Showing posts with label John McLaughlin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John McLaughlin. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 20, 2022

Al Di Meola, John McLaughlin, Paco De Lucia - Friday Night In San Francisco

Styles: Guitar, Bop
Year: 1981
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:13
Size: 94,7 MB
Art: Front

(11:35) 1. Mediterranean Sundance · Rio Ancho
( 8:44) 2. Short Tales of the Black Forest
( 7:57) 3. Frevo Rasgado
( 8:54) 4. Fantasia Suite
( 4:01) 5. Guardian Angel

On 5th December, 1980, Al Di Meola, John McLaughlin, and Paco de Lucia were two months into what had so far been an extremely successful and creative tour. Even just the concept itself was intriguing three guitarists, and acoustic to boot! With not a drummer, percussionist, or bassist in sight. The sheer novelty of it all. Recorded at the Warfield Theatre, California, Friday Night in San Francisco manages to capture this triumvirate trio of instrumentalists at the apex of their abilities.

Now Paco, although he wasn't all that well known outside of Spain, was already something of a super star of Flamenco, and whose virtuosity on guitar was as much respected as it was unmatched. McLaughlin was undoubtedly the most renowned, having played with Miles Davis, Chick Corea, Tony Williams, Jimi Hendrix, Santana, along with pretty much the who's who of jazz-rock and everyone else in between. Di Meola was probably somewhere in the middle of the other two. His career began officially when he became a member of Return to Forever, before releasing a series of highly acclaimed solo albums, and was also voted best jazz guitarist four times in Guitar Player Magazine (in other words, the bloke had a following).

Now some Flamenco purists might turn their noses up at the fact that Di Meola and McLaughlin are using a plectrum, when Paco wasn't. But that shouldn't bother the listener one bit. All that matters is the music itself; and plectrum or no, this is unquestionably some of the hottest acoustic guitar ever to have been performed in front of a live audience.

The performance opens with a dazzling duet between Al and Paco on "Mediterranean Sunset," a Di Meola composition first released on his second solo album Elegant Gypsy in 1977. Al's signature light-speed riffs are everywhere, while Paco plays some ferocious Flamenco. Both are in perfect simpatico throughout, right to the scintillating and exciting climax at the end. Exhilarating for both players and audience alike I'm sure.

Next we have Chick Corea's "Short Tales of the Black Forest," where Di Meola and McLaughlin really do pull out all the stops as performers, like two gunslingers attempting to prove who can shoot the furthest and fastest. There is even a brief reference to Henry Mancini's "Pink Panther" thrown in for good measure, something which elicits much laughter from the audience. They also throw in a little 12 bar blues before finishing with a fiery crescendo.

"Frevo Rasgado, a song written by Egberto Gismonti, begins side two, where this time we have McLaughlin and Paco locked together in mortal six string combat. Personally the money's on Paco, but McLaughlin's not too far behind. Both manage to give as good as the other, as far as this listener's concerned, and while it's Paco who probably has the edge, their exchange is purely magical all the same.

Di Meola's "Fantasia Suite" finds all three on stage exchanging notes at an ever complicated rate. One can hear occasionally an audience member cry out during the quieter moments, but even on LP the listener is simply overwhelmed by the sheer synergy and power on display here. It's as if they had of had a dose of speed about an hour before the show. And that's what must have impressed people at the time, no matter how sophisticated they might have been.

Oddly, the final track is a studio recording made in White Plains, New York. Written by McLaughlin, "Guardian Angel" finds the trio managing to capture not only the complexity of their playing, but also the camaraderie between all three men. It is a relationship which lasted for many years, as attested to by the numerous reunions that took place over the proceeding decades. Paco De Lucia was Spain's equivalent to Jimi Hendrix. And it was this album, more than anything he had done before, which really put him on the map, thus exposing a multitude of people for the first time to the genius of Flamenco, almost in the way that Carmen Amaya had some forty-years before. Yet this was the record which proved that guitars didn't need to be electric in order to be exciting. Because from this a new sense of sophistication had arisen, inspiring a whole new generation of guitarists in the process. And for that at least you have to give them credit where it's due.
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/friday-night-in-san-francisco-john-mclaughlin-al-dimeola-paco-delucia-columbia-records-review-by-sacha-ogrady

Personnel: Al Di Meola: acoustic guitar; John McLaughlin: acoustic guitar; Paco de Lucía: acoustic guitar

Friday Night In San Francisco

Saturday, April 30, 2022

Paco de Lucia - Castro Marin

Styles: Guitar
Year: 1987
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:23
Size: 83,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:47) 1. Monasterio de sal
(4:59) 2. Gitanos andaluces
(4:17) 3. Castro Marín
(5:39) 4. Herencia
(5:13) 5. Convite
(7:27) 6. Palenque
(3:59) 7. Huida

