Record Reviews
11 Reviews Found. Use search to find more reviews or follow the links in the review text.
  | ORNETTE COLEMAN ~ BEAUTY IS A RARE THING: THE COMPLETE ATLANTIC RECORDINGS RHINO 71410 (Barcode: 081227141028) ~ USA ~ Jazz Recorded: 1959 - 1961 Released: 1993
This magnificent Box Set includes some of the most revolutionary music ever recorded on this planet. Ornette ColemanFind albums by this artist’s music dropped on the jazz scene with the force of an atom bomb by the end of the 1950s. Although other great jazz pioneers, especially John ColtraneFind albums by this artist and Miles DavisFind albums by this artist, were already slowly approaching the free / Avant-Garde jazz idiom, Coleman’s bold and fearless attack on the conventional jazz form was completely radical and innovative, splitting the jazz community immediately into the pro and contra camps, with discussions as heated as they can get. Coleman was ridiculed and called bad names by critics and listeners alike, who failed to comprehend his prophetic statement, and it took many years before this music was widely accepted into the jazz canon and treated with the proper esteem. Recorded between May 1959 and March 1961 (less than 2 years!) this music includes all 9 Coleman’s albums released on Atlantic (The Shape Of Jazz To ComeFind albums with this title, Change Of The CenturyFind albums with this title, This Is Our MusicFind albums with this title, Free JazzFind albums with this title, Ornette!Find albums with this title, Ornette On TenorFind albums with this title, The Art Of The ImprovisersFind albums with this title, TwinsFind albums with this title and To Whom Who Keeps A RecordFind albums with this title), as well as previously unreleased material and selections from Gunther SchullerFind albums by this artist’s Jazz AbstractionsFind albums with this title featuring Coleman. As usual in such Box Sets, the music is presented in chronological recording order. As to the musicians, most of the music was recorded in quartet setting, with Coleman and trumpeter Don CherryFind albums by this artist as the permanent core of the group and various bass / drums rhythm sections, which included Charlie HadenFind albums by this artist, Scott LaFaroFind albums by this artist and Jimmy GarrisonFind albums by this artist on bass and Billy HigginsFind albums by this artist and Ed BlackwellFind albums by this artist on drums. The legendary “Free Jazz” session features a double quartet and includes Eric DolphyFind albums by this artist on bass clarinet and Freddie HubbardFind albums by this artist on trumpet. There is hardly any need to go into the description of the music itself - whole books have been written on the subject and the music is indescribable anyway. What is important however, is the fact that any respectable jazz collection could never be considered comprehensive if it didn’t include this music. Absolutely essential!
| Updated: 12/04/2019Posted: | CD 6 Box Set Remastered Bonus Tracks Essential Recommend To A Friend |
  | JOHN COLTRANE ~ A LOVE SUPREME: LIVE IN SEATTLE IMPULSE! 602438499977 (Barcode: 602438499977) ~ USA ~ Free Jazz / Improvised Music Recorded: 1965 Released: 2021
This is an archival album by iconic American Jazz saxophonist / composer / bandleader / visionary John ColtraneFind albums by this artist, captured live on October 2, 1965 at the Penthouse Jazz club in Seattle with his septet, which also includes saxophonists Pharoah SandersFind albums by this artist and Carlos WardFind albums by this artist, pianist McCoy TynerFind albums by this artist, bassists Jimmy GarrisonFind albums by this artist and Donald GarrettFind albums by this artist and drummer Elvin JonesFind albums by this artist. The album presents eight tracks, the four-part “A Love Supreme” suite and four interludes.
The music was recorded informally by local Seattle saxophonist and educator Joe BrazilFind albums by this artist and the tapes were in his private collection for many years, until they were discovered in 2013 but released only eight years later. The recording is pretty rough and primitive, using just two microphones directly plugged into the tape recorder, resulting in a highly unbalanced sound mix with the drums dominating most of the music.
Coltrane very rarely performed the suite live after it was recorded in the studio in December of 1964, and there was only one available live recording of it before these tapes were discovered. This is not really surprising considering Coltrane’s very special relation to the suite, which he considered highly spiritual. The decision to perform it on the last day of the Seattle club residence was most probably entirely spontaneous, but the musicians in Coltrane’s septet were obviously not taken aback by that decision and played along as if it was a completely natural one.
