February 23, 2012

BEGGAR'S OPERA - ACT ONE




Beggar’s Opera - Act One (1970) (@256)


(Review from progarchives.com)

What a mindblowing debut-album this is! The very melodic and harmonic music from this five-piece band is based upon an incredible dynamic and propulsive rhythm-section and splendid, very exciting Hammond organ work, often accompanied by a powerful and fiery electric guitar. The interplay between the musicians is magnificent and the excertions on keyboards and guitar are very compelling, in the spirit of the late Sixties and early Seventies. The vocals are also worth to be mentioned: distinctive with an enthusiastic approach and often a bit cynical undertone but at some moments also warm and plesant. The highlight on this CD is the track “Raymond’s road” featuring awesome guitarsoli (inspired by Hendrix and Page)and exciting work on the Hammond organ in the vein of the best Keith Emerson, including short renditions of known classical pieces from Bach and Grieg. An excellent album that will please every hammond aficionado and fans from the early seventies progrock sound!

Line-up :
- Martin Griffiths / vocals
- Alan Park / organ
- Raymond Wilson / drums
- Ricky Gardiner / lead guitar
- Marshal Erksine / bass guitar

Track List :
01. Poet and Pesant (7:10)
02. Passacaglia (7:04)
03. Memory (3:57)
04. Raymond’s road (11:49)
05. Light Cavalry (11:57)
06. Sarabande (3:32)
07. Think (4:25)

http://fp.io/af4be72e/

ERIC JOHNSON - ZAP: ALL INSTRUMENTAL WORK




http://fp.io/m5m1e1d3/

21st Century Schizoid Band - Live In New York



21st Century Schizoid Band
Pictures of a City - Live in New York

Release Date
Mar 21, 2006

Recording Date
Apr 27, 2004

Label
Iceni

 Review by Bruce Eder
This double-disc set is comprised of the best parts of the early and late shows from the 21st Century Schizoid Band's April 27, 2004, appearance at B.B. King's in New York. This is a slightly different configuration of the band from the one that debuted in 2002, Ian Wallace having succeeded Michael Giles on drums — frankly, this reviewer prefers Giles, whose dexterity remains astonishing going into his sixties, but Wallace brings a lot of raw power to the playing, and he and bassist Peter Giles (finally enjoying the international music career he was denied by fate nearly 40 years ago) make a tight rhythm section. As to Ian MacDonald and Mel Collins, the two reed/wind/keyboardmen romp and stomp over the classic material on dual saxes, except where they aim for delicacy as on "Spend Us Three" and "Cadence and Cascade," and lead guitarist/vocalist Jakko Jakszyk proves every bit the perfect successor to Greg Lake, Gordon Haskell, and Boz Burrell on lead vocals. His work, in turn, is enhanced by the presence of several keyboard instruments, far beyond the Mellotron (which is well represented). The sheer range of this band on-stage is sort of a self-fulfilling characteristic, in terms of each member's work being enhanced in these surroundings, and in many ways this set will prove the good-sounding substitute for the historically important but technically lacking Fillmore East recordings by Crimso Mark 1. Some of the tempos are tighter and quicker than the original bands would have played them, especially on "Catfood," but otherwise this is a release that straddles two eras, two audiences, and two purposes, reaching back to the late '60s ("The Court of the Crimson King," "I Talk to the Wind," etc.) and early '70s ("Cirkus," "Formentera Lady," etc.) and bringing the work forward, and adding new material that's also well worth hearing. The band even reaches out to the repertory of the next incarnation of Crimso, performing "Starless" as their finale. The recording is perfectly balanced and so well done that one gets a sense of the ambience. On "Ladies of the Road," for example, the quintet even gets the Beatles-like harmonies on the chorus right, and there's a really cool sax/lead guitar jam, but there's also just enough audience ambience to confirm that there was mostly a guy crowd at B.B. King's that night (no surprise — this reviewer only ever knew one woman who was interested in King Crimson and that was his college art history teacher who was 45-plus [but very hot] and she was mostly intrigued by "The Night Watch" as a song inspired by Rembrandt, but I digress....). "Catley's Ashes," one of the new numbers, starts out as a punchy reed workout with room for the guitar, bass, and drums to get in some impressive, and it's a lot more than filler — it's a good enough showcase for the band that it would've made a great track on Islands (better than some that were on the latter) and, appropriately enough, it leads into what were the last two cuts off side one of that album. And it's on that trio of tracks that Giles and Wallace really start to impress this reviewer as much as everyone else here, Wallace weaving these multi-layered patterns and Giles handling the transition from "Catley's Ashes" to "Formentera Lady" and then the band carrying the latter for eight whole minutes without dragging or lagging, with a beautiful solo sax cadenza and lots of new piano ornamentation along with a recapturing of the studio original's haunting falsetto vocal embellishment; all of it leads to the explosive "Sailor's Tale," taken a little briskly but with lots of guitar and Mellotron pyrotechnics (over an awesome bass and drums foundation) to keep the listener busy, to close the first disc on what amounts to practically a sonic white-out. Disc two doesn't disappoint, opening with the oldest song in the group's repertory, "I Talk to the Wind," and closing with the newest of the classic material, "Starless," which makes for an almost overpowering finale after all that's come before.