One of the least well-known of the extensive body of work recorded by the Algeciran, which contains some of the tracks that he would include months later on his 1981 record Solo Quiero Caminar with The Sextet. On two songs he counts on the participation of John McLaughlin and Larry Coryell, both of whom collaborated on a series of virtuoso trio performances, an idea promoted by Paco’s manager, Barry Marshall, towards the end of 1978 (Al di Meola soon took the place of Larry Coryell). After an American tour in 1981, Paco recorded 7 tracks in Tokyo between the 25th and 27th of December 1980. It takes the form of a preparation of Solo Quiero Caminar in a format for a solo guitar, in duet with the acoustic guitar of Larry Coryell on ‘Corvite’, and in a trio, joined by McLaughlin with a twelve string acoustic guitar on ‘Palenque’. The other five tracks are played solo by Paco (often accompanying himself on another track). Castro Marin is the name of the village where his mother, Luzia, who was Portuguese, was born, and is situated on the Spanish border at the mouth of the river Guadiana. This album is a memory of his beloved mother. In 1998 he dedicated another to her. http://www.pacodelucia.org/en/disc/castro-marin

Personnel: Paco de Lucía - Flamenco guitar; Larry Coryell - Acoustic guitar; John McLaughlin - Acoustic guitar, 12 string guitar; Carles Benavent - Bass guitar

Castro Marín

Friday, July 30, 2021

John McLaughlin - Liberation Time

Styles: Guitar Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:59
Size: 85,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:21) 1. As the Spirit Sings
(5:06) 2. Singing Our Secrets
(7:13) 3. Lockdown Blues
(2:28) 4. Mila Repa
(7:22) 5. Right Here, Right Now, Right On
(1:37) 6. Shade of Blue
(7:49) 7. Liberation Time

Perhaps the biggest success of Liberation Time is that its title feels sincere and not ironic. Such a sentiment could have easily come out as a cute bit of wishful thinking under the restrictions of pandemic life. Being who he is, though, John McLaughlin inevitably finds the value and positivity even in this strange state of affairs. "The wonderful thing about music is that you put the headphones on and you are all in the same room," he says in regards to the newly-standard modus operandi of virtual conference calls. Even if that's not literally true, the chemistry among this crew of friends is thankfully undimmed by distance.

Of course the closeness is partly due to the long working history of the 4th Dimension band of Gary Husband, Etienne Mbappe and Ranjit Barot. As a silver lining to the circumstances, though, McLaughlin takes advantage of the remote-recording method to include a handful of collaborators who might not have been available otherwise. His romping guitar and Husband's keys are joined by a different rhythm section on the cooking opener "As the Spirit Sings"; Julian Siegel's sax adds some extra bebop flavor to the intricate rock-fusion jam of "Right Here, Right Now, Right On" while an entirely different backing group flies through the quick changes.

Alongside the core quartet's jamming in spots such as the jaunty "Singing Our Secrets," or the too-bright-for-its-name "Lockdown Blues" (spiced up with some playful Indian konokol scatting while they're at it), the guest tracks manage to feel all of a piece with the overall program. The leader's uplifting spirit unifies the music and the cast as much as his voice on the guitar does. His fleet juicy fretwork is inimitable as ever, often still tearing through these fun licks at whiplash speed, surprisingly complemented by a couple of contemplative interludes featuring him at the piano another addition that probably would not have happened in what we used to call ordinary circumstances. Even if it can't quite hit the incendiary highs of Live at Ronnie Scott's (Abstract Logix, 2017) or John McLaughlin & Jimmy Herring—Live in San Francisco (Abstract Logix, 2018), this is a sharp-cooking session radiant with liberating energy and hope for the future.By Geno Thackara https://www.allaboutjazz.com/liberation-time-john-mclaughlin-abstract-logix

Personel: John McLaughlin: guitar; Gary Husband: drums; Ranjit Barot: drums; Etienne Mbappe: bass; Roger Rossignol: piano; Jean Michel Aublette: bass; Vinnie Colaiuta: drums; Nicolas Viccaro: drums; Julian Siegel: saxophone, tenor; Sam Burgess: bass; Jérôme Regard: bass; Oz Ezzeldin: piano.

Liberation Time

Thursday, June 24, 2021

Tony Williams Lifetime feat John McLaughlin - Live In New York 1969

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:32
Size: 88,5 MB
Art: Front

( 6:56) 1. To Whom It May Concern
(12:24) 2. Emergency
( 7:01) 3. Unknown Title
( 6:43) 4. A Famous Blues
( 5:27) 5. Something Spiritual

Having fearlessly merged rock rhythms with jazz during a close association with Miles Davis, in 1969 the great Tony Williams founded Lifetime, featuring John McLaughlin at his innovative best, and the mighty organist Larry Young. The trio instantly won acclaim for their fiery, uncompromising improvisations, which are typified on this amazing performance. Recorded for radio broadcast in New York at the close of the year, the FM entire broadcast is presented here, digitally remastered, with background notes and images. https://www.directaudio.net/products/tony-williams-lifetime-featuring-john-mclaughlin-live-in-new-york-1969-vinyl-lp

