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

Tuesday, September 1, 2020

John McLaughlin & 4th Dimension - France 2011

John McLaughlin & 4th Dimension 
34th Jazzfest
Marciac, France
July 30, 2011
FM Source @320


Track List:
01. FM Intro [0:45]
02. Raju [8:48]
03. The Unknown Dissident [6:39]
04. Band Introduction [3:21]
05. Recovery [4:24]
06. FM Announcer [0:08]
07. The Fine Line [7:45]
08. Señor C.S. [12:54]
09. FM Announcer/McLaughlin talks [0:50]
10. Little Miss Valley [7:38]
11. FM Announcer [0:23]
12. Sully [6:16]
13. FM Outro [0:45]

Thanks to the original source!

pass = fbsvw

Friday, June 16, 2017

John McLaughlin and Carlos Santana - Live Montreux 2011

John McLaughlin and Carlos Santana
"Invitation to Illumination"

July 1, 2011
45th Montreux Jazz Festival
Auditorium Stravinsky,
Montreux, Switzerland
Soundboard @320



Set List:
101. The Life Divine (2)
102. Peace On Earth/Dear Lord
103. A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall
104. Stairway To Heaven
105. Our Lord’s Prayer/Sun Ra Freak Out
106. Right Off
107. Vuelta Abajo (2)
108. Vashkar (2)
109. The Creator Has A Master Plan (1)
110. Naima (Acoustic)
111. Lotus Land (Acoustic) -
112. Downstairs Blues Upstairs

201. Venus/Upper Egypt
202. Let Us Go Into The House Of The Lord
203. Black Satin
204. A Love Supreme
205. Jam Session (3) (aka Montreux Boogie)


Musicians:
Carlos Santana
John McLaughlin
Cindy Blackman-Santana
Dennis Chambers
Tony Lindsay (1)
David K. Mathews
Etienne Mbappé
Raul Rekow
Benny Rietveld (2)
Claude Nobs (3)


$!$

Saturday, May 7, 2016

John McLaughlin - Devotion -1970 {Out of Print}

John McLaughlin - Devotion -1970
Studio recordings @320
{Out of Print}

Devotion is a hard driving, spaced-out, distorted hard-jazz-rock album featuring organist Larry Young, drummer Buddy Miles, and the little known bassist Billy Rich. This album was recorded close to the period when McLaughlin had been jamming with Jimi Hendrix, Young, Miles and Dave Holland. Terrible bootlegs exist of some of their jams, but bad sound quality and McLaughlin's guitar on the fritz make the bootlegs a ripoff.
Devotion was also sort of a ripoff. To this day, McLaughlin is angry about the way former Hendrix producer Alan Douglas mixed this record. Apparently, Douglas spliced bits of music together here and there that were not supposed to be connected. Despite this obvious problem, and the fact Douglas paid McLaughlin only $2,000 to record both Devotion and My Goal’s Beyond , this album is chock full of wonderfully ominous riffs and sounds. Devotion is an overlooked landmark album. 
~Walter Kolosky - All About Jazz


Track List:
1. Marbles (4:05)
2. Siren (5:55)
3. Don't Let the Dragon Eat Your Mother (5:18)
4. Purpose of When (4:42)
5. Dragon Song (4:13)
6. Devotion (11:25) 




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Thursday, January 21, 2016

Mahavishnu Orchestra - Avery Fisher Hall 1973

Mahavishnu Orchestra - Avery Fisher Hall
 December 27, 1973
New York, NY.
Soundboard @320 


This has been floating along on the web for a long time. Don't remember posting here.
ENJOY!