The music is, despite the difficulty to be able to hear it properly, absolutely stunning, demonstrating and peak of Coltrane’s Free Jazz period, just before he entered the final “wall of sound” period. It is not difficult to distinguish between Coltrane’s and Sanders’ solos of course, as their approach was quite different. Tyner, whenever heard, plays Godly, as usual, with his staccato bombardment of the keyboard, and yet beautifully melodically at all times. The double bass lineup allows the rhythm section to expand its role and using the bow, as well as solo extensively during the Interludes and Jones is what he is, masterly keeping time and playing around the time all at once.
Overall, this is a superb document of American Free Jazz at its absolute peak, as well as another “missing link” in the seemingly endless Coltrane discography, which is one of the most important one-man manifestations of American Jazz ever. The bad sound balance gets all forgotten when the music lashes at the listener’s ears, and every split second of the music is an incredible evidence of Genius incarnate.
| Updated: 08/07/2024Posted: 28/02/2022 | CD 1 Mini-Sleeve Recommend To A Friend |
  | JOHN COLTRANE ~ A LOVE SUPREME: THE COMPLETE MASTERS (SUPER DELUXE EDITION) IMPULSE! 602547489470 (Barcode: 602547489470) ~ USA ~ Jazz Recorded: 1964 - 1965 Released: 2015
This is the singular most important piece of music ever recorded.
Everything else I or anybody else has to say about it is of secondary importance to be honest, so I´ll just stick to the facts and a few personal reflections.
This version of the "A Love SupremeFind albums with this title" album is the second expansion of the original album released in 1965, which featured four tracks (called "Acknowledgment", "Resolution", "Pursuance" and "Psalm") recorded on December 9, 1964 by the legendary quartet led by American saxophonist / composer John ColtraneFind albums by this artist, which also included pianist McCoy TynerFind albums by this artist, bassist Jimmy GarrisonFind albums by this artist and drummer Elvin JonesFind albums by this artist.
The 2002 Deluxe Edition added to the original album on the first CD a second CD comprising of "A Love Supreme" recorded live at Festival Mondial du Jazz Antibes, Juan-les-Pins, France on July 26, 1965, and also a couple of alternate takes from the quartet session recorded on December 9, 1964 and a couple of alternate takes from the sextet session with saxophonist Archie SheppFind albums by this artist and second bassist Art DavisFind albums by this artist, recorded on December 10, 1964, which attempted to record the same music but resulted in recording only six takes of "Acknowledgment".
This 2015 Super Deluxe Edition is expanded to three CDs and includes in addition to all the tracks of the Deluxe Edition nine previously unreleased alternate takes, five of which originate from the quartet session and four from the sextet session. It also includes an informative little book with many photographs and handwritten remarks and musical notation by Coltrane, which is highly educational.
God only knows if more recordings connected to these sessions will pop up in the future; experienced record collectors know very well to treat the word "complete" with extreme caution and disbelieve. In the meantime we are of course grateful to have access to this Godly music and enjoy it to the max.
I have been listening to this music continuously from the day it was released, which is now over forty years in the past. I grew up with it, lived with it and now am getting old with it and never for a moment could I imagine it to be absent from the soundtrack of my life. In retrospect this music encompasses everything I consider essential in music: it has great melodies, it is mesmerizing from start to finish, it includes the entire Jazz tradition, from Ragtime to Free, it connects with Music from other Cultures, it is deeply spiritual and intellectual at the same time, and of course it is absolutely super-humanly performed.
I often say that all music created after Coltrane, as good as it might be, and it often is insanely good, never really expanded the boundaries of music again. Coltrane was the Messenger, and he simply said it all. This does not mean of course that new music shouldn´t be made; of course not, it simply means that there is a scale of reference, which we can always apply to music, in order to properly appreciate and evaluate it.
Side Note: Today is Valentine´s Day, so what could be more appropriate than "A Love Supreme"! But seriously, this is the 5,000th album review that I write for the "Soundtrack Of My Life" site, a number which probably does mean very little to most people but it encapsulates years of writing about music, an activity I love to be involved with more than anything else. Hopefully some people are also reading this…
| Updated: 20/05/2018Posted: 14/02/2016 | CD 3 Mini-Sleeve Remastered Bonus Tracks Essential Recommend To A Friend |
  | JOHN COLTRANE ~ BLUE WORLD IMPULSE! 602577626524 (Barcode: 602577626524) ~ USA ~ Jazz Recorded: 1964 Released: 2019
This is an archival album by the legendary American Jazz saxophonist / composer / bandleader John ColtraneFind albums by this artist, recorded with his classic quartet featuring pianist McCoy TynerFind albums by this artist, bassist Jimmy GarrisonFind albums by this artist and drummer Elvin JonesFind albums by this artist. The album presents eight short tracks, which are five original compositions by Coltrane, one with three takes, one with two takes and the other three with one take each. The music was recorded on June 24, 1964 between the recordings sessions for the “CrescentFind albums with this title” and “A Love SupremeFind albums with this title” albums. The recording is in mono, since it was about to serve as a soundtrack to the film “Le chat dans le sac” by the Canadian director Gilles GroulxFind albums by this artist, released later that year. It was the only soundtrack recording by Coltrane. The music remained unreleased for fifty-five years!
