Robben Ford - Bringing It Back Home (2013) CD-Rip
BAND/ARTIST: Robben Ford
- Title: Bringing It Back Home
- Year Of Release: 2013
- Label: Provogue #PRD 7388 2
- Genre: Modern Electric Blues, Soul-Blues
- Quality: EAC Rip -> FLAC (Img+Cue, Log) / MP3 CBR320
- Total Time: 00:48:52
- Total Size: 315 / 118 Mb (Full Scans ~ 87 Mb)
- WebSite: Album Preview
Guitar giant Robben Ford’s new album Bringing It Back Home is a stunning study in soul, style and virtuosity that cuts to the heart with its exceptional, emotion-laden musicianship. The disc also brings the five-time Grammy nominated stage and studio legend back to his earliest roots as a performer, playing blues.
Ford, who Musician magazine called one of the “100 Greatest Guitarists of the 20th Century,” developed his reputation in the jazz and pop world of the 1970s and ’80s as a solo artist, a member of the ground-breaking fusion group L.A. Express and a sideman with Joni Mitchell, Miles Davis and others. But he emerged from northern California in the ’60s as part of the Charles Ford Blues Band. In that group — formed with his brothers and named after their father — he supported blues legends Jimmy Witherspoon and Charlie Musselwhite, getting a hands-on education in the style.
Bringing It Back Home revisits and reshapes the roots of Ford’s first musical love. The guitar kingpin selected 10 tunes from the blues canon, ranging from early Delta pioneer Charley Patton’s “Bird’s Nest Bound” to Bob Dylan’s “You Go Your Way and I Go Mine,” and, along with a hand-picked team of A-list players, crafted dynamic, new and highly original arrangements for each song in the studio.
“Bringing It Back Home is the album I really wanted to make right now,” Ford relates. “I wanted to apply my perspective to the music that first moved me, get together with a group of great musicians and play what we were inspired to play at that moment, without any pressure or expectations. The results are really pure, and the most fun I’ve had making an album in years.
“My goal was to be effortless and honest,” he continues, “and that’s exactly what happened. It was extremely liberating. Rarely do you achieve the vision you had for an album when you’d conceived it. Typically you bring in other players who have different perspectives, and maybe if you’re lucky you get something similar to your original vision. But with Bringing It Back Home everything fell seamlessly into place.
The brilliantly economical version of “Bird’s Nest Bound” that begins the set realizes another of Ford’s goals for the disc: to wed the blues’ oldest rural roots with the more urban sound of classic soul as exemplified by Memphis’ historic Stax Records label.
Ford was inspired to record the song after hearing a version by one of Patton’s inheritors, country bluesman Bukka White, on a compilation. “The way we approached ‘Bird’s Nest Bound’ made its emotions very different from those early recordings, adding the textured depth and nuance that’s part of soul music,” Ford says. That’s reflected in Fords’ sweet, keening vocal delivery and the sparse interplay of his warm-toned guitar and Larry Goldings’ subtle organ shadings.
“I couldn’t have made Bringing It Back Home without this group of musicians,” Ford notes. His stellar band was composed of organist Goldings, whose credits range from James Taylor to Ford’s primary jazz guitar influence Jim Hall; drummer Harvey Mason (Herbie Hancock, George Benson); bassist David Piltch (Kd Lang, Solomon Burke); and trombonist Steve Baxter (Johnny Guitar Watson, Macy Grey). Remarkably, they’d never played a note together until the disc’s three days of sessions helmed in Los Angeles studio the Village by engineer Ed Cherney (the Rolling Stones, Bonnie Raitt, Ry Cooder).
“In the Morning” was the first track they cut, and while the organ and guitar tour-de-force is the disc’s sole instrumental, Ford explains that it set the tone for the sessions.
“Our performance of that song, which I discovered as an old gospel recording with lyrics, brought me into the space I’d envisioned,” he attests. And “space” truly is the key to Bringing It Back Home’s gorgeous, poised sound. Ford says that Miles Davis’ majestic Kind of Blue — a perfect study in how open spaces within the sounds on a recording can establish emotional timbre — was his guidepost.
“Space is always the most important element,” the soft-spoken guitarist and practicing Buddhist avows. “What I love best about blues and jazz is how great players — like Miles Davis or Jim Hall or Paul Desmond — allow a lot of space in their music. That’s where the beauty happens. And we got that on this album by bringing in musicians who understand that idea, and by creating a situation where we all could relax and just do what we do.” Of course, it takes a lifetime of playing to achieve the balance of relaxation and command heard on Bringing It Back Home. Ford’s musical odyssey started in the late 1960s, when the budding jazz saxophonist’s ear was captured by the music of the Paul Butterfield Blues Band and, in particular, the group’s guitarist Michael Bloomfield. He soon put the sax aside and took up the six-string.
“I’d been doing okay on the saxophone, but when I started playing guitar I was able to excel on the instrument very quickly,” Ford recounts. As teens, he and his brothers Mark and Patrick formed the Charles Ford Blues Band, which still records and performs today as the Ford Brothers Band. They quickly graduated from school dances to clubs to supporting harmonica virtuoso Musselwhite and powerhouse vocalist Witherspoon on festival stages.
