Wednesday, September 6, 2017

Melvin Jackson - Jazz and Funk


Bassist Melvin Jackson has exactly one album in his catalog as a leader (he spent most of his time playing with Eddie Harris). But man, that's all he needed. Pumping his upright through a Maestro G-2 filter box, a Boomerang, an Echoplex, and an Am peg amp, he made that thing sound like something from outer space while keeping it firmly in the groove of the corner bar on Front Street. Gimmicky? That's what they once said about Roland Kirk playing multiple horns at once, too. As for the naysayers who think of this as a novelty, consider the heavies in his band: Roscoe Mitchell, Leo Smith, Lester Bowie, Phil Upchurch, Pete Cosey, Morris Jennings, Jodie Christian, Billy Hart, Byron Bowie, Steve Galloway, and a whole lot of others. All of these cats were heavyweights in their own right. What does Funky Skull sound like? Psychedelic, funky soul-jazz and a whole lot more. Jackson bowed his bass a well as plucked it depending on what the tune needed. Produced in Chicago by Robin McBride and originally released on the Limelight label, it marked an era of exploration and Jackson was on the ground floor of the space station. There was only one requirement: the groove had to be in the pocket and the beat had to be on the one. There are nine tunes here; Jackson wrote or co-wrote four, including the two-part title cut. He took pages from both Harris' serious soul-jazz book and James Brown's funky one. There are vocals on these tracks, but they amount to little more than accents on the repetitive rhythmic lines being laid down. It's all backbone-slipping, hard, electric jazz funk from the pre-fusion era. "Funky Skull, Pts 1 & 2" and Eddie Harris' "Cold Duck Time, Pts. 1 & 2" were actually spun on jukeboxes throughout the Midwest and in New York in beer gardens, at lunch counters, in bowling alleys, etc. In other words, these jams got heard and grooved to by ordinary folks, not just jazz heads. The nickels got pumped for a reason. Some cuts here, such as "Dance of the Dervish," have pretty sophisticated arrangements and fell more firmly in the jazz camp, but were outside it, too -- especially the Echoplexed bass solo. Elsewhere, "Everybody Loves My Baby," which is a workout for hand percussion, hi hat, and bowed electronically affected bass, was out there on the launching pad in terms of classification. It gets brought back in from the cold by Jackson's "Say What," with the horns playing as a section with striated harmony and a subtle B-3 played by some uncredited genius who kept the funk lines clipped and tight; it was Jackson's cue for wrapping himself all over the groove while never leaving the pocket entirely. The bleating saxophone solo tells you that something else is being aspired to and delivered: it pushes the melody line way out the window, but the rhythm section never loses it for a second. "Funky Doo," written by Jackson and producer Robin McBride, rocks it up while being a dance tune for a sweaty after-hours party. The set ends with "Silver Cycles," written by Jackson and Harris. Clocking in at over nine minutes, it begins with a small piano vamp and Jackson playing glissando bowed bass before flutes, a trap kit, and other horns wind their way in. Jackson's bass gets double-tracked, finding the expansive groove being laid down and extrapolated into harmonic wonderland. Textures by the horn section, and the lower edges of the bass and piano registers are expounded upon, with the horn playing in high, tinny fashion, creating a huge space in the middle for anything to happen. But it stays on the subtle side with all sorts of interaction going on between the instruments crisscrossing channels and parts before fading into the night. Funky Skull is a one of a kind listening experience. It's fun, wildly inventive, freewheeling and complex all at the same time. This is one of those records that one has to hear to believe, and once heard, has to have as a permanent part in your collection. [Luckily for us, the fine folks over at Dusty Groove in Chicago reissued this Limelight classic on CD in 2007.




Amplified bass, electronic effects, and more - all served up in one of the headiest funk albums of the 60s. Eddie Harris' bassman Melvin Jackson works here in a Cadet Records-like session -- with horns from members of the AACM (including Lester Bowie, Leo Smith, and Roscoe Mitchell), guitar from Phil Upchurch, vocals from The Sound Of Feeling, and lots of funky rhythms on the stretched-out tracks. A unique record that's in the same territory as early Earth Wind & Fire, funky Ramsey Lewis, and Charles Stepney at Cadet - soulful, sophisticated, and totally righteous!

GENIUS - A Rock Opera


Genius is a "rock opera" trilogy that includes a total of 33 songs (11 for each episode); and side-project of Empty Tremor's keyboard player Daniele Liverani.

Storyconcept introduction by the author:
Genius is a rock opera trilogy that will include a total of 33 songs (11 for each episode).
Even if the total duration of the Opera is about 4 hours of music for 3 cd, the whole storyconcept refers to a dream experienced by the main character 'Genius' that lasts only 10 minutes!
It's known that dreams are often creating a time-stretch effect in our minds, so that a 10 minutes long dream can be remembered as a day long story...
Infact, these 10 minutes of Genius' dream has been described in 4 hour of music!
But we are not talking about a regular dream like all humans have always  experienced...
In this 10 minutes Genius goes too far and discovers for the first time all the secrets of human's dream creation...