Although the music is, as everything recorded by Coltrane, sublime, the album introduces nothing new to Coltrane’s recorded legacy. All the compositions were already previously recorded and the music offers some of the most “well behaved” Coltrane performances, which were actually out of sync with his stylistic approach at the time of the recording, obviously since the music was intended for a soundtrack and highly improvised Free Jazz was way too early to appear on the screen. That said, Coltrane and the quartet at the apex of their powers and the music swings wonderfully with the saxophone soaring highly above.
Overall, this is definitely a worthy addition to the extended Coltrane discography, perhaps less essential than his other studio recording of that period, but still blessed by his enormous and unique talent. For Coltrane completest this album is of course an absolute must!
| Updated: 08/07/2024Posted: 20/01/2024 | CD 1 Mini-Sleeve Recommend To A Friend |
  | JOHN COLTRANE ~ ONE DOWN, ONE UP: LIVE AT THE HALF NOTE IMPULSE! 602498621431 (Barcode: 602498621431) ~ USA ~ Free Jazz / Improvised Music Recorded: 1965 Released: 2005
This is an archival album by iconic American saxophonist / composer John ColtraneFind albums by this artist and his legendary quartet with pianist McCoy TynerFind albums by this artist, bassist Jimmy GarrisonFind albums by this artist and drummer Elvin JonesFind albums by this artist. The album presents two sessions recorded on March 26 and May 7, 1965, recorded by the radio station WABC-FM, which used to broadcast the Friday concerts under the “Portraits Of Jazz” moniker. These two sessions were recorded in between the two studio sessions that resulted in the “The John Coltrane Quartet PlaysFind albums with this title” album.
Each of the two sessions presents just two lengthy improvisations, together four tracks, lasting between 12+ to 27+ minutes. The title track, which is also the longest track on this album, is also the longest Coltrane solo ever recorded, most of which is a duo between him and Jones.
There is no sense of writing about this music really… Endless stream of words was already written about Coltrane and his music: articles, books, documentaries, etc., none of which are able to even come close to describe his music and the genius of his creative process. Obviously sometimes music is just beyond words. Therefore, I’ll just share my retrospective reflections here.
1965 was undoubtedly the year when the music of Coltrane peaked, or at least the music he played, which was still connected to his Jazz roots and tradition and before his rapid musical progression will take him into interstellar dimensions and his music would become completely spontaneously improvised.
For the sharp-eared listeners it should be fascinating to note the differences between the music played just six weeks apart, a seemingly completely insignificant period of time in a life of a musician, but in case of Coltrane, who was already traveling at the speed of light, the transformation is colossal. His meditative playing and the cry of anguish he produced were already the Coltrane of the last two years of his life, which led to the disintegration of the classic quartet captured here.
Coltrane played in this tiny / dinky NY club for a ridiculously small audience, whereas in Europe and Japan his concerts were attended by thousands of appreciative fans. That much for the American Jazz scene…
And of course the most daunting of all the reflections about Jazz music: this album proves beyond the shadow of a doubt that the development of Free Jazz / Improvised Music reached its peak in the mid-1960s and nothing, I mean NOTHING, happened in that idiom, which might be considered as expanding the limits of that music ever since. The idiom still exists but it is sadly completely stagnant.