Witherspoon became Ford’s first musical guru.
“ ‘Spoon’ instilled in me a sense of space, humor and poignance on stage,” Ford relates. “After spending time playing with him I found myself naturally using those things in my own guitar and vocal performances.”
Witherspoon’s jazz-inflected approach to arranging and singing further piqued Ford’s own explorations of that genre. In 1974 Ford helped saxist Tom Scott form the historic fusion group L.A. Express. That same year George Harrison hired the Express to back him for his Dark Horse tour. The band’s next high profile gig, supporting Joni Mitchell, brought Ford another important musical mentor.
“Joni’s harmonic sensibility and creativity had a big impact on me, and so did the level of musicianship that the other guys in the L.A. Express had,” says Ford. “That was an important period for my growth. I really pushed myself to broaden my palette of chords and tones, and to set really high expectations for myself.”
In subsequent years Ford performed with Bonnie Raitt, Bob Dylan, Phil Lesh and a host of others. By the time he joined Miles Davis’ group a decade later, he’d developed a signature approach based on an axis of blues and jazz mastery. When Ford left Davis’ employ after six months of touring, Davis acknowledged the guitarist’s skills by offering him an open door.
Instead, Ford continued to carve his own path. His resume includes eight other solo albums, four live recordings, three discs with his group the Blue Line, nine albums with the Ford Brothers and a collaboration with fellow guitar kingpin Michael Landau , former Yellowjackets bassist Jimmy Haslip,and Drummer Gary Novak called Renegade Creation for two Cd’s.
Through it all Ford has kept his passion for the old-school blues he first embraced alive. “That’s why finding songs for Bringing It Back Home was so much fun,” he says. “Usually when I get ready to make an album there’s a painstaking period of writing, when I really push myself to create the best music I possibly can. It’s really hard work. This time, instead of composing I spent a lot of time listening to compilations of rare and obscure material. And when it was time to cut tracks I got to just relax and play the blues.”
Ford’s search yielded nuggets by both the revered (New Orleans composer Allen Toussaint’s “Everything I Do Gohn Be Funky”) and the obscure (“lost” R&B singer Willie West’s “Fair Child”). To give every track a common, unifying sound and to streamline the recording process, he used only one guitar: a 1963 Epiphone Riviera which he kept exclusively on the “rhythm” pickup throughout the sessions.
“The idea was to not re-invent the wheel,” says Ford. “Everyone knows the blues. My concept was to put great players together with songs that have deep roots and rich emotional terrain, and to just let something beautiful happen. As it turns out, that’s exactly what occurred.”
Ford, who Musician magazine called one of the “100 Greatest Guitarists of the 20th Century,” developed his reputation in the jazz and pop world of the 1970s and ’80s as a solo artist, a member of the ground-breaking fusion group L.A. Express and a sideman with Joni Mitchell, Miles Davis and others. But he emerged from northern California in the ’60s as part of the Charles Ford Blues Band. In that group — formed with his brothers and named after their father — he supported blues legends Jimmy Witherspoon and Charlie Musselwhite, getting a hands-on education in the style.
Bringing It Back Home revisits and reshapes the roots of Ford’s first musical love. The guitar kingpin selected 10 tunes from the blues canon, ranging from early Delta pioneer Charley Patton’s “Bird’s Nest Bound” to Bob Dylan’s “You Go Your Way and I Go Mine,” and, along with a hand-picked team of A-list players, crafted dynamic, new and highly original arrangements for each song in the studio.
“Bringing It Back Home is the album I really wanted to make right now,” Ford relates. “I wanted to apply my perspective to the music that first moved me, get together with a group of great musicians and play what we were inspired to play at that moment, without any pressure or expectations. The results are really pure, and the most fun I’ve had making an album in years.
“My goal was to be effortless and honest,” he continues, “and that’s exactly what happened. It was extremely liberating. Rarely do you achieve the vision you had for an album when you’d conceived it. Typically you bring in other players who have different perspectives, and maybe if you’re lucky you get something similar to your original vision. But with Bringing It Back Home everything fell seamlessly into place.
The brilliantly economical version of “Bird’s Nest Bound” that begins the set realizes another of Ford’s goals for the disc: to wed the blues’ oldest rural roots with the more urban sound of classic soul as exemplified by Memphis’ historic Stax Records label.
Ford was inspired to record the song after hearing a version by one of Patton’s inheritors, country bluesman Bukka White, on a compilation. “The way we approached ‘Bird’s Nest Bound’ made its emotions very different from those early recordings, adding the textured depth and nuance that’s part of soul music,” Ford says. That’s reflected in Fords’ sweet, keening vocal delivery and the sparse interplay of his warm-toned guitar and Larry Goldings’ subtle organ shadings.
