The 70's Jazz-rock/fusion appreciation society |
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Kazuhiro
Forum Admin Group Joined: 15 Jan 2011 Location: Tokyo, Japan Status: Offline Points: 3776 |
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Yes. American Garage is a good album. Or, Still Life is also good. I often listen to them.
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Kazuhiro
Forum Admin Group Joined: 15 Jan 2011 Location: Tokyo, Japan Status: Offline Points: 3776 |
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Features might be united to some degree as the music character of PMG. Each characteristic and the idea by ECM and Geffen might have joined it, too. PMG in the 80's might often have the element of World Fusion. I think initial PMG also for an experimental element to exist as a subjective opinion. I thought one directionality to have been established when Pat Metheny announced the off-ramp. Point that Pat Metheny considered band anyway. And, it is convinced that the existence of Lyle Mays is very important for PMG. |
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Abraxas
JMA Collaborator Joined: 10 Mar 2011 Location: Argentina Status: Offline Points: 1251 |
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^Yes, American Garage is fantastic up-lifting fusion.
Offramp has grown on me a lot, its dark mood, I now find it another masterful album.
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Sean Trane
Forum Senior Member Joined: 19 Apr 2011 Location: Brussels Status: Offline Points: 789 |
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Really not a fan of most 80's fusion.... It had lost all kinds of energy compared to the 70's.... bad synth and shoddy 80's production values are also major setbacks. It's why I don't really like ECM-type of fusion.... too cool and dead, IMHO.
90's are not much better, but it seems that energy levels were on the rise... and some of those 80's trademarks disappeared
Of couse, synclaviers (I refuse to put a capital s to that crap) are the worst thing that could've happened to jazz guitar.... it took all of the biting edge of guitar sounds and smoothed it out beyond commen sense.
Listen to McL throughout the 80's, he sounds like a weenie version of his former self
Edited by Sean Trane - 14 Jun 2011 at 2:53am |
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my music collection increased tenfolds when I switched from drug-addicted musicians to crazy ones....
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Jazz Pianist
Forum Senior Member Joined: 13 Jun 2011 Location: Birmingham, UK Status: Offline Points: 118 |
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STRATUS
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Sean Trane
Forum Senior Member Joined: 19 Apr 2011 Location: Brussels Status: Offline Points: 789 |
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Anybody knows of Second Vision with John Etheridge??
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my music collection increased tenfolds when I switched from drug-addicted musicians to crazy ones....
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darkshade
Forum Senior Member Joined: 09 Mar 2011 Location: New Jersey Status: Offline Points: 1973 |
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overall I agree about the 80s, but there was good stuff from that decade. 90's fusion is generally my least preferred, which is why I love 2000s fusion. It's like a fusion of 70s fusion with 2000s rock/metal energy, or maybe infuse more funk and jazz. Either way, I think I like 2000s fusion so much because of the great production values compared to 80s and 90s |
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Dick Heath
Forum Senior Member Joined: 11 Jul 2011 Location: Loughborough UK Status: Offline Points: 98 |
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Yes. Post Soft Machine collaboration with Ric Sanders, jazz rock folk made before the violinist headed off to the Fairports - issued on CD by Blueprint. A reminder that Etheridge has played with a lot of violinists during his career - Darryl Way, Nigel Kennedy, Stephane Grapelli also immediately come to mind. |
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Moshkito
Forum Groupie Joined: 15 Aug 2011 Location: Vancouver, WA Status: Offline Points: 42 |
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Dang ... I could have sworn that Deodato did not do Strauss on that Kubrick film but I have to go check my madness boutique!
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Sean Trane
Forum Senior Member Joined: 19 Apr 2011 Location: Brussels Status: Offline Points: 789 |
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I've tried to find this, but apparently it's OOP, rare or scarce or never reissued on CD
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my music collection increased tenfolds when I switched from drug-addicted musicians to crazy ones....