Since these recordings were not included in any of the Coltrane Box Sets and were only released for the first time forty years after they were recorded, this is an absolute must for every Coltrane follower.
| Updated: 08/07/2024Posted: 06/08/2021 | CD 2 Digipak Remastered Essential Recommend To A Friend |
  | JOHN COLTRANE ~ THE COMPLETE 1961 VILLAGE VANGUARD RECORDINGS IMPULSE! 232 (Barcode: 011105023221) ~ USA ~ Jazz Recorded: 1961 Released: 1997
When this music was recorded in November of 1961 I was only 10 years old and yet it changed my life forever. Living in (Socialist) Poland, my access to contemporary (at the time) jazz originating in the US was pretty limited and the only beacon of light was the daily Willis ConoverFind albums by this artist’s radio jazz program on Voice Of America, beamed from across the Iron Curtain. Millions of Eastern European listeners would risk freedom (listening to VOA was a criminal act then) to gain freedom, myself included. These broadcasts changed the life of countless people and particularly in Poland would eventually be a dominant factor in the process of forming a burgeoning and extremely fruitful local jazz scene. Many hours of my early childhood were spent with myself standing on a conductor’s podium (e sledge), in front of an imaginary orchestra playing inside the enormous radio (a pre WW II antique). Since classical music was less censored and sponsored by the Establishment, it was there for us to enjoy most of it of very high quality. I remember listening for hours at end to the annual Chopin competition, which was Poland’s most prestigious music event, getting to know his music inside out before I even knew anything about him. My Mother encouraged my “conducting” aspirations warmly, supplementing them with occasional background information. But the discovery of jazz and its strange convoluting patterns and unfamiliar rhythms was a revelation. I just couldn’t get enough of it and every new artist or piece of music was an instant bliss. By the time I was about to hear John ColtraneFind albums by this artist for the first time I was already familiar with the music of Duke EllingtonFind albums by this artist, Count BasieFind albums by this artist, Charlie ParkerFind albums by this artist and Dizzie GillespieFind albums by this artist (thanks to Mr. Conover). Conover, in contrast to many of his peers (who were stuck in be-bop or some earlier jazz sub-genre for the rest of their lives), was remarkably open-minded and understood the genius of Coltrane and his visionary contribution to the development of the Jazz Art form. He therefore featured every new Coltrane album as soon as it was released. So here I was, 10 years old, some time in early 1962, listening to the Village Vanguard sessions – an experience equivalent to a 10,000 Volts electricity shock. My life would definitely be never the same again. I hope these personal reminiscences don’t put you off too much, but I just couldn’t resist the temptation. Taking the time-travel express to now here are my comments about this music from a “45 years later” point of view. In 1961 Coltrane left AtlanticFind albums on this label (his second label, PrestigeFind albums on this label being the first) and signed a contract with Impulse!Find albums on this label, the new and ambitious jazz label run by producer Bob ThieleFind albums by this artist, where he would stay for the rest of his life. Coltrane was already following a path (mostly subconsciously) which would lead him to the edge of the known jazz explorations and beyond. His monumental Atlantic albums like Giant Steps and My Favorite Things were just a glimpse of things to come. Coltrane felt that Thiele would allow him to speed up the process of reaching the quest of musical enlightenment by allowing him total artistic freedom and supporting him all the way and he was of course right. The extensive volume of music recorded for Impulse! in the span of almost 7 years right up to his death would become the most important musical legacy of the 20th Century, so innovative and groundbreaking that it is still a mystery to many contemporary listeners and musicologists today. Coltrane’s first recording for Impulse! (in the spring of 1961) would be the Africa / Brass sessions, an ambitious project involving a large ensemble of the most gifted players on the scene (Freddie HubbardFind albums by this artist, Booker LittleFind albums by this artist, Eric DolphyFind albums by this artist and many others) – see The Complete Africa / Brass SessionsFind albums with this title album, another essential Coltrane release. These sessions introduce several new elements in Coltrane’s music, like Far-Eastern motifs, African rhythms and other ethnic influences. In November of 1961 Thiele decided to record Coltrane live, using the 4 nights booking at the NY club The Village Vanguard (where many jazz albums were recorded live) for this purpose. The booking was for a John Coltrane Quintet and it was only natural that the Quintet would include Eric Dolphy, whom Coltrane knew, respected and played with earlier. The legendary Quartet (with McCoy TynerFind albums by this artist, Jimmy GarrisonFind albums by this artist and Elvin JonesFind albums by this artist) was not entirely crystallized at the time, so Coltrane and Thiele decided to expand the line-up (on some takes) to include an oud player (Ahmed Abdul-MalikFind albums by this artist) and alternative bassist (Reggie WorkmanFind albums by this artist) and drummer (Roy HaynesFind albums by this artist). Since this music was recorded for a future release Thiele (as any produce would do) recorded several takes of each tune, some with an alternating line-up. This 4CDs Box Set includes all the music that was recorded during these four days (mind you not all the music that was played, as some of it was not recorded hence the “complete” being not entirely true) in the exact order it was recorded. This music was to be released later on two albums (Live At The Village Vanguard and The Other Village Vanguard Tapes) as well as parts of other albums (Impressions) and collections. Collected here together for the first time, this is a monumental piece of jazz history and an unforgettable musical experience. Coltrane’s circular breathing technique and his “wall of sound” approach are clearly evident here for the first time in their full glory. The comparison of the different versions of the same tunes are both fundamental and clairvoyant examples of the “one time experience” that every jazz performance essentially is. The power, the vision, the super-human strength of will of the Master and Prophet (please excuse the almost religious references) that Coltrane was, are here for us, his disciples, to discover, study, revere and bequest to future generations. This Box Set is something one has in one’s record collection for life. It is not only timeless, but also constantly evolving in parallel to one’s private (musical) evolution. Listening to it time after time (especially after a long period of abstention) will be revealing and constantly surprising. It is a superb example of great Art, which keeps alive for eternity, adopting itself to the changing cultural surroundings, and therefore being truly eternal. I can’t imagine anybody, who calls himself a music lover, not owning this music, as naive as this might sound, since I believe there is something in it for everybody. Beyond essential!