Musicians: Tony Williams, drums; John McLaughlin, guitar; Larry Young, organ

Live In New York 1969

Monday, June 15, 2020

Bill Evans - The Alternative Man

Styles: Saxophone Jazz 
Year: 1987
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:51
Size: 113,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:45)  1. The Alternative Man
(4:37)  2. The Path Of Least Resistance
(5:40)  3. Let The Juice Loose
(4:31)  4. Gardiners Garden
(3:24)  5. Survival Of The Fittest
(6:21)  6. Jojo
(5:41)  7. The Cry In Her Eyes
(5:24)  8. Miles Away
(7:23)  9. Flight Of The Falcon

The fact that Bill Evans' years as a Miles Davis sideman had so positive an effect on him is evident on The Alternative Man  an unpredictable fusion date that, although overproduced at times, is full of spirited blowing and adventurous composing. Ranging from the reggae-influenced "The Path of Resistance" to the addictive "Let the Juice Loose!" to the angular "Jojo," Evans' material is consistently impressive. A Michael Brecker disciple but definitely his own man, Evans tends to be robust and aggressive on tenor and more reflective on soprano. Guest John McLaughlin (electric guitar) is characteristically persuasive on the poetic "Flight of the Falcon."~ Alex Henderson https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-alternative-man-mw0000191774

Tracks 5 & 9: Bill Evans - tenor & soprano saxes; Clifford Carter - keyboards; Michell Forman - piano; John McLaughlin - guitar; Mark Egan - bass; Danny Gottlieb - drums; Manolo Badrena - percussion, space tines

Other players include: Hiram Bullock - guitar; Marcus Miller - bass; Al Foster - drums

The Alternative Man

Friday, February 23, 2018

John McLaughlin With Shakti - Natural Elements

Styles: Fusion
Year: 1977
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:34
Size: 93,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:47)  1. Mind Ecology
(5:58)  2. Face To Face
(1:58)  3. Come On Baby Dance With Me
(7:03)  4. The Daffodil And The Eagle
(4:28)  5. Happiness Is Being Together
(3:52)  6. Bridge Of Sighs
(7:02)  7. Get Down And Sruti
(3:22)  8. Peace Of Mind

The third and final Shakti recording from the '70s. The songs here are shorter than those on Shakti and Handful of Beauty, but no less impressive. The novelty of combining Eastern and Western musical styles had worn off and McLaughlin sounds comfortable. This allows for memorable compositions and interchanges, rather than the blistering virtuosity that characterized the first two releases. From the intense ("Daffodil and the Eagle") to the joyful ("Happiness Is Being Together"), Natural Elements stands as a milestone in McLaughlin's illustrious career. ~ Robert Taylor https://www.allmusic.com/album/natural-elements-mw0000031689

Personnel:  John McLaughlin – guitar, acoustic guitar, vocals;  Zakir Hussain – bongos, dholak, percussion, tabla, timbales, triangle, vocals;  Lakshminarayana Shankar – viola, violin, vocals;  Vikku Vinayakram – ghatam, kanjeera, percussion, vocals

Natural Elements

Tuesday, February 13, 2018

John McLaughlin and Shakti - A Handful Of Beauty

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:57
Size: 109.8 MB
Styles: Fusion
Year: 1977/2001
Art: Front

[ 4:50] 1. La Danse Du Bonheur
[ 7:29] 2. Lady L
[12:38] 3. India
[ 3:00] 4. Kriti
[15:13] 5. Isis
[ 4:44] 6. Two Sisters

John McLaughlin- guitar; L. Shankar- violin; Zakir Hussain- table; T.H. Vinayakram- Ghatam.

John McLaughlin should have given this album a different name. Jazz-rock fans of the day (early 1977) did not want to be seen purchasing an album with such a title. It didn't help any to have a picture of John McLaughlin on the cover dressed and smiling as if he were a guru himself. Let’s face facts, even at this time: McLaughlin’s fans came from a rock background. In hindsight the Indo-jazz-fusion Shakti recordings are considered highlights in McLaughlin’s career, but they did cost him most of his early fan base.

In stark contrast to its album cover indicating joy and peace and all the related elements that were stretched beyond endurance in the 1970's, Handful of Beauty was in reality a dark and somber creation. Despite the opening cut, a free-spirited and wildly fun "La Danse Du Bonheur", this album features mostly dense compositions that provoke deep re-appraisals of one's own life. The musical highlight is "India". The tune seems to investigate the underside of the Eastern World and finds McLaughlin ominously bending and twisting notes while Shankar's violin dwells in the lower registers.

Of the three original Shakti albums, Handful of Beauty features the best playing from McLaughlin. Somber does not mean boring. The two master Indian percussionists Zakir Hussain and T. S. Vinayakaram provide the rhythm and much of the dynamic. The incomparable L. Shankar helps provide the mood. (It is too bad he and McLaughlin no longer seem to be friends in real life.) As was later to be the case on the group's Natural Elements, one of the highlights of the two Shakti studio recorded efforts is the high quality of sound engineering. This album should be played relatively loud, late at night, lights-off, while you sip from a cup of tea. Best to be in a reflective mood.

