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Topic Closedwhat Jazz/fusion album are you listening to ?

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febus View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2007 at 10:00
I would add the magnificent sound of guitar of Norwegian master: TERJE RYPDAL.Thumbs%20Up
 
Try ODYSSEY   or WhENEVER I SEEM TO BE FAR AWAY or IF MOUNTAINS COULD SING...............cosmic jazz for me!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2007 at 13:09
My collection is at start so there's nit much jazz in it, but it's all good:










I'll get back with the words, now it's time for lunch. Big%20smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2007 at 14:22
Here's one for the guitar nerds like meWink
 
Jesus Gabriel
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2007 at 14:34
Originally posted by Chus Chus wrote:

Here's one for the guitar nerds like meWink
 

 

I have seen him several times and mike is awesome!!!!

 Idon' t have this album how is it?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2007 at 16:27
"Music is much like f**king, but some composers can't climax and others climax too often, leaving themselves and the listener jaded and spent."

Charles Bukowski
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2007 at 16:42
Originally posted by darksideof darksideof wrote:

Originally posted by Chus Chus wrote:

Here's one for the guitar nerds like meWink
 

 

I have seen him several times and mike is awesome!!!!

 Idon' t have this album how is it?
 
Excellent, lots of dynamics jam sessions and modern jazz pieces. Mike's improvisational approach is as good as always has been; recommended also for fans of scattingBig%20smile.


Edited by Chus - May 02 2007 at 16:45
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2007 at 17:24
http://images-eu.amazon.com/images/P/B000065BXK.02.LZZZZZZZ.jpg
"Music is much like f**king, but some composers can't climax and others climax too often, leaving themselves and the listener jaded and spent."

Charles Bukowski
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2007 at 23:55
I love this topic !!! because i can get to see all album cover of all my fav fusion albums and I can see that you guys have the same great taste as me!!! i want to comment on all of them.!!!

I just did buy this album whao...... I haven't listen to it for years since the late 80's when I had it on vinil. Also it was not available in the USA on cd intil recent years if I am not mistaken and I forgot all about it for a while I just went to Virgil to pick up the last Porcupine Tree album ( becauss of what I heard last time I saw them Live I Know it is brilliant work in my opinon much better album than the last album), so, I went the Jazz section at virgin and I saw this album. It brought a great smiles to my face because of all the great memories.I hadlistening to fusion classic album and chick's RTFstuff. I picked up and took home with a refreshing feeling. This is the magic about music. Brilliant Work.

Edited by darksideof - May 03 2007 at 00:02
http://darksideofcollages.blogspot.com/
http://www.metalmusicarchives.com/
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Darksideof-Collages/
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 03 2007 at 02:05



right Now !!! Great stuff!!!!
http://darksideofcollages.blogspot.com/
http://www.metalmusicarchives.com/
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Darksideof-Collages/
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 03 2007 at 05:21
Nyugen Le is superb - first heard him on Tales From Viet Nam and its wonderful fusion of Vietnamese folk and jaz zrock (sometimes ala Allan Holdsworth). 3 Trios is most excellent. Also recommend his Hendrix tribute Purple.
BTW anybody heard the latest Hiromi album, I understand David Fuze Fuiczynski guests on guitar, and in my books he can do no wrong?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 03 2007 at 08:35
Often wrongfully (IMO) aligned with "smooth-jazz" back in their hey day (early to mid 90s) I always thought that the Rippingtons were the next evolution of fusion.  They've mellowed a bit since then and have turned slightly more toward a latin sound but still a very good listen.  IMO their best release from back in the day with the classic line-up:
 
 
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 03 2007 at 08:55
Graham Collier Music - Portraits (1972)

Graham Collier (bass); Dick Pearce (flugelhorn); Peter Hurt (alto sax); Ed Speight (guitar); Geoff Castle (piano); John Webb (drums). Recorded at RG jones Studios, Wimbledon, London, England on November 16 & 17, 1972.