| Updated: 26/01/2019Posted: | CD 4 Box Set Oversampling Remastered Bonus Tracks Essential Recommend To A Friend |
  | JOHN COLTRANE ~ THE HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPION: THE COMPLETE ATLANTIC RECORDINGS RHINO 71984 (Barcode: 081227198428) ~ USA ~ Jazz Recorded: 1959 - 1961 Released: 1995
This magnificent Box Set compiles everything John ColtraneFind albums by this artist recorded for AtlanticFind albums on this label – his second long-term recording stint with a label following his PrestigeFind albums on this label period and preceding his final years on Impulse!Find albums on this label. The first 6 CDs include all the 10 Coltrane’s LPs released on Atlantic (Giant StepsFind albums with this title, Coltrane JazzFind albums with this title, My Favorite ThingsFind albums with this title, Bags & TraneFind albums with this title, Olé ColtraneFind albums with this title, Coltrane Plays The BluesFind albums with this title, Coltrane’s SoundFind albums with this title, The Avant-GardeFind albums with this title, The Coltrane LegacyFind albums with this title, Alternate TakesFind albums with this title), but the material is organized in chronological order (by session). The 7th CD adds over an hour of never before released material. All this music was recorded over a period of just over two years (January 1959 – May 1961), but it includes some of the most pivotal Jazz recordings ever. The Atlantic period is a superb document of transition for the Jazz Giant. Stylistically it presents the steady move from Bebop and Hard Bop to Free. Instrumentally it shows the shift from tenor saxophone to soprano saxophone. It also reveals the process of crystallization of Coltrane’s great classic quartet (see The Classic Quartet: Complete Impulse! Studio RecordingsFind albums with this title), whereas by October of 1960 three quarters of the quartet (with McCoy TynerFind albums by this artist on piano and Elvin JonesFind albums by this artist on drums) were already in place and only the bassist Jimmy GarrisonFind albums by this artist was to join soon after. Two of the sessions present here are collaborations with other co-credited Jazz Giants: “Bags & Trane” with the great vibraphonist Milt JacksonFind albums by this artist and “The Avant-Garde” with legendary trumpeter Don CherryFind albums by this artist. The music is of course divine – absolutely nothing I can say about it would ever come close to the experience of actually listening to it. This music influenced every Jazz musician and Jazz lover on earth and left a mark on contemporary music, which has no equals to this day. It also shows Coltrane as a great composer for the first time, with some of his greatest melodies like “Giant Steps” and “Naima”. His interpretation of “My Favorite Things” is of course probably the most commonly known Jazz anthem ever. This sublime music is an integral part of Art’s cannon and an everlasting evidence of human (or perhaps super-human) genius. Absolutely essential!
| Updated: 12/04/2019Posted: | CD 7 Box Set Remastered Bonus Tracks Essential Recommend To A Friend |
  | ROLF + JOACHIM KUHN QUARTET ~ IMPRESSIONS OF NEW YORK MPS 600753227572 (Barcode: 600753227572) ~ GERMANY ~ Free Jazz / Improvised Music Recorded: 1967 Released: 2009
This is a reissue / remaster of the legendary album by the German Kuhn Brothers, clarinetists / composer Rolf KuhnFind albums by this artist and pianist / composer Joachim KuhnFind albums by this artist. The quartet includes also American bassist Jimmy GarrisonFind albums by this artist and Italian drummer Aldo RomanoFind albums by this artist. The album presents two tracks, corresponding to the two sides of the original LP, which are in fact four parts of a suite, which gave the album its name. All the music was co-composed by the both brothers.
