Progarchives, the progressive rock ultimate discography
Larry Young - Larry Young's Fuel CD (album) cover

LARRY YOUNG'S FUEL

Larry Young

 

Jazz Rock/Fusion

3.12 | 5 ratings

From Progarchives.com, the ultimate progressive rock music website

BrufordFreak like
3 stars Ever the champion of his local Newark musicians, Larry forges another album with his signature adventuring on experimental sounds through keyboard synthesizers.

1. "Fuel for the Fire" (6:07) hearing this song for the first time lends itself to a theory that Larry and his collaborators had encountered the musical talents of both Urszula Dudziak (through the music of husband Michal Urbaniak's NYC- based band) and Leon Thomas (through Pharoah Sanders). I like and appreciate Linda's wordless work but she's really doing nothing very extraordinary much less innovative. Also, some really nice foundational play from the Fuel lineup feels a bit wasted on the video game synthesizer that Larry seems fixated upon (which later gets turned into some nice Fender Rhodes play). This just feels like a rather boring trip down the New Jersey Turnpike. (8.75/10) 2. "I Ching (Book of Changes)" (6:25) sounds a bit like music to a 1990s video game that was created by fusing melodies from Oriental and Classical music into cartoon-like urban funk themes. The music is at times frivolous and even laughable--like a Charlie Chan movie or an episode from Bill Cosby and The Cosby Kids--but at the same time offering some rather remarkable, high-quality fusion as well as some very high quality musicianship. (8.875/10)

3. "Turn off the Lights" (7:03) Linda Logan is back to lead us through a late night sex dungeon. Her sultry, ultra- suggestive vocal rides along a funk rhythm motif within which Larry explores keyboard sounds with an adventurousness that rivals George Clinton or Joe Zawinul (or Billy Preston). Focusing on the music there is a lot of fun sound and play coming from Larry's fingers--and Linda's vocal performance is strong and refined--quite worthy as an urban singer representing the Betty Davis School of Feminist Funk. (13.375/15)

4. "Floating" (4:12) another instrumental with a street-cruisin' funk motif that seems founded in both classical music traditions as well as the latest urban trends. I'm also once again reminded of the Black Exploitation soundtracks and early video game soundtracks as Larry's lead synthesizer sounds ready to settle into an Atari game of Pong or Space Computer. Not enough adventure and variety to warrant this as a representative of a highly creative, but that might be explained by its compositional credit going to Fuel's young guitarist, Santiago Torano. (8.6667/10)

5. "H + J = B (Hustle + Jam = Bread)" (6:17) more great urban funk from Fernando, Rob, and Santiago. This organ-based funk song sounds like a vehicle for Fuel's percussionists over which Larry continued to explore (rather mindlessly) the variety of synthetic sounds available to him on his array of synthesizers. (8.75/10)

6. "People Do Be Funny" (3:42) the third and final song with vocalist Linda Logan once again features Larry noodling around beneath Linda's urban funk vocal as if he's oblivious to the rest of the crew and the potential for more. (8.667/10)

7. "New York Electric Street Music" (8:33) more nice foundational funk music (with some nice work from drummer Santiago Torano) which feels underdeveloped and, therefore, rather wasted as its only reason for existence is to serve as a cushion and propellant Larry's rather silly vocal and keyboard work. There is some rather cool incendiary lead guitar work peppered here and there within the music (the seventh minute, in particular). (17.5/20)

Total Time 41:39

It is unfortunate that so much great funk music feels rather wasted by Larry's rather singular and selfish preoccupation with the monofocus of playing George Clinton-like synth lines over and between the rhythm section and the vocals. This results in a collection of songs that feel tremendously under-developed; this could have been so much more!

C+/three stars; a collection of well-founded funk that sadly seems grossly one-dimensional and quite underdeveloped.

BrufordFreak | 3/5 |

MEMBERS LOGIN ZONE

As a registered member (register here if not), you can post rating/reviews (& edit later), comments reviews and submit new albums.

You are not logged, please complete authentication before continuing (use forum credentials).

Forum user
Forum password

Social review comments

Review related links

Copyright Prog Archives, All rights reserved. | Legal Notice | Privacy Policy | Advertise | RSS + syndications

Other sites in the MAC network: JazzMusicArchives.com — jazz music reviews and archives | MetalMusicArchives.com — metal music reviews and archives

Donate monthly and keep PA fast-loading and ad-free forever.