Set List:
01. Dream 27:13
02. Trilogy 18:47
03. Birds Of Fire 11:34
04. Sister Andrea 12:01
05. Dance of Maya 19:24



Billy Cobham - drums
Jerry Goodman - violin
Jan Hammer - keyboards
Rick Laird - bass
John McLaughlin - guitar
 

*Original Source Notes*
This Mahavishnu Orchestra performance, recorded on the first night of a two-night stand at New York City's Avery Fisher Hall, captures one of the very last performances ever by the legendary original lineup. This recording is a fascinating glimpse of the group at the tail end of their existence. In July of 1973, Mahavishnu Orchestra convened at London's Trident Studios to record their ill-fated third studio album. By this point, the relationships within the band were strained and the resulting recordings, which for the first time featured compositions by bandmembers other than McLaughlin, would not see the light of day for several decades. In August and September, McLaughlin and Cobham embarked on a tour with Carlos Santana, further straining the relationships within the band, which would dissolve by the end of the year. The initial classic lineup of the group lasted less than three years and only released two studio albums and one live recording during this era, but these recordings had a profound effect, redefining the jazz/rock fusion movement in the process. Combining the improvisational elements of jazz with the volume and energy of rock music, Mahavishnu Orchestra created music that was often intricate and complex, performed by musicians whose virtuosity thrilled audiences, musicians and critics alike.

Following the captivating take on "Dance Of Maya," they tackle another extended number, "Dream." Again, there is an abundance of exploratory and propulsive playing here, but one of the most interesting aspects of this performance is that McLaughlin plays the first sequence on acoustic guitar, and it is far more compelling than the live version featured on Between Nothingness And Eternity, recorded the previous August. Often this initial sequence was merely a dreamy contemplative introduction to the fireworks to come, but here it is absolutely beautiful and McLaughlin's playing has far more depth and character and Goodman's haunting violin phrases are all the more compelling for it. Despite hollering and rudeness from the audience (which is audible on the recording), McLaughlin remains focused. As the second, faster section begins, Hammer unleashes his trademark barrage of chords and arpeggios on his Fender Rhodes as the band begins building an elegant melody line. This becomes a head-spinning exercise as McLaughlin and Goodman lock together in unison driving the main section of the composition. This is fast and furious playing at its most intense, with various duets emerging in and out of the fray. This is a jaw-dropping performance that is simply overflowing with energy; seemingly superhuman in its seething intensity.

The recording ends with another track from the Trident sessions, "Trilogy." The first passage develops into an elaborate trade-off between McLaughlin and Hammer, with the guitar dominating. The second section features Goodman's violin dominating and Hammer providing birdcall effects with his synthesizers. Cobham's drumming is particularly impressive during this passage. Then the group suddenly launches into the third section—a aggressive hyperactive jam, first featuring a brief violin solo followed by a scorching solo from McLaughlin. The entire group develops an impressive repetition based on McLaughlin's lead riff that remains captivating as the tape stock unfortunately ran out shortly before the conclusion of the show.

This recording, paired with the following night's recording at the same venue, would be the original lineup's final performances in New York City. Taken together, they provide a wonderful picture of the band's later era material performed at the most extreme levels of improvisation.

Read more about the Mahavishnu Orchestra in Crawdaddy!: 
 
 
pass-fbsvw

 
 
 

Monday, December 29, 2014

John McLaughlin & Billy Cobham - Live Montreaux 2010

John McLaughlin and Billy Cobham
Live at the Montreux Jazz Festival, Switzerland
July 2, 2010.

BBC FM Source @224


Radio presenter Jaz Nelson:

The Mahavishnu Orchestra performed in 1971, unleashed a series of cosmic… fusion albums until ‘76 when their inner mounting flame grew too hot and they imploded. They got together briefly in 1984 and then disappeared again until at last one day last July when guitarist John McLaughlin just happened to be hanging out on the banks of Lake Geneva when he got a call from his old friend Claude Nobs telling him that a band had cancelled that night and Claude said, ‘John, do you fancy getting back together with Billy Cobham and playing some Mahavishnu tunes?’

Thanks to Tom Phillips who shared the tracks on Dime. Tom noted: “John McLaughlin’s last minute ad-hoc reunion with Billy Cobham, recorded at the Montreux Jazz Festival last July. Suberbly recorded and demonstrating the John hasn’t lost his chops (where has he been for the last 25 years?), it is only short highlights…”

Certainly shows why the Mahavishnu Orchestra should never be overlooked.
Thanks also to fastone for the artwork.


Thanks to bigozine2.com

Montreaux '10


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