Wednesday, 28 February 2018

Kathryn Moses, Part One from 1976 [limited time only]





An unbelievably beautiful woman in the top photograph with her absolutely perfect anglo-saxon profile, comma-shaped eyebrows, queenlike nose, plus the delicate opening of her fingers pointing upwards as if in a Botticelli painting, I could stare at that image all day long...  as I said before in conjunction with Don Juan, even for us music lovers there is nothing that can compare to the beauty of a woman.

This very accomplished musician (a Canadian who went to university in Oklahoma), is credited with composition (note the back blurb that lists some of her material up to that point), some surprisingly professional vocalizing in both classical and jazz formats, plus virtuoso performance of flute and saxes in not only jazz line-ups but also symphony orchestras.  She toured apparently with Chuck Mangione and I see that she appeared on his 1976 record Bellavia.

Also surprising was a youtube search on her that featured this concert with Chuck in which she, now adorned with a superbly fashionable afro, sings his hokey song "Land of Make Believe" (though I shouldn't say that, having always been a huge fan of the early Mangione.) Notice also this performance from 1980 with the Ted Moses group, where you can get a better idea of what she looked like.)  So was she married to Ted? She appeared only on this (brilliant) album of his.  Were they divorced afterwards maybe?  Anyone know? or care?  What I found interesting though is that on both this album and her next, to come soon, there are hints of his compositional style, which at the time I talked about at length-- even though she is credited as composer on those tracks (that sound so similar to his).  In terms of that style, I talked about the odd chord changes with the very angular but drawn-out melodies.

On this debut record we have quite a mixture, I suppose entirely to be expected from a young artist presenting her first accomplishment.  There are clear commercial throwaways, the ancient proterozoic jazz standards that I so dread to see (luckily only two), some uptempo doodling around, and then some more positive, for us here, material sometimes involving her gorgeously sweet, part girlish, part womanly voice.  All or most of her songwriting is dominated by themes of romance or love or desire, which reminds me a lot of my old favourite Radka Toneff.

One of her quirky habits (which we will encounter in the next record as well) is an intro written in advanced classical-modern chamber instrument style that after 1-2 minutes segues into the aforementioned doodling.  The perfect example of this is a track called Touch Me with its melancholy string quartet intro that, perhaps bizarrely, leads into a latin-themed instrumental:





Monday, 26 February 2018

NTSU Lab Band & The Bowie (Maryland) Senior High School "Starliners" ‎– 12 By 3 from 1971







A 2 LP set this time.


An astounding track credited to Pete Myers, trumpeter and composer in the Oliver Nelson Band, is called As in Wheaties?






Bear in mind this is the strongest track and nothing quite comes close.

Friday, 23 February 2018

NTSU Lab Band, Leon Breeden, Director: Lab '76





A track called The Myth of Sisyphos (composed by Paul Loomis) couldn't possibly disappoint us, could it:





What do you think? Disappointed?  If not, certainly the remainder of this record won't disappoint you.

Wednesday, 21 February 2018

Back to NTSU with Leon Breeden ‎and Lab '74!




The well written fusion proceeds apace here, with a record almost bereft of silly old jazz standards (just a Gershwin composition) and instead stuffed full with wonderfully confident composing and arranging, as evidenced by Warp Factor:





One of three written by a young Lyle Mays.

Monday, 19 February 2018

NTSU Lab Band in 1971, plus 67, 82, thanks to Simon666












The last cover, its artwork so French, I love it.

Thanks to blogger Simon666 from the rhodes blog of course, we have more from this hugely talented band led by Leon Breeden to add to earlier installments from 1980 and 1975 + 1978.  (And, btw, in the future I'll be posting a lot of new rips from other years of the decade).  So by that time we'll have covered more than 15 years of the discography and then reassess.  One thing I can assure you, if you didn't already realize it: each of the LPs is worth hearing and is guaranteed to contain at least one superb gemological fusion treat.  We saw that especially with the Zebra Soars.

So for example from 1967, usually not a very promising year for fusion except if your name is Miles Davis, there's the track called Anadge:





That stunningly advanced chart written by Robert Morgan, described as a high school jazz band director.  Most of that summer of love year, predictably for the jazz phylum of the kingdom of music/life, is merely cover songs of such ancient, prezoic standards as Nature Boy (George Benson did the best version of that song ever in my opinion).

So moving on to the year 1971 we have a more promising entry, just casually looking at the kooky song titles.  First of all, the artwork is just wonderful, recalling as it does the communist geometric art of those ancient Melodiya Russian jazz LPs we know so well.  God bless the great old union of soviet republics (cccp), soon to be new union of putin republics (ccpp?).  And it would be perfectly true to say this record, from beginning to end, is well worth listening to in the most intent manner you can muster, these days, with wife and screaming kids, sorry, I meant screaming wife and kids in the near distance here at all times.  From beginning track to the extended composition called Liferaft Earth that closes it out.  The A2 track Badi' is my favourite:





It's warm and smooth, but really rewards close listening with its odd chord transformations, as well as the sudden alterations in rhythm and abrupt modulation and it's written by one Jim Milne (if this database if correct).

As might be expected, by 1982 we can no longer bank on the same kind of magical composition.  Why?  I'm not so sure myself, but the 'I want my MTV push' sure wanted simplified music too, and they sure got it.  I have trouble finding a really well written piece on this one, but maybe the Northern Lights comes close:




 At the same time, it doesn't quite compare to the sample immediately above it.

So instead let's look forward to the coming installments, as I said...