Niacin - Deep (2000)
BAND/ARTIST: Niacin
- Title: Deep
- Year Of Release: 2000
- Label: Magna Carta[MAX-9048-2]
- Genre: Jazz Fusion, Jazz Rock, Prog Rock
- Quality: FLAC (tracks + .cue,log,scans) | MP3/320 kbps
- Total Time: 65:37
- Total Size: 516 MB(+3%) | 155 MB(+3%)
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
01 - Swing Swang Swung
02 - Best Laid Plans
03 - Sugar Blues
04 - Stompin' Ground
05 - Blue Mondo
06 - Panic Button
07 - Bootleg Jeans
08 - Mean Streets
09 - This One's Called...
10 - Klunkified
11 - Ratta McQue
12 - Things Ain't Like They Used To Be
13 - Bluesion
personnel :
Dennis Chambers - drums
Billy Sheehan - bass
John Novello - piano, Fender Rhodes piano, Hammond B-3 organ, synthesizers
Additional personnel:
Glenn Hughes - vocals
Steve Lukather - guitar
The third studio album from this fusion power trio packs a two-fisted wallop and takes no prisoners. Billy Sheehan's bass solos on "Panic Button" and "Sugar Blues" are highlights, but, in truth, much of the record is practically a bass solo. His sound is crushing -- not unlike the fat tone Chris Squire used to get in the early days of Yes, but pumped up with even more gain. John Novello wrings astonishing sounds out of the Hammond B-3 organ, and drummer Dennis Chambers gives every track enough rhythmic juice to power a small country. The instrumental cover of Van Halen's "Mean Streets" verges on silly, however. "Things Ain't Like They Used to Be" (not to be confused with the similarly titled Duke Ellington tune) isn't much of a song, and Glenn Hughes' guest vocal is overblown, but guitar ace Steve Lukather contributes tasty licks and a hair-raising solo. Niacin's sound can get a little wearisome after a while, but if muscular, technically adept fusion is your thing, this is your band.~David R. Adler
01 - Swing Swang Swung
02 - Best Laid Plans
03 - Sugar Blues
04 - Stompin' Ground
05 - Blue Mondo
06 - Panic Button
07 - Bootleg Jeans
08 - Mean Streets
09 - This One's Called...
10 - Klunkified
11 - Ratta McQue
12 - Things Ain't Like They Used To Be
13 - Bluesion
personnel :
Dennis Chambers - drums
Billy Sheehan - bass
John Novello - piano, Fender Rhodes piano, Hammond B-3 organ, synthesizers
Additional personnel:
Glenn Hughes - vocals
Steve Lukather - guitar
The third studio album from this fusion power trio packs a two-fisted wallop and takes no prisoners. Billy Sheehan's bass solos on "Panic Button" and "Sugar Blues" are highlights, but, in truth, much of the record is practically a bass solo. His sound is crushing -- not unlike the fat tone Chris Squire used to get in the early days of Yes, but pumped up with even more gain. John Novello wrings astonishing sounds out of the Hammond B-3 organ, and drummer Dennis Chambers gives every track enough rhythmic juice to power a small country. The instrumental cover of Van Halen's "Mean Streets" verges on silly, however. "Things Ain't Like They Used to Be" (not to be confused with the similarly titled Duke Ellington tune) isn't much of a song, and Glenn Hughes' guest vocal is overblown, but guitar ace Steve Lukather contributes tasty licks and a hair-raising solo. Niacin's sound can get a little wearisome after a while, but if muscular, technically adept fusion is your thing, this is your band.~David R. Adler
Jazz | Rock | FLAC / APE | Mp3 | CD-Rip
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