“I couldn’t have made Bringing It Back Home without this group of musicians,” Ford notes. His stellar band was composed of organist Goldings, whose credits range from James Taylor to Ford’s primary jazz guitar influence Jim Hall; drummer Harvey Mason (Herbie Hancock, George Benson); bassist David Piltch (Kd Lang, Solomon Burke); and trombonist Steve Baxter (Johnny Guitar Watson, Macy Grey). Remarkably, they’d never played a note together until the disc’s three days of sessions helmed in Los Angeles studio the Village by engineer Ed Cherney (the Rolling Stones, Bonnie Raitt, Ry Cooder).
“In the Morning” was the first track they cut, and while the organ and guitar tour-de-force is the disc’s sole instrumental, Ford explains that it set the tone for the sessions.
“Our performance of that song, which I discovered as an old gospel recording with lyrics, brought me into the space I’d envisioned,” he attests. And “space” truly is the key to Bringing It Back Home’s gorgeous, poised sound. Ford says that Miles Davis’ majestic Kind of Blue — a perfect study in how open spaces within the sounds on a recording can establish emotional timbre — was his guidepost.
“Space is always the most important element,” the soft-spoken guitarist and practicing Buddhist avows. “What I love best about blues and jazz is how great players — like Miles Davis or Jim Hall or Paul Desmond — allow a lot of space in their music. That’s where the beauty happens. And we got that on this album by bringing in musicians who understand that idea, and by creating a situation where we all could relax and just do what we do.” Of course, it takes a lifetime of playing to achieve the balance of relaxation and command heard on Bringing It Back Home. Ford’s musical odyssey started in the late 1960s, when the budding jazz saxophonist’s ear was captured by the music of the Paul Butterfield Blues Band and, in particular, the group’s guitarist Michael Bloomfield. He soon put the sax aside and took up the six-string.
“I’d been doing okay on the saxophone, but when I started playing guitar I was able to excel on the instrument very quickly,” Ford recounts. As teens, he and his brothers Mark and Patrick formed the Charles Ford Blues Band, which still records and performs today as the Ford Brothers Band. They quickly graduated from school dances to clubs to supporting harmonica virtuoso Musselwhite and powerhouse vocalist Witherspoon on festival stages.
Witherspoon became Ford’s first musical guru.
“ ‘Spoon’ instilled in me a sense of space, humor and poignance on stage,” Ford relates. “After spending time playing with him I found myself naturally using those things in my own guitar and vocal performances.”
Witherspoon’s jazz-inflected approach to arranging and singing further piqued Ford’s own explorations of that genre. In 1974 Ford helped saxist Tom Scott form the historic fusion group L.A. Express. That same year George Harrison hired the Express to back him for his Dark Horse tour. The band’s next high profile gig, supporting Joni Mitchell, brought Ford another important musical mentor.
“Joni’s harmonic sensibility and creativity had a big impact on me, and so did the level of musicianship that the other guys in the L.A. Express had,” says Ford. “That was an important period for my growth. I really pushed myself to broaden my palette of chords and tones, and to set really high expectations for myself.”
In subsequent years Ford performed with Bonnie Raitt, Bob Dylan, Phil Lesh and a host of others. By the time he joined Miles Davis’ group a decade later, he’d developed a signature approach based on an axis of blues and jazz mastery. When Ford left Davis’ employ after six months of touring, Davis acknowledged the guitarist’s skills by offering him an open door.
Instead, Ford continued to carve his own path. His resume includes eight other solo albums, four live recordings, three discs with his group the Blue Line, nine albums with the Ford Brothers and a collaboration with fellow guitar kingpin Michael Landau , former Yellowjackets bassist Jimmy Haslip,and Drummer Gary Novak called Renegade Creation for two Cd’s.
Through it all Ford has kept his passion for the old-school blues he first embraced alive. “That’s why finding songs for Bringing It Back Home was so much fun,” he says. “Usually when I get ready to make an album there’s a painstaking period of writing, when I really push myself to create the best music I possibly can. It’s really hard work. This time, instead of composing I spent a lot of time listening to compilations of rare and obscure material. And when it was time to cut tracks I got to just relax and play the blues.”
Ford’s search yielded nuggets by both the revered (New Orleans composer Allen Toussaint’s “Everything I Do Gohn Be Funky”) and the obscure (“lost” R&B singer Willie West’s “Fair Child”). To give every track a common, unifying sound and to streamline the recording process, he used only one guitar: a 1963 Epiphone Riviera which he kept exclusively on the “rhythm” pickup throughout the sessions.
“The idea was to not re-invent the wheel,” says Ford. “Everyone knows the blues. My concept was to put great players together with songs that have deep roots and rich emotional terrain, and to just let something beautiful happen. As it turns out, that’s exactly what occurred.”
Track List:
01. Everything I Do Gonna Be Funky [0:04:55.77]
02. Birds Nest Bound [0:05:51.58]
03. Fair Child [0:04:24.82]
04. Oh, Virginia [0:04:18.89]
05. Slick Capers Blues [0:03:50.24]
06. On That Morning [0:07:14.34]
07. Traveler's Waltz [0:03:34.73]
08. Most Likely You Go Your Way And I'll Go Mine [0:04:57.53]
09. Trick Bag [0:04:06.42]
10. Fool's Paradise [0:05:37.41]
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Blues | Soul | FLAC / APE | Mp3 | CD-Rip
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