The Eleventh House Featuring Larry Coryell - Aspects (1976) CD Rip
BAND/ARTIST: The Eleventh House Featuring Larry Coryell
- Title: Aspects
- Year Of Release: 2004
- Label: Arista[BVCJ 37352]
- Genre: Jazz, Jazz Funk, Fusion
- Quality: FLAC (tracks + .cue,log,scans)
- Total Time: 41:46
- Total Size: 299 MB(+3%)
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
01 Kowloon Jag 5:51
02 Titus 5:30
03 Pyramids 5:23
04 Rodrigo Reflections 4:41
05 Yin-Yang 4:45
06 Woman of Truth And Future 6:09
07 Ain't It Is 5:03
08 Aspects 4:26
personnel :
Larry Coryell – electric and acoustic guitars
Terumasa Hino – trumpet, flugelhorn
Mike Mandel – keyboards
John Lee – bass guitar
Gerry Brown – drums
Guests
Randy Brecker – trumpet
David Sanborn – alto saxophone
Michael Brecker – tenor saxophone
Steve Khan – acoustic guitar
Danny Toan – rhythm guitar
James Mtume – percussion
Never fit to be tied, Coryell decided to leave behind his jazz-rock fusion in pursuit of disco-funk. There is some good playing here (Coryell lays out on "Kowloon Jag"), but this is not a complimentary setting for him. John Lee and Gerry Brown were the correct sidemen for the job, as was the inclusion of David Sanborn, but Coryell sounds uncomfortable and continuously reverts back to his trademark licks when he runs out of ideas. Even the guitar solo, "Rodrigo Reflections," turns out to be a disappointment due to some very annoying and poorly recorded percussion accompaniment. A less than memorable session that probably seemed like a good idea at the time.~Robert Taylor
01 Kowloon Jag 5:51
02 Titus 5:30
03 Pyramids 5:23
04 Rodrigo Reflections 4:41
05 Yin-Yang 4:45
06 Woman of Truth And Future 6:09
07 Ain't It Is 5:03
08 Aspects 4:26
personnel :
Larry Coryell – electric and acoustic guitars
Terumasa Hino – trumpet, flugelhorn
Mike Mandel – keyboards
John Lee – bass guitar
Gerry Brown – drums
Guests
Randy Brecker – trumpet
David Sanborn – alto saxophone
Michael Brecker – tenor saxophone
Steve Khan – acoustic guitar
Danny Toan – rhythm guitar
James Mtume – percussion
Never fit to be tied, Coryell decided to leave behind his jazz-rock fusion in pursuit of disco-funk. There is some good playing here (Coryell lays out on "Kowloon Jag"), but this is not a complimentary setting for him. John Lee and Gerry Brown were the correct sidemen for the job, as was the inclusion of David Sanborn, but Coryell sounds uncomfortable and continuously reverts back to his trademark licks when he runs out of ideas. Even the guitar solo, "Rodrigo Reflections," turns out to be a disappointment due to some very annoying and poorly recorded percussion accompaniment. A less than memorable session that probably seemed like a good idea at the time.~Robert Taylor
Jazz | Funk | FLAC / APE | CD-Rip
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