Listening to the tour that supported this recording was a different matter entirely. The same tunes that had led to introspection suddenly led to emotional release. The band was hot and an absolute joy to see, both visually and sonically. ~Walter Kolosky

A Handful Of Beauty mc
A Handful Of Beauty zippy

Wednesday, December 13, 2017

Ithamara Koorax - Love Dance - The Ballad Album

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:41
Size: 124,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:15)  1. Ligia
(2:17)  2. I loved you
(7:21)  3. Love Dance
(4:15)  4. La Puerta
(9:54)  5. Man Alone
(5:36)  6. Amparo
(4:20)  7. Someday
(4:58)  8. Flame
(2:12)  9. April in Paris
(7:30) 10. Blauauge

Ithamara Koorax has released several albums in Brazil and Japan, but Love Dance is only the second US album for this star from Rio, the follow-up to her debut Serenade in Blue. With her unmistakable voice, Koorax sings English, Portuguese, and Spanish love songs composed by such masters as Antonio Carlos Jobim, Luiz Bonfá, Marcos Valle and Ivan Lins, plus songs by Claus Ogerman and Jurgen Friedrich (in German). Her voice manifests this diversity to its advantage: Koorax does not sound like a Brazilian singer or an American singer or a jazz singer or a pop or Latin singer. She sounds like she can sing just about anything. Subtitle this set “The Dedication Album”: the soothing and seductive opening version of Jobim’s “Ligia” is dedicated to Stanley Turrentine; “Man Alone” to Jimmy Scott; “Blauauge,” a duet with composer Friedrich on piano, to Art Farmer; and the title track to Mark Murphy (whose 1988 Milestone session, September Ballads, inspired this Dance ). With "Love Dance," performed with Azymuth, Koorax transforms one of Brazilian composer Ivan Lins’ finest moments into one of her own finest moments, too. 

She sails with this smooth fusion band, letting the last few notes of a phrase throatily fade in a husky whisper (like Stan Getz on sax), sharpening and rounding notes’ edges, then exploding like brilliant sunlight to close. Love Dance also features John McLaughlin’s first date supporting a vocalist (“Man Alone”) and album notes by Ira Gitler, neither honor a small one. ~ Chris M.Slawecki https://www.allaboutjazz.com/love-dance-the-ballad-album-ithamara-koorax-fantasy-jazz-review-by-chris-m-slawecki.php

Personnel: Personnel: Ithamara Koorax (vocals); Nelson Angelo (acoustic guitar, piano); Luiz Bonfá (acoustic guitar); John McLaughlin (electric guitar); Jose Carlos Ramos (flute); Juarez Araújo (clarinet); Mario Castro-Neves (piano, keyboards); Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Jurgen Friedrich (piano); Marcos Valle (keyboards); Manuel Gusmao, Sergio Barroso (acoustic bass); Jorjao Carvalho, Alex Malheiros (electric bass); Jorge Pescara (fretless bass); Cesar Machado, Ivan Conti, Joao Palma (drums); Sidinho Moreira, Dom Um Romao, Arnaldo DeSouteiro (percussion).

Love Dance - The Ballad Album

Wednesday, September 27, 2017

John McLaughlin & The 4th Dimension - Live at Ronnie Scott's

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:25
Size: 163,9 MB
Art: Front

( 8:06)  1. Meeting of the Spirits
( 7:34)  2. Miles Beyond
( 5:05)  3. Gaza City
(10:41)  4. Here Come the Jiis
( 7:36)  5. New Blues Old Bruise
( 6:47)  6. El Hombre que Sabia
( 5:08)  7. Sanctuary
( 7:45)  8. Vital Transformation
(12:38)  9. Echos from Then

Music has taken him and his guitar to some of the most exotic far reaches of the world, but Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club will always have a special place in John McLaughlin's heart. His mid-1960s time in the famous London venue's house band was a key early step in his musical life, and he idly wonders "where would I be without them?" five decades later. No doubt he would still be a legend today; such boundless curiosity and imagination would have led him to some adventurous path one way or another. Nonetheless, this homecoming show of sorts provides the perfect occasion to celebrate a scorching group at the top of their game. That affection for the club contributes to this live set's special vibe, though of course there are many factors at work. Things are consistently taken to another level when McLaughlin can settle in and gel with one consistent band (as exciting as the studio constructions or occasional brief projects can also be). The Fourth Dimension makes his all-time longest-running ensemble (formed in 2007, with this lineup since 2011) and it's become the most expansive and versatile group the guitarist has ever had. More than any previous outfit, even the top-flight Five Peace Band of 2008-9, this quartet can handle his globe-spanning range with a virtuosity and interplay that are downright uncanny.

This was plenty in evidence on their previous live release The Boston Record (Abstract Logix, 2014), but the three years between leave them even more keenly in tune with each other on Ronnie Scott's. Admirers of the Mahavishnu Orchestra will be delighted with the return of a few chestnuts from that band's first two albums the audacity of the compositions hasn't dulled with age, though their renditions here have the inevitable seasoning of maturity as well. The players may hit McLaughlin's trademark blizzard pace fairly often, but they trade their brisk solos and dash off their complex dialogues without any gaudy grandstanding. Gary Husband's electric keys conduct a sprightly back-and-forth with Etienne M'Bappé's bass through Mahavishnu's "Miles Beyond," while an epic take on "Here Come the Jiis" positively sizzles thanks to Ranjit Barot's frisky drumming and use of konokol (a percussive vocalizing used in traditional Carnatic music). 

