Showing posts with label Les McCann. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Les McCann. Show all posts

27 October, 2011

McCoy Tyner - Song For My Lady (1973)

McCoy Tyner - Song For My Lady (1973)
jazz | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 270MB
OJC
 Allmusic:
The early '70s were an exciting recording period for this artist, whose initial forays outside the classic quartet of John Coltrane were just a bit too mellow, as if he was thinking, "Whew! Now I can relax." This was one of several for the Milestone label that burned energetically, although in terms of the pianist's overall career this concentrated thrust of stamina was simply a passing phase. He is captured here a few years before he settled into elder statesman status and began barely breaking a sweat on-stage. The emphasis here is often on pure power, the presence of a non-funky Alphonze Mouzon on drums something of a signature in band attitude. The nimble and fleet Calvin Hill is on bass, and Sonny Fortune is present on reeds during a stint of several years with Tyner. What really makes the album special is the enlarged ensemble that creates two of the album's most extended tracks. "Native Song" and "Essence" add flugelhorn, violin, and conga, and the fine-tuning skill of Tyner the arranger becomes present, turning the lineup of three lead instruments into something nearly symphonic. Violinist Michael White is more than a bit overpowered by Tyner, as one would expect, but it is the opposite case in terms of fireworks between brass player Charles Tolliver and the boss. Tolliver fronted a band named Music Inc. during this period who also played hard, heavy, and unrelenting jazz, pianist Stanley Cowell coming on strong with many Tyner-ish-influenced moves. It is a great meeting of the minds, as two players with sympathetic approaches toward the post-Coltrane jazz language engage in high-powered dialogue. The program is quite typical of some of Tyner's best albums for this label and Blue Note before that. All but one of the tracks are originals, featuring lovely melodies that either wash through a ballad mood or become anthems for rocket launchings, Mouzon splattering away on his cymbals like a happy child. The one standard, "The Night Has a Thousand Eyes," gets a liftoff worthy of Coltrane. This is quite a fine collection of tracks and one of Tyner's six best albums.

Tracks
-1. "Native Song" - 13:00
-2. "The Night Has a Thousand Eyes" (Bernier, Brainin) - 8:17
-3. "Song for My Lady" - 7:37
-4. "A Silent Tear" - 4:30
-5. "Essence" - 11:20
All compositions by McCoy Tyner except as indicated
Tracks 1 and 5 recorded on September 6, 1972; 2, 3 and 4 on November 27, 1972.


Personnel
* McCoy Tyner - piano, percussion
* Sonny Fortune - alto saxophone, soprano saxophone, flute
* Calvin Hill - bass
* Alphonse Mouzon - drums
* Michael White - violin
* Charles Tolliver - flugelhorn (tracks 1 & 5)
* Mtume - congas, percussion (tracks 1 & 5)

29 July, 2010

Les McCann - Invitation To Openness (1971) (eac-log-cover)

Les McCann - Invitation To Openness (1971)
jazz-rock | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 320MB
Label M | rar +5% recovery
AMG:
Label M has reissued the classic 1972 Les McCann album Invitation to Openness on CD with the majority of the tunes receiving the benefit of advanced technology. On this recording, the 26-minute "The Lovers" is more illustrative, freer in its essence and translation of the predominant free love theme of the '60s and '70s. Every nuance of McCann's stream of consciousness comes through loud and clear, as do the excellent solos by Yusef Lateef on a wide array of reeds, flutes, and percussion. David Spinozza's electric guitar chops and Alphonse Mouzon's drum and percussion feelings on McCann's completely improvised composition are an auditory delight for fusion fans. McCann adds a couple of piano melody lines and a couple of basslines, but other than that this composition is freely improvised by the musicians. Two other compositions, "Beaux J. Poo Boo" and "Poo Pye McGoochie (And His Friends)" round out the set with both adding different sonorous characters and musical back stories.

Tracks:
01 - The Lovers
02 - Beaux J. Poo Boo
03 - Poo Pye McGoochie (and his friends)

Personnel:
Les McCann- piano, electric piano, Moog synth; Corky Hale- harp; Yusef Lateef- flute, oboe, sax, percussion; David Spinozza, Cornell Dupree- guitars; Jimmy Rowser, Bill Salter- bass; Buck Clarke, William Clarke, Donald Dean, Alphonze Mouzon, Bernard Purdie- percussion, drums
r c

01 March, 2010

Les McCann - Pump It Up (2002) (eac-log-cover)

Les McCann - Pump It Up (2002)
jazz | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 380MB
ESC
allmusic:
Still trying to recover from the effects of a devastating 1995 stroke, Les McCann relaxed and put out a playful jazz/funk album with a cast of dozens that in some ways harkens back to some of his Atlantic sides from the 1970s. Unlike his other post-stroke albums, he doesn't play any keyboards here, leaving them in the hands of Ricky Peterson, with an emphasis on the Hammond B3. Rather, McCann is content just to sing and rap -- again, a throwback and fallback to records made a quarter-century before. At 66, McCann sounds considerably different -- older and a little shakier on the ballads, but still sly and willing. The grooves are OK in a minimally updated '70s funk manner, but the material, coming from a variety of sources, is rather ordinary as a whole. The guest celebs come in profusion to help out: singer Dianne Reeves sits in on the ho-hum Bill Withers big ballad "You Just Can't Smile It Away," Billy Preston pumps some swampy rhythm from his Wurlitzer electric piano and B3 into the semi-autobiographical "Tryin' to Make It Real," and "Funk It" is dominated by Maceo Parker's staccato alto sax and the acrobatic bass of Marcus Miller. The most poignant passage comes when the elder McCann sings a new lyric over an LP dub of his younger self's piano trio recording "The Truth," from the Pacific Jazz days, with Preston's soulful B3 and Bonnie Raitt on hand to alternate on vocals. It's almost like they're sharing a private moment in McCann's living room.

Tracks

01. Pump it Up
02. Buckshot & Lefonque
03. Let it Ride (the Train)
04. I Can't Stand It
05. So What
06. You Just Can't Smile It Away
07. Tryin' to Make It Real
08. The Truth
09. Daylight
10. Funk It (Let the Music Play
11. I Can't Stand It - Reprise

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