''Issued in 1973 after a pair of recording dates in late 1972, Portraits sees Collier revisiting his notion explored on Mosaics -- the working out of longer forms. Three selections make up the album, the two-part "And Now For Something Completely Different," and the nearly 11-minute title track. The ensemble on Collier's Portraits contains only drummer John Webb, and pianist Geoff Castle from Collier's previous few outings, and includes only one saxophonist, Pete Hurt. Dick Pearce is in the brass chair, and Ed Speight is added on guitar. Musically, the exotica present on Mosaics has gone by the wayside in place of a more solidly modal attack that gives play to rock thematics in terms not only of texture, but of architecture. Collier paid close attention to Miles Davis' In A Silent Way, and took from it its sense of propulsive dynamics, and its repetition, while opening up the modes to a more swinging jazz vocabulary. On the suite, riffs take the place of front line melodies, and the modes that come from them are spun out of a clipped series of notes that wind around the rhythm section in a nearly hypnotic way. "Portraits I" is also Milesian, but more in the sense of the quintet's longer reaching palette of modal interstition and elocution. A restrained palette is employed as a way of exploiting all of its chromatic elements, and then inverting them in on themselves. Language between the soloists is overlapping and entwined, rather than oppositional. Time signatures do not vary, but the series of tension placed on one note over another seems to vary, according to arbitrary tonal considerations. This is a more laid-back, yet more challenging listen than any previous Collier outing, but it also dates as one of the best.'' ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide



Edited by Man Erg - May 03 2007 at 09:02

Do 'The Stanley' otherwise I'll thrash you with some rhubarb.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 03 2007 at 12:43
Holdsworth, Pasqua, Haslip & Wackerman this coming Sunday!!!!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 03 2007 at 17:35
Originally posted by dwill123 dwill123 wrote:

Often wrongfully (IMO) aligned with "smooth-jazz" back in their hey day (early to mid 90s) I always thought that the Rippingtons were the next evolution of fusion.  They've mellowed a bit since then and have turned slightly more toward a latin sound but still a very good listen.  IMO their best release from back in the day with the classic line-up:
 
 
 
 
 
Yellowjackets were also one of those bands mislabeled as smooth, even if they were not as experimental as early jazz-rock was (add a funkier sound, without sounding fusak). Their later albums (Dreamland, for example) did also have some latin jazz inflections, last time I heard it (then again it was long ago, so not sure in which measure the latin jazz was there).
 
Another one of these smooth jazz albums which have at least one or two jazz-rock gems
 
The title track is a full-fledge JR/F (prog) track
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 04 2007 at 00:31
on that note early albums by Jap fusion band Casiopea are pretty good too!!!  Eyes of The Mind is great stuff.......
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 04 2007 at 05:41
There wasa sort of reunion album from Yellowjackets 3 or so years ago. I agree twith Chus, that there wasa perception of Yellowjackets and the Rippingtons being smooth jazz - but that was the danger when reviewers knew each band was signed to the home of smooth/fuzac GRP Records. And I would say a couple of Rippington albums were bland and I can't listen to them nowadays. And I have a love hate relationship with some of that period Yellowjackets' releases - love for instance the live album with Michael Franks (something of an acquire taste in jazz vocalists) . Seeing Haslip with Holdsworth on Sunday - if the opportunity arise I'll ask him whether there will be another Yellowjackets recording.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 04 2007 at 08:43
 
A classic, and possibly his best. Thumbs%20Up
 
Saw him live once, BTW -- terrific! Cool
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Cool Great stuff -- like all JB albums from Blow by Blow on. Thumbs%20Up
 
 
 
I enjoy all forms of jazz, BTW -- that's right Dick, even "smooth" jazz (which I find cheerful). Smile
 


Edited by Peter - May 04 2007 at 09:24
"And, has thou slain the Jabberwock?
Come to my arms, my beamish boy!
O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!'
He chortled in his joy.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 04 2007 at 10:52
Originally posted by Peter Peter wrote:

 
 
 
I enjoy all forms of jazz, BTW -- that's right Dick, even "smooth" jazz (which I find cheerful). Smile
 
 
 
I missed that line in Ian Drury's Reasons To Be Cheerful Part 3 - must have been in parts 1 or 2?Wink But then Ian was a Ornette Coleman freak -  but wasn't adverse at ripping off the bassline from a Coleman tune, for Hit Me With Your Rhythm Stick.
 
Tune in next week for tangential rhubarb!!! (Cue music)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 04 2007 at 12:09
.
 
 
.
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 04 2007 at 13:15
Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:

... I would say a couple of Rippington albums were bland and I can't listen to them nowadays.
The Rippingtons had a string of really good releases from about 1991 to about 1998.  All mostly with what I refer to as the classic line-up (Freeman, Morales, Stone, Portman, Kashiwa and Reid).  After 1998 (and maybe even earlier) they started losing their way and key members left the band.  I too have not liked much of what they have released in quite sometime.  But they were so good in the 90s, I keep hoping.
 
 Curves Ahead (1991)
 Weekend in Monaco (1992)
 Live In L.A. (1993)
 Sahara (1994)
 
 Brave New World (1996)
 
 Black Diamond (1997)
 
 Best Of The Rippingtons (1997)
Topaz (1998)


Edited by dwill123 - May 04 2007 at 13:17
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