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darkshade
Forum Senior Member Joined: 09 Mar 2011 Location: New Jersey Status: Offline Points: 1973 |
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The question is, which era of 70s fusion is the best? The 1969-1972 era, or the 1973-1976 era? First one was overall more psychedelic inspired, spacey, still very jazzy, raw, and really open; whereas the second brought more funky moods, synthesizers, tighter rhythms, and felt more composed.
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Sean Trane
Forum Senior Member Joined: 19 Apr 2011 Location: Brussels Status: Offline Points: 789 |
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I'm really a first wave JR/F fan (preferring Mwandishi to Head Hunters by a million miles >> notwithstanding Davis of course) , but the real break for me came later than these two periods I really think that the funk became even more evident in JR/F after 76, and notably when Pastorius joined WR (Black Market) >> This is a totally personal view, but the influence that album had on everyone kind of triggered or provoked what I view as JR/F's decline... Of course before that BM album, we'd seen plenty of jazzers try out their luck solo ventures in funk-jazz rock or jazz-funk as I like to call it (thinking of Stanley Clarke, for ex)...
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my music collection increased tenfolds when I switched from drug-addicted musicians to crazy ones....
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darkshade
Forum Senior Member Joined: 09 Mar 2011 Location: New Jersey Status: Offline Points: 1973 |
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Jaco changed the entire landscape of jazz-rock/fusion in 1976 (that's kinda why I made the cut-off '76). Just about every fusion bassist to come out after that was inspired by Jaco in some way or another.
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Sean Trane
Forum Senior Member Joined: 19 Apr 2011 Location: Brussels Status: Offline Points: 789 |
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UNFORTUNATELY!!! not a big fan of his over-playing
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my music collection increased tenfolds when I switched from drug-addicted musicians to crazy ones....
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darkshade
Forum Senior Member Joined: 09 Mar 2011 Location: New Jersey Status: Offline Points: 1973 |
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Maybe for some 80s and 90s fusion albums, but many of the 2000s and 2010s fusion albums I've heard, where the bassist is influenced by Jaco (or Victor Wooten), they're more tasteful, not to mention I feel the genre has improved since around the mid-2000s. I also enjoy Jaco's style, and those influenced by him, anyway. |
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Dean Watson
Forum Newbie Joined: 10 Aug 2012 Location: Rosseau Status: Offline Points: 27 |
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This is certainly my kind of genre - I grew up with it - I lived it during its heyday. I'm older now, and still, listening to it. Perhaps I'm a little toned down, more of a Yellowjackets kinda guy. I write harder though, anyway, fantastic complex genre, and completely love it.
Did any of that make sense?
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Find me at:
http://deanwatson.bandcamp.com/track/Fantasizer New CD "Fantasizer!" out now! |
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dreadpirateroberts
Forum Admin Group Joined: 06 Jul 2011 Location: AU Status: Offline Points: 1836 |
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^ sure did
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We are men of action. Lies do not become us.
Reviews... |
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darkshade
Forum Senior Member Joined: 09 Mar 2011 Location: New Jersey Status: Offline Points: 1973 |
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Aside from certain Zappa albums, 70s jazz-fusion has just not been on lately. Been mostly listening to 90s/2000s/2010s fusion. Maybe I discovered all I want/need from this decade in the fusion world.
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js
Forum Admin Group Site admin Joined: 22 Dec 2010 Location: Memphis Status: Offline Points: 34403 |
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I was raised on that stuff, don't listen to it much anymore, but still like a lot of it.
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darkshade
Forum Senior Member Joined: 09 Mar 2011 Location: New Jersey Status: Offline Points: 1973 |
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Sure, if it's on I'll enjoy it, and I do throw on the odd album here and there, but lately I haven't been feeling it. I did get Return to Forever's recent album, and while the original songs are from the 70s, the music itself is very much more modern, in fact, it's one of the band's best albums.
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