The piece takes him and Husband to heights of rhythmic joy in a most fitting dedication to Shakti's master mandolinist U. Srinivas. Honoring departed friends sadly makes a recurring theme here, as "El Hombre Que Sabia" (The Man Who Knew) does the same for McLaughlin's guitar partner Paco De Lucia (Husband's angular keys conveying the subject's uniqueness admirably). Still, it's only right to mark such notes in a set that ranges throughout the guitarist's career, and the band does them justice with performances full of life. Those tribute pieces and the thoughtful-but-not-maudlin "Gaza City" are the newest ones here, taken from 2015's Black Light (Abstract Logix), and all eloquently stand alongside those classics from decades past. The time in between has made a long and winding journey, but the inner flame burns undimmed even fifty years on. ~ Geno Thackara https://www.allaboutjazz.com/live-at-ronnie-scotts-john-mclaughlin-abstract-logix-review-by-geno-thackara.php
 
Personnel: John McLaughlin: guitar; Gary Husband: keyboards, drums; Etienne M'Bappé: bass; Ranjit Barot: drums, konokol.

Live at Ronnie Scott's

Friday, April 1, 2016

Larry Coryell - Spaces

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1974
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:04
Size: 85,2 MB
Art: Front

(9:23)  1. Spaces (Infinite)
(4:12)  2. Rene's Theme
(4:32)  3. Gloria's Step
(9:02)  4. Wrong Is Right
(9:32)  5. Crisis
(0:21)  6. New Year's Day In Los Angeles-1968

This album features the pioneer fusion guitarist Larry Coryell with quite an all-star group. Two selections match Coryell with fellow guitarist John McLaughlin, bassist Miroslav Vitous (doubling on cello) and drummer Billy Cobham, all important fusion players at the time. "Rene's Theme" is a guitar duet with McLaughlin, while "Gloria's Steps" (a Scott LaFaro composition) has Coryell, Vitous and Cobham jamming as a trio. Chick Corea sits in on electric keyboard for "Chris," and the 20-second closer ("New Year's Day in Los Angeles 1968") finds Coryell playing alone. Overall, the music has its energetic moments, but also contains some lyricism often lacking in fusion of the mid-'70s. In addition, all of the musicians already had their own original voices, making Spaces a stimulating album worth searching for.~Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/spaces-mw0000197196

Personnel:  Larry Coryell – guitar;  John McLaughlin – guitar;  Chick Corea – electric piano;  Billy Cobham – drums;  Miroslav Vitous – bass

Spaces

Friday, November 27, 2015

John McLaughlin - Black Light

Styles: Guitar Jazz, Jazz Fusion
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:26
Size: 129,2 MB
Art: Front

(6:27)  1. Here Come the Jiis
(5:58)  2. Clap Your Hand
(5:41)  3. Being You Being Me
(6:14)  4. Pandit Ji
(6:31)  5. 360 Flip
(5:37)  6. El Hombre Que Sabia
(4:15)  7. Gaza City
(5:54)  8. Kiki
(3:44)  9. Nothing to Lose but the Blues

All my recordings are personal and reflect what is happening in my interior world, and I’m happy about the way the diverse cultural influences that have impacted on me for so many years, are showing themselves in this new album. The inclusion of ‘movements’ inside the pieces is a new development for me and I like the way they work within, giving a breath, or pause with a different dynamic. The work here relates to, and is a development of the work I began with the album ‘Industrial Zen’.  In addition there are a number of homages:, namely in ‘Here come the Jiis’ to the memory of the wonderful musician with whom I played for 14 years, Mandolin Shrinivas. The piece ‘Panditji’ is a small thank you to a great human being and musician, Pandit Ravi Shankar, with whom I had the honor of studying under during the middle 1970’s.

‘El Hombre que Sabià’ is for the unforgettable Paco de Lucia, and is one of the pieces we had planned to record together last year. He was particularly fond of this piece, so I changed the title and worked out an arrangement with the great musicians of 4D; I’m really happy how it turned out. ‘Being you being me’comes out of an experience of seeing the One in the many. I am personally convinced that the only real evolution in humanity will be when we all see the divine in each other, and so accord the respect that every individual merits. In the opening and closing of this piece, you’ll hear the synth guitar. ‘360 Flip’ comes from skateboard move my son introduced me to, and reminded me of a 360 Flip that can happen in your mind, when your mind turns 360 degrees and you see everything the same but differently. This can happen while playing music, meditating or even walking in the mountains.’Clap your hand’ is a pun on the Zen koan, ‘What is the sound of one hand clapping?’

’Gaza City’ requires no explanation after the bombardment of that City in the summer of 2014. I played the synth guitar and electric guitar on this piece. And finally ‘Kiki’ who is such a dear friend and wonderful drummer. I hope you find something in the music. ~ John McLaughi  http://www.johnmclaughlin.com/project/black-light/

Personnel: John McLaughlin (acoustic guitar, electric guitar, synthesizer); Ranjit Barot (vocals, drums); Gary Husband (piano, synthesizer, drums, percussion); Etienne Mbappé (electric bass).