       01.  Pictures of a City  Fripp, Sinfield  8:33
       02.  Catfood  Fripp, McDonald, Sinfield  4:24
       03.  Let There Be Light  McDonald, Sinfield  3:38
       04.  Cirkus  Fripp, Sinfield  8:16
       05.  Spend Us Three  Collins  1:43
       06.  Cadence and Cascade  Fripp, Sinfield  3:46
       07.  The Court of the Crimson King  McDonald, Sinfield  8:45
       08.  Ladies of the Road  Fripp, Sinfield  8:17
       09.  Catelys Ashes  Jakszyk  8:52
       10.  Formentara Lady  Fripp, Sinfield  9:49
       11.  Sailors Tale  Fripp  6:02
       12.  I Talk to the Wind  McDonald, Sinfield  6:59
       13.  Epitaph  Fripp, Giles, Lake, McDonald ...  10:00
       14.  21st Century Schizoid Man  Fripp, Giles, Lake, McDonald ...  11:57
       15.  Starless  Bruford, Cross, Fripp, James ...  11:29

 Mark "Clem" Clements Live Mixing
 Paul Crockford Management
 Ben Darlow Mastering
 Jim Farber Liner Notes
 Michael Fisher Liner Notes
 Peter Giles Bass, Vocals (bckgr), Liner Notes
 Jakko M. Jakszyk Editing
 Ian McDonald Alto, Flute, Keyboards, Sax (Alto), Vocals, Liner Notes, Soloist
 Phil Smee Package Design
 Ian Wallace Percussion, Drums, Vocals, Liner Notes
 http://fp.io/29d8fed4/

21st Century Schizoid Band - Live In Italy (2003)




21st Century Schizoid Band - Live In Italy (2003)

Live in Italy is the third installment of the "Official Bootleg" series from the 21st Century Schizoid Band. It is the first album to feature new drummer Ian Wallace, who replaced Michael Giles earlier that year.





Mel Collins: Baritone, Tenor and Alto Sax, Flute, Keys and Backing Vocals
Peter Giles: Bass Guitar and Backing Vocals
Jakko M Jakszyk: Guitar, Vocals, Flute and Mellotron
Ian McDonald: Keyboards. Flute, Alto Sax and Vocals
Ian Wallace: Drums, Percussion and Vocal

01 - Schizoid Intro
02 - A Man, A City
03 - Let There Be Light
04 - Court Of The Crimson King
05 - Ladies Of The Road
06 - Improv / Sailor's Tale
07 - Birdman
08 - Epitaph
09 - Catley's Ashes (Studio Version)
http://fp.io/8d72fe46/

YO-YO MA,Stuart Duncan, Edgar Meyer, Chris Thile – The Goat Rodeo Sessions (2011)





Yo-Yo Ma, Stuart Duncan, Edgar Meyer, Chris Thile – The Goat Rodeo Sessions (2011)

In the tradition of Appalachian Journey and Obrigado Brazil, Yo-Yo Ma once again embraces styles and traditions that go beyond classical music by bringing together four American string virtuosos and creating a new kind of chamber ensemble. The Goat Rodeo Sessions is a landmark album project which uniquely showcases cellist Yo-Yo Ma, fiddler Stuart Duncan, bassist Edgar Meyer and mandolinist Chris Thile, with special guest vocalist, Aoife O’Donovan (Crooked Still) on two tracks. While each musician is a renowned superstar in his own music sphere, they have come together as a unified ensemble in this most remarkable and organic cross-genre project stemming from their friendship…
…and the title concept.
A “goat rodeo,” according the Urbandictionary.com, “is about the most polite term used by aviation people (and others in higher risk situations) to describe a scenario that requires about 100 things to go right at once if you intend to walk away from it.” Meyer first heard the term used in reference to “a very chaotic situation where a lot of agendas are kind of confused, and it’s hard to tell up from down.” Relating it to The Goat Rodeo Sessions participants, all four lead extremely demanding, if not chaotic lives, making their meeting here on this record, a goat rodeo miracle.
But the term proved a perfect catch-all, too, in describing the otherwise hard-to-define nature of the quartet’s music. Much of the group’s improvisational “co-authorship” was created on the spot. “There’s quite a bit of interplay between the musicians in bringing each piece to life, from composing to figuring out our parts,” says Meyer. Ma offers final clarification, “In the end, what we’re trying to do is simply make music that transcends whatever roots or catagories of backgrounds that it starts from – that just exists as something that we’re trying to express, through our community of values, as a moment in time creating very special music.”
1. Attaboy [05:42]
2. Quarter Chicken Dark [04:47]
3. Helping Hand [04:32]
4. Where’s My Bow? [05:30]
5. Here and Heaven [03:53]
6. Franz and the Eagle [06:53]
7. Less Is Moi [07:27]
8. Hill Justice [04:29]
9. No One But You [03:54]
10. 13:8 [05:54]
11. Goat Rodeo [04:18]
http://fp.io/m7d8a749/
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