Following the unification of the Kuhn Brothers in West Germany, with Joachim leaving the DDR and moving to West Germany, they were invited to perform at the legendary Newport Jazz Festival. Their performance was witnessed by the legendary producer Bob ThieleFind albums by this artist, who invited them to record this album on his iconic Impulse!Find albums on this label label. The album was recorded on July 27, 1967, just a few days following the death and funeral of John ColtraneFind albums by this artist, which the brothers attended, and which had a tremendous impact on the music on this album, considering the fact that Coltrane was the most revered American musician and an instigator of Free Jazz / Improvised Music, as well as the fact that Coltrane’s bassist played on it. This album was the first Impulse! release to feature German Jazz Musicians. The Kuhn Brothers recorded another album for Impulse! some forty-four years later, called “LifelineFind albums with this title”.
The album is an outstanding example of early European Free Jazz / Improvised Music, of the absolutely highest standard and imagination, which took the seeds of American Free Jazz of the period and took them to another plane, way more sophisticated, Artistic and imaginative. The performances are blood-chilling and absolutely unique, in many ways probably exposing the very peak of the Jazz creativity, which to be honest never managed to climb much higher than what can be heard here.
Rolf Kuhn is for me the true hero of this session, considering the fact that he was deeply rooted in American Swing and Mainstream, playing in the US for many years, and yet managed to detach himself from that tradition in such a radical way, which is way more difficult than plunging into Improvising Music straight on, like his younger brother. Obviously, the comparison of his clarinet performances herein with Coltrane’s saxophone playing is immediately a point of interest, as are the piano parts against those of Coltrane’s pianists. Rolf’s death almost two years ago (2022) was a huge personal loss for me, since we have been Friends for so many years and I truly admired his talent and wisdom.
Overall, this is one of the most pivotal Jazz albums in European Jazz, despite the fact that it is only known by relatively very few Jazz listeners. I have owned a copy since day one and listened to this album countless times in the almost sixty years since it was released, and each and every time I managed to discover something new in the music. I can only hope some more listeners will discover it one day, although admittedly it is quite difficult to find a copy.
| Updated: 01/10/2024Posted: 08/07/2024 | CD 1 Oversampling Remastered Essential Recommend To A Friend |
  | JOHN MCLAUGHLIN ~ THE HEART OF THINGS VERVE 539153 (Barcode: 731453915329) ~ UK ~ Jazz-Rock Fusion Recorded: 1997 Released: 1997
Since the late 1960’s John McLaughlinFind albums by this artist’s career enfolded like a continuous success story, moving from one musical hilltop to another: recording with Miles DavisFind albums by this artist, leading the Mahavishnu OrchestraFind albums by this artist, world music excursions with ShaktiFind albums by this artist, etc. – all remarkable achievements. Keeping a position “in the lead” for so many years is never easy, but McLaughlin manages to deliver an amazingly consistent high quality output time after time with elegance and grace. This album is no exception and presents the genius player / composer at his best again. Listening to this album raises almost immediately an attempt to compare the music and the group of musicians playing it to the Mahavishnu Orchestra. Although never formally called by that name, it is indeed a direct continuation of the work McLaughlin did with Mahavishnu about 20+ years earlier – electric Fusion. Of course this group is more mature, slightly more jazz oriented, and definitely much more relaxed and laid back, all for the good. Not that the fire and passion of the original Mahavishnu wasn’t fantastic – it definitely was, but it often ventured into moments of havoc and confusion, which are completely absent here. McLaughlin uses on this recording a set of seasoned and experienced players: saxophonist Gary ThomasFind albums by this artist (one of the most talented players of the new generation and the jazziest player in this group), keyboards player Jim BeardFind albums by this artist and drummer Dennis ChambersFind albums by this artist, both veteran fusion players and finally the youngest member – Matthew GarrisonFind albums by this artist on bass (son of the legendary bass player Jimmy GarrisonFind albums by this artist from John ColtraneFind albums by this artist’s quartet). McLaughlin composed all the music on this album, and the result should be equally appealing to both jazz and fusion fans. Highly recommended!
| | CD 1 Digipak Recommend To A Friend |
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