Musicians:
Daniele Liverani: All Guitars, Bass and Keyboards
Dario Ciccioni: Drums & Percussions

Cast of characters:
Mark Boals: 'Genius'
Lana Lane: 'Doorkeeper'
Daniel Gildenlow: 'Twinspirit n.32'
Chris Boltendahl: 'Stationmaster'
Joe Vana: 'King Mc Chaos Consultant'
John Wetton: 'King Mc Chaos'
Steve Walsh: 'King Wild Tribe'
Oliver Hartmann: 'King Wild Tribe Consultant'
Midnight: 'Maindream'
Philip Bynoe: 'Storyteller'
Olaf Senkbeil,Hachy Hackmann,Chris Boltendahl:' Choirs'

Additional backing vocals on 'The Right Place' by
Rita Celli

Additional backing vocals on 'All Of Your Acts' by
Thom Griffin

All songs written and composed by
Daniele Liverani

Original story concept written by
Daniele Liverani

Music recorded at Fear Studios, Alfonsine, Italy, engineered by
Gabriele Ravaglia and Daniele Liverani





Musicians:
Daniele Liverani: All Guitars, Bass and Keyboards
Dario Ciccioni: Drums & Percussions
Oliver Hartmann: 'All choirs'

Cast of characters:
Mark Boals: 'Genius'
Daniel Gildenlow: 'Twinspirit n.32'
Russel Allen: 'Dream League commander'
Edu Falaschi: 'Jason'
Jeff Martin: 'Seventree'
Rob Tyrant: 'Oddyfer guardian'
Eric Martin: 'Mr. Niko'
Johnny Gioeli: 'Oddyfer'
Liv Kristine: 'Klepsydra'
Philip Bynoe: 'Storyteller' 

Additional backing vocals on 'Playing in their dreams' by
Daniel Gildenlow

All songs written and composed by
Daniele Liverani

Original story concept written by
Daniele Liverani

Music recorded at Fear Studios, Alfonsine, Italy, engineered by
Gabriele Ravaglia and Daniele Liverani



(From Magal Files)

All guitars, basses and keyboards by 
Daniele Liverani

Drums & percussions by 
Dario Ciccioni

Main choirs by 
Oliver Hartmann

Additional backing vocals by 
Irene Ermolli

Directed, produced and edited for Frontiers Records by 
Daniele Liverani

All songs written and composed by 
Daniele Liverani

Original story concept written by 
Daniele Liverani



Tuesday, September 5, 2017

FAUN Prog Folk • Germany


FAUN are a German neofolk band known for their expansive use of traditional, ethnic and modern electric instruments, as well as recorded sounds and synthesized music. The band formed in 2002 and have released four studio albums, one live album and a pair of DVDs to-date.

FAUN's music is heavily centered around lyrics, both ancient and modern, and have also been known to adapt traditional scores and poetry. Their lyrics are sung in a wide range of both modern and historical languages.

>>Bio by Bob Moore (aka ClemofNazareth)<<




Thanks Magal

Alain Goraguer - La Planète Sauvage (Jazz and Funk)


Originally released in 1973, this highly sought after soundtrack accompanied Rene Laloux's animated feature film. Basedon the 'Oms En Serie', a book by the critically garlanded sci-fi author Stefan Wul. An extraordinary soundtrack from cult French compose. Composer Alain Goraguer creates an equally hypnotic score from a palette of effects-laden guitars, flutes, Fender Rhodes and strings. While the lush arrangements are reminiscent of Goraguer's collaborations with Serge Gainsbourg in the 1960s, space-age synth flourishes suggest a more psychedelic era. Moody vignettes flow together in tense, slow-paced funk rhythms and Baroque textures.

It comes as no surprise that La Planète Sauvage has been cited as an influence on contemporary artists such as French duo Air and American hip-hop producers J Dilla and Madlib. Gorgeous, interplanetary soundscapes resemble the surreal meeting point between Pink Floyd's Obscured by Clouds and Broadcast's Future Crayon.

This long out-of-print vinyl release features the original soundtrack recording and newly designed artwork. Recommended for fans of Ennio Morricone, Basil Kirchin and David Axelrod.






CÁLIX Prog Folk • Brazil


CÁLIX is an excellent Brasilian group that plays some very interesting prog with a variety of influences, although their music is mostly progressive folk-rock oriented. Musically the band uses at least a dozen different instruments including the flute, harmonica, violin, piano and what I presume are some traditional Brazilian folk instruments. That's why they are referred to as the South-American JETHRO TULL. 

The album "Canções de Beurin", released in 2000 and sung entirely in Portuguese is very illustrative with a tone of voice less raucous than that of Ian ANDERSON. "A Roda" can be described as a fairly straight mix of later-day TULL and CAMEL. A bit of blues, a bit of rock and quite a bit of folk.

Bruno B.pl

A Roda Vem Aí




Canções de Beurin






Thanks Magal

Monday, September 4, 2017

The Stranglers - Punk Rock (UK)


The Stranglers are an English rock band who emerged via the punk rock scene. Scoring some 23 UK top 40 singles and 17 UK top 40 albums to date in a career spanning four decades, the Stranglers are one of the longest-surviving and most "continuously successful" bands to have originated in the UK punk scene.

Formed as the Guildford Stranglers on 11 September 1974 in Guildford, Surrey, they originally built a following within the mid-1970s pub rock scene. While their aggressive, no-compromise attitude identified them as one of the instigators of the UK punk rock scene that followed, their idiosyncratic approach rarely followed any single musical genre and the group went on to explore a variety of musical styles, from new wave, art rock and gothic rock through the sophisticated pop of some of their 1980s output.

They had major mainstream success with their 1982 single "Golden Brown". Their other hits include 1970's Punk Rock hits "No More Heroes", "Peaches", "Always the Sun" and "Skin Deep" and 2003 Top 40 hit Big Thing Coming, which was seen as a return to form.

The Stranglers' early sound was driven by Jean-Jacques Burnel's melodic bass, but also gave prominence to Dave Greenfield's keyboards. Their early music was also characterised by the growling vocals and sometimes misanthropic lyrics of both Jean-Jacques Burnel and Hugh Cornwell. Over time, their output gradually grew more refined and sophisticated. Summing up their contribution to popular music, critic Dave Thompson later wrote: "From bad-mannered yobs to purveyors of supreme pop delicacies, the group was responsible for music that may have been ugly and might have been crude – but it was never, ever boring.











Thanks Magal

The Funk Tapes