Black Light

Monday, July 13, 2015

John Mclaughlin - Electric Guitarist

Styles: Guitar Jazz, Fusion
Year: 1978
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:18
Size: 90,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:49)  1. New York In My Mind
(7:09)  2. Friendship
(6:55)  3. Every Tear From Every Eye
(7:45) 4. Do You Hear The Voices That You Lefeat. Behind?
(4:27)  5. Are You The One? Are You The One?
(3:46)  6. Phenomenon Compulsion
(3:24)  7. My Foolish Heart

If you listen to McLaughlin's version of "My Foolish Heart" from 1978's Johnny McLaughlin - Electric Guitarist, it's hard to logically explain how the same guitarist had also produced the sounds found on so many of his earlier records. It's hard to reconcile this tune with his approach on his debut Extrapolation, Miles' Tribute to Jack Johnson, Larry Coryell's Spaces, and various recordings by the Mahavishnu Orchestra and Shakti. None of those earlier performances would have prepared you for McLaughlin's beautiful treatment of Victor Young and Nat Washington's jazz standard. His warm and serene arrangement sounds like the antithesis of what McLaughlin was known for. Electric Guitarist was meant to be a comeback record for McLaughlin. Columbia Records was none too pleased that McLaughlin had produced three straight records with his Indian acoustic world music group Shakti. These records would eventually reach legendary status, but at the time they sold embarrassingly poorly. There was hope at Columbia that Electric Guitarist would bring John McLaughlin back to the top of the record sales heap. In the end, although it sold well, it did not sell as many records as Columbia had hoped.

Electric Guitarist features many of McLaughlin's contemporaries, including Chick Corea, Stanley Clarke, Jack DeJohnette, Billy Cobham, Narada Michael Walden, Carlos Santana, Jerry Goodman, and David Sanborn. There is not one weak cut on the entire album. Electric Guitarist also marks the first recorded use of McLaughlin's scalloped fretboard electric guitar, an idea from his Shakti experience that gave him a brand new sound. McLaughlin was able to bend notes and even chords beyond limits. This technique opened up a whole new vocabulary for his compositions. Key cuts to play really loud include a duet with Billy Cobham, "Phenomenon-Compulsion," and "Are You the One? Are You the One?," featuring Tony Williams and Jack Bruce. This tune harkens back to the great Tony Williams Lifetime that featured McLaughlin, Bruce and the late Larry Young on organ. Even though, for obvious reasons, Young couldn't make this gig, he would have loved this tune. "Do You Hear The Voices You Left Behind," based upon the changes of Coltrane's "Giant Steps," is an unrelenting jazz force that McLaughlin, Chick Corea, Stanley Clarke and Jack DeJohnette play for all they are worth. Many all-star recordings do not live up to their promise. 

This album is not one of them. Johnny McLaughlin- Electric Guitarist was the last important recording of the initial jazz-fusion movement. ~Walter Kolosky  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/electric-guitarist-john-mclaughlin-columbia-records-review-by-walter-kolosky.php

Personnel: John McLaughlin (guitar); David Sanborn (alto saxophone); Jerry Goodman (violin); Stu Goldberd (electric piano, organ; Mini-Moog Synthesizer); Chick Corea (piano, Mini-Moog synthesizer); Patrice Rushen (piano);Tom Coster (organ); Stanley Clarke (acoustic bass); Alphonso Johnson (Taurus bass pedals, bass); Fernando Saunders, Neil Jason, Jack Bruce (bass); Carlos Santana (guitar); Narada Michael Walden Jack DeJohnette, Tony Williams, Billy Cobham (drums); Armando Peraza (congas); Alyrio Lima (percussion).

Electric Guitarist

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

John McLaughlin, Elvin Jones, Joey deFrancesco - After The Rain

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:55
Size: 116.6 MB
Styles: Fusion, Guitar jazz
Year: 1995
Art: Front

[6:13] 1. My Favorite Things
[6:31] 2. Sing Me Softly of the Blues
[7:30] 3. Encuentros
[4:44] 4. Naima
[6:32] 5. Tones for Elvin Jones
[7:39] 6. Crescent
[6:51] 7. Afro Blue
[4:52] 8. After the Rain

Recording Date; October 4 - 5, 1994 at Clinton Studios, New York City. Drums – Elvin Jones; Guitar, Producer – John McLaughlin; Organ – Joey DeFrancesco.

After the Rain received much praise in 1994 from many critics who usually consider McLaughlin's approach to music a bit too cosmic. The feelings among McLaughlin devotees were more mixed, however—there was some talk that McLaughlin may be running out of ideas. After all, this was the second tribute album he had released in the last couple of years. There were even some complaints about his guitar tone. To be sure, it is a bit too warm. But when all is said and done, After the Rain is an outstanding recording.

