shadowfax, and Dixie Dregs fame, and T s longtime friend, Dregs mastermind, and Magna Carta label mate, monster axeman Steve Morse.
School of the Arts is different from every album I ve ever done as a leader, says Lavitz

With SOTA, Lavitz (with four decades experience in the music biz having played with such wide-ranging musicians as Widespread Panic, Bill Bruford, Billy Cobham, Nils Lofgren, Pat Benatar, Jefferson Starship, Mother s Finest, Dave Fiuczynski, Peter Himmelman, Dennis Chambers, Jeff Berlin, and Scott Henderson) is top dog, playing acoustic piano (an instrument close to his heart), and composing most of the material for the band s debut.

Underscoring Lavitz s empathy and musical instincts, is the keyboardist s ability to spearhead and hold together the SOTA project, despite each member s busy schedule: Morse is constantly touring with Deep Purple (occasionally with the Dregs); Jerry Goodman is an in-demand electric violin trailblazer; Patitucci and Weckl crisscross the globe with various artists and solo work; and likewise for Gambale, who recently finished a tour with Billy Cobham.


The music is definitely interactive, Lavitz says. When I take a solo, there s Frank Gambale answering me, like something you d hear on a gig.

Case in point: the Afro-Latin acoustic jazz tune Gambashwari. Sinewy guitar and piano chords/notes weave around one another in syncopated patterns, stating main, contra and counterpoint melodies. It s breezy, not cheesy, jazz -- the kind that possesses sophistication without being elitist, boring or unlistenable. It s utterly infectious jazz-fusion with aspirations toward chamber or classical music, with rock s reckless abandon simmering just under the surface.

Other tracks include, High Falutin Blues (an appropriate title for a song that crosses the boundaries of country, blues, and jazz), Like This (listen as Weckl locks into Patitucci s sparse bass line all the while commenting on Goodman s and T s jazzy/bluegrass-esque soloing acrobatics), and Teaser (a Chick Corea-style acoustic rocker, complete with trill-filled piano performances, blanketed by Weckl s silky stream of beats). Dave Weckl laid down some of the best drum tracks I ve heard in a while, Lavitz says.

Despite the obvious and some might say inevitable chops heard on this record, the high level of musicianship never detracts from the overall flow of the compositions. In fact, the record has a ring of newfound freedom; of a songwriter allowed to spread his compositional wings, which recalls the artistic creativity and motivation that drove Lavitz to create his 1986 solo debut, Storytime an album produced in the wake of a Dregs breakup. I am very excited about this, because not only did I get to write the bulk of the music, but I produced, played and played only acoustic, says Lavitz. While it has elements from other recordings I've done, it seems, at least to me, to stand out as being very different.