Showing posts with label Maynard Ferguson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maynard Ferguson. Show all posts

roun dup pt2

(Nothing over $3)

It is weird to think this is 11 years old now. Y2K hip-hop, the last of the "underground". A little reminder of what 'Hip Hop Is'/ was.

If i was paying more attention i would have had this album already. How many Herb Alpert albums i've flipped passed in the past without a second thought would be in 100s. From start to finish its a winner. Same goes for this particular track.

This is another horny guy. nice breaks and some smooth jazzy listening for your M.F'n ear.

Dave Dee, Dozy, Bea.. I can't be bothered typing these guys redick name out. Dave should've gone solo.
Don't matter if recs from this era are a little scratched up. It suits that ol timey sound.

Little 7" EP of this club banger.

I have a 'best of' compilation of William Bell. But albums are where the magic happens.

Woman To Woman. Too easy to have sampled this and make a winner. The real challenge is turning nothing into something. Woman To Woman is already quite something.

Quincy Jones. G.O.A.T.

Why this mint condition (not this image) double LP was sitting in the sales pile I'll never know. I was laughing.

I'm stocking up on comedy gold for the hard times ahead. It'll bring joy when the dollar aint worth shit.

I know what you're thinking. "Where's the 80s garbage?"

Shelia E is the female equivalent to Prince. No wait, Prince is the female equivalent to Prince. Shelia E is his protégée. This album was made at the same time as 'Sign O' The Times' and in the same studio.

And that concludes the roun dup.

Primal Scream

I don't know why I haven't given Maynard Ferguson a listen before. I am a big fan of that jazz that came out in the mid to late 1970s that includes such great musicians as Bob James, Steve Gadd, Eric Gale et al. It has connections with all the things I love from this period - disco, progressive rock, and Steely Dan (Steve Gadd played on Aja). That period has the feeling of a tight community of musicians all playing on each other albums. The hay day of the session musician.

My first exposure to MF was through listening to Primal Scream (1976) a couple of days ago. The title track starts with a scream from the horn section and progresses into an energetic funk workout. Check out this clip of Primal Scream live at the 1977 Canadian Stage Band Festival. So many highlights - MF dancing and conducting, the audience nodding heads, the conga solo - too much.

Arthur Janov wrote his book Primal Scream in 1970 outlining his experiences of practicing Primal Therapy. John Lennon is probably the first musician to show the influence of Janov's work in his song Mother (John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band, 1970). Lennon had worked with Janov (pictured left with Lennon and Ono).




Influence can manifest itself in a variety of ways - Lennon putting therapy on record, MF's seriously funky horn display - not to mention the band Primal Scream (formed in 1982). All cathartic and therapeutic in their own way but perhaps progressively moving away from the true meaning of the source.