This isn't to say it is the best or the most influential of McLaughlin’s albums, but it may be the most beautiful of his electric releases. It attains this status through its melodic textures, driving rhythms and overall musicality. And there is more to it than that. The beauty inherent in any recording can in some part be attributed to its spirituality. (Don’t worry; we are not going into Sri Chinmoy mode here.) The spirit that thrives on this album is rooted in its inspiration—and that spirit is of John Coltrane. The beauty of this album emanates from McLaughlin's heartfelt purpose to honor the great musician who opened the door for him and many others.

After The Rain features several tunes associated with Coltrane. Two of McLaughlin’s compositions are included. The trio also covers Carla Bley’s “Sing Me Softly of the Blues”. McLaughlin decided to showcase these compositions in a traditional Hammond B-3 trio format. Former Coltrane sideman Elvin Jones' drumming evokes memories and emotions that can only be described as reassuring. His accents, bangs, thuds and grunts give great credibility to the affair. Jones' personal homage to Coltrane becomes clear through his brilliant playing; he provides a more than stable foundation for McLaughlin and organist DeFrancesco to build upon. Joey DeFrancesco, who like most B-3 players, has a tendency to meander somewhat during solos, meanders not a wit. His playing emerges as purposeful and understated. However, when the need arises for driving power, he delivers.

McLaughlin's approach on After the Rain is more straight-ahead than it has ever been. At the same time, you know it is still JOHN MCLAUGHLIN. While a little more guitar bite would have been helpful, he does attain a light swing, a somber tone, and a lilting flow...words are lacking. Every single tune stands as a highlight, but pay special attention to "My Favorite Things" because this is soon to be what this album will be to you. ~Walter Kolosky

After The Rain

Tuesday, December 30, 2014

John McLaughlin And The 4th Dimension - Now Here This

Styles: Jazz Fusion
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:59
Size: 114,5 MB
Art: Front

(7:16)  1. Trancefusion
(7:02)  2. Riff Raff
(6:07)  3. Echos From Then
(6:27)  4. Wonderfall
(5:53)  5. Call And Answer
(6:17)  6. Not Here Not There
(7:08)  7. Guitar Love
(3:46)  8. Take It Or Leave It

Guitarist John McLaughlin and his 4th Dimension group's studio debut, To The One (Abstract Logix, 2010), mined the past for inspiration. The spirit of saxophonist John Coltrane's A Love Supreme (Impulse!, 1965) drove McLaughlin's most charged electric playing in years, proving he'd lost none of his fire. Two years on, and McLaughlin's 4th Dimension returns another energetic set of strong compositions, less specifically inspired than To The One, but inspired nonetheless. McLaughlin's electric guitar and guitar-synthesizer swing between biting edge and a lyricism more in line with the sublime Floating Point (Abstract Logix, 2008). Ranjit Barot replaces Mark Mondesir, and the Indian drummer brings another dimension (a 5th dimension?) to the band. On pulsating tracks like "Riff Raff" and "Call and Answer," drummer and guitarist go flat out in thrilling passages and it's difficult to think of any drummer driving McLaughlin this hard since Billy Cobham in the early Mahavishnu Orchestra days. Barot's polyrhythmic bustle, bass bombs and the snap and crackle of his cymbals greatly inform the mood of the music, and he forms a formidable rhythm team with bassist Etienne Mbappe. 

The modal jazz, jazz-rock, fusion and the ever-present blues that has largely defined McLaughlin's unique five-decade musical adventure are all in the mix, though artfully distilled to maximize melody and lyricism. The bouncing blues bass line of "Echos of Then" evokes trumpeter Miles Davis' A Tribute to Jack Johnson (Columbia, 1971), though there's more of grooving funk vibe here. McLaughlin, at 70, sounds even more fired up than he was on that essential Davis session forty years ago. Keyboardist Gary Hush ever-present in the 4th Dimension since 2007 and Barot take short, lively solos, but melody and groove win the day outright. The slower, more spacious compositions are arresting. M'Bappes' purring fretless bass, McLaughlin's tender guitar-synth lines and Husband's spare piano playing combine beautifully on the soothing "Waterfall." It's impossible not to be seduced by the joyful guitar melody of "Not Here Not There" or pulled along in the undertow of M'Bappe's quietly spun funk. Husband's subtly emotive playing provides the perfect accompaniment to McLaughlin's more expansive though caressing phrasing. Balladic, and lovingly playful, this gem ranks among McLaughlin's most lyrical compositions. 

The delicate arpeggio into to "Guitar Love" has just a hint of Mahavishnu Orchestra, though the band shifts up a gear with McLaughlin unleashing an inspired extended solo. Husband rises to the occasion with an untethered Hammond-style solo that burns, accompanied by McLaughlin's buoyant, floated chords. The short but explosive funk of "Take It or Leave It" provides a stirring finale. Stoked by M'Bappe's funk and Barot's in-the-pocket groove, McLaughlin's gradually intoxicating synth-guitar and Husband's understated counterpoint both evoke keyboardist Joe Zawinul's wicked charms. 

