10 Most Influential Albums
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If you haven't heard this musical masterpiece, you really need to! This album is certainly on my "desert island classics". This was an interesting era, with guitarist David Torn's "Cloud About Mercury", Patrick O'Hearn's "River's Gonna Rise" and Mark Isham's "Castalia". Many of these same players were on these albums, along with Terry Bozzio, Bill Bruford and Tony Levin.
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This was Cobham's 3rd solo album after "Spectrum" and "Crosswinds". It was also the first time I'd seen Cobham outside of the Mahavishnu Orchestra, and I wasn't disappointed. I would see Cobham dozens of times more during the '70s and into the '80s, with George Duke, Alphonso Johnson, and John Scofield in the unforgettable Billy Cobham-George Duke Band; with Tom Scott and Steve Khan; with Jack Bruce and with his "Glass Menagerie" bands featuring Tim Landers, Gil Goldstein and Dean Brown.
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I would see the band several more times over that span; the "No Mystery" tour when they played 3 nights in a row at the Carter Barron Amphitheater 3 blocks from my house; At the Capital Centre for the "Romantic Warrior" along with Buddy Miles and Santana, and of course the solo tours; Stanley's "Modern Man" and School Days", Lenny's phenomenal "Astral Pirates" and "Streamline" tours; and Al's "Elegant Gypsy" and "Casino" tours. RTF, along with Larry Coryell's Eleventh House, Mahavishnu and Weather Report were the best of the best; Jazz, rock and fusion at it's finest.
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U.K. was sensational; the best thing to come out of Britain in years. Part King Crimson, part Yes, part Roxy Music, part Soft Machine, part Gong; Unreal. Sadly, they blew themselves up over musical differences. Some of the music lived on in U.K. with Bozzio, and with Bruford's band featuring Holdsworth's replacement, the "unknown John Clark". Nevertheless, U.K., like the Mahavishnu Orchestra before them, burned brightly, but their incandescence was not meant to last.
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I also saw the subsequent "Black Market" tour with Alphonso Johnson, Chester Thompson and Alex Acuna, and then the "Heavy Weather" tour with Jaco Pastorius, Acuna and Badrena (when McLaughlin's "Shakti" stole the show as the opener!); Jaco was jumping around the stage like a man possessed and was a bit off-putting. I only learned later that his genius came with a price. They killed it with Peter Erskine after that, but because of that first impression, the WR/Alphonso groups are my favorites.
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I would see several incarnations of the Mahavishnu Orchestra over the ensuing years; The "Apocalypse" and "Visions of the Emerald Beyond" bands with Jean-Luc Ponty, Narada Michael Walden, Ralphe Armstrong, Steve Kindler, (who go on to become Jan Hammer's violinist in the Jan Hammer Group with Jeff Beck), Gayle Moran, (the future Mrs. Chick Corea), and cellist Phil Hirschi, who I've had to the pleasure to perform and record with in Jason Everett's "Deep Energy Orchestra". The final incarnation of the MO with Dan Gottlieb, Mitch Forman, Bill Evans and Jonas Helborg never quite reached the heights of the previous two, and would give way to McLaughlin's amazing "Shakti" bands with Zakir Hussain, Shankar and the father and son Vinayakrams; Vikku and Selvaganesh. Nevertheless, McLaughlin, Cobham, Hammer, Goodman and Laird were one of the greatest bands I've ever heard or seen. Power, passion, and beauty indeed...
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During those days, I was living in NYC and performing with the Brian Eno led group, "The Same", with Carter Burwell, Chip Johannsen, Clodagh Simmonds, Stephen Bray, and Stanley Adler. Eno told Stanley that Fripp was in town, auditioning bassists for a new King Crimson and suggested he try out for Fripp. Stanley went down to a studio in the Village where he found himself face-to-face with Fripp, Bruford and Belew. Stanley did his best, however Fripp informed him that they were going to go with Tony Levin, and thanked him, remarking that he was the best Eno had ever sent him. Eno was livid and told Stanley, "That wanker! One day the world will know the name Stanley Adler!" Well, I love Stanley, but I think it turned out for the best. We all went to the Savoy in NYC later that year and were mesmerized by this incredible group, now about to embark on its 50th anniversary tour.
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Bruford soon switched to a 12 piece Simmons kit, using only an acoustic snare and cymbals. I saw him using that kit live with David Torn's "Cloud About Mercury" band and with his new jazz group Earthworks. His ability top play chords and melodies along with a groove was unbelievable, so much so that I went out and built a Simmons kit just like it, one I still own to this day. Bruford would use his Simmons SDS7 and later SDX with Earthworks, Anderson Bruford, Wakeman and Howe, and finally with Yes' "Union" reunion tour, when his SDX module and back up both blew up on stage; reducing him to playing a tambourine the rest of the night. Bruford's use of electronic drums had come to a bitter end; He never played them again, however the mark he left on electronic percussion has shaped me and generations to come.
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Next thing I know, I'm building my own "drum-guitar" I called the Drummstick, and taught myself to play it by playing along to every song on this album; It worked like a charm and before long I was touring and playing live with a variety of musicians from Bill Kirchen to Bon Lozago! Years later I was finally able to meet the Flecktones and spent a brief time picking Futureman's brain; Suffice it to say, I learned a lot from him and the rest is history... Perhaps for me, their most memorable show was when Fleck, and the Wooten Brothers were joined on stage by the late guitarist Danny Gatton at Lisner Auditorium in DC; It would be one of Gatton's final live performances.
Well, it's been a fun challenge; 10 albums really don't do it justice, but these 10 have had the biggest influence on me. Give them a listen, you may find they may have a similar effect on you...;)