With the notable exception of Shakti, McLaughlin's projects have burned fiercely and relatively briefly before new adventures beckon. After more than half a decade, the 4th Dimension has evolved to a point where, to coin a phrase, the sky's the limit. This blend of musical personalities has a balance and dynamism that's all too rare. In concert? Surely unmissable. ~ Ian Patterson  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/now-here-this-john-mclaughlin-abstract-logix-review-by-ian-patterson.php
 
Personnel: John McLaughlin: electric guitar, synthesizer-guitar; Gary Husband: keyboards; Etienne M’Bappe: electric bass; Ranjit Barot: drums.

Friday, April 4, 2014

John McLaughlin & The 4th Dimension - The Boston Record

Size: 145,3 MB
Time: 63:05
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz: Fusion, Progressive Rock
Art: Full

01. Raju (8:35)
02. Little Miss Valley (9:21)
03. Abbaji (6:53)
04. Echos From Then (8:15)
05. Senor C. S. (2:49)
06. Call & Answer (9:17)
07. Maharina (4:56)
08. Hijacked (6:45)
09. You Know You Know (6:10)

Ever since guitarist John McLaughlin formed the 4th Dimension—his first electric fusion band in a decade—fans have been hoping he'd dig a little further into his back catalog. The wait is over with The Boston Record, a live album recorded in 2013 at Boston's Berklee College of Music.

This isn't 4th Dimension's first live album, though it is the first to feature the seven year-old group's current configuration. Ranjit Barot, first heard with McLaughlin on Floating Point (Abstract Logix, 2009), replaced drummer Mark Mondesir on Now Here This (Abstract Logix, 2013), and is as outrageously virtuosic as ever; the equally impressive bassist Etienne Mbappe is back too, as is serious double-threat keyboardist/drummer Gary Husband—the only other remaining member of 4th Dimension's inaugural lineup and clearly an increasingly important musical collaborator.

Now Here This came under some fire for its drum-heavy mix; The Boston Record is more equitably balanced. McLaughlin's recent tone has also been criticized, but from the first power chords of the opening "Raju"—the group's standard opener from Floating Point, but which never gets old—it's clear that, while not quite as heavily fuzz-toned as in his Mahavishnu Orchestra days, the guitarist has returned to a far grungier tone that better suits the high octane, pedal-to-the-metal fusion which dominates much of The Boston Record.

The last time this group released a live document—2008's Official Pirate: Best of the American Tour 2007 (Abstract Logix)—it didn't have any material of its own; with Now Here This and its predecessor, the John Coltrane-inspired To the One (Abstract Logix, 2010), the 4th Dimension now has a repertoire on which to draw. From Now Here This, the group delivers the fast-paced "Call & Answer," featuring one of Husband's best solos of the set and a truly epic drum feature over an irregular-metered ostinato, while the equally odd-metered shuffle of "Echos from Then" harkens back to "The Dance of the Maya," from Mahavishnu Orchestra's groundbreaking debut, The Inner Mounting Flame (Columbia, 1971). Despite little abatement in the 63-minute set, Floating Point's "Maharina" does provide some respite, though with McLaughlin's searing lines, it's not without its own impressive power.

It's also great to hear McLaughlin and the group dig into older material like the altered blues of "Little Miss Valley," from the guitarist's Tokyo Live (Verve, 1994), where Mbappe lets loose some serious pyrotechnics, and the knotty, high velocity "Hijacked," from Que Alegria (Verve, 1992). But the biggest—and best—surprise is saved for last, a set-closing updated look at Inner Mounting Flame's "You Know You Know," where the ever-playful McLaughlin quotes everyone from Miles Davis ("Jean-Pierre") to Jimi Hendrix ("Foxy Lady"). It's the first time McLaughlin has looked back to the group that broke his career, but it's more than a piece of nostalgia; it demonstrates that his music is, indeed, timeless—sounding as fresh today as it did 43 years ago.

At 72, McLaughlin isn't just at the top of his game; with his best (and longest-standing) fusion group since his breakthrough/breakout days of the early '70s, The Boston Record documents an artist still vital, still treading new ground—and still as relevant as ever. ~John Kelman

Personnel: John McLaughlin: guitar; Gary Husband: keyboards, drums; Etienne Mbappe: bass; Ranjit Barot: drums.

The Boston Record

Monday, December 16, 2013

John McLaughlin - Belo Horizonte

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 37:03
Size: 84.8 MB
Styles: Fusion, Guitar jazz
Year: 1981/2013
Art: Front

[4:23] 1. Belo Horizonte
[5:54] 2. La Baleine
[1:09] 3. Very Early (Homage to Bill Evans)
[6:23] 4. One Melody
[5:58] 5. Stardust On Your Sleeve
[3:23] 6. Waltz For Katia
[5:41] 7. Zimfir
[4:09] 8. Manitas D'Oro

Recorded in 1981, this is a diverse and somewhat obscure John McLaughlin outing recorded in France, mostly with French musicians. Classical pianist Katia Labèque makes appearances on acoustic piano and synthesizer; there is a thoughtful version of "Very Early" recorded in tribute to Bill Evans, and a collaboration with flamenco guitarist Paco de Lucía, "Manitas d'Oro." In general, McLaughlin is in fine shape on this worthwhile set, both on acoustic and electric guitars, occasionally showing some fire. ~Scott Yanow

Belo Horizonte