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domingo, 2 de setembro de 2012

BOB DOWNES OEN MUSIC - Electric City (1970 UK Prog Psych Jazz Rock)



BOB DOWNES LIDERA A BANDA OPEN MUSIC NOS VOCAIS E TOCANDO SAX E FLAUTA MAGISTRALMENTE!! A SONORIDADE É ROCK COM FORTES INFLUÊNCIAS DO JAZZ E BATIDAS GROOVE!! O SAX E A FLAUTA PASSEIAM SOLTO E NÃO DECEPCIONAM!! RITMOS VARIADOS E VIRTUOSOS DÃO O TOM!! UM BOM E INTERESSANTE DISCO DE JAZZ ROCK QUE VALE A PENA DAR UM TÉKINHO!!

Released on the legendary Vertigo "swirl" label, Electric City was one of the wilder and more obscure issues of the famous 6360 series. But if I say wild and obscure, it is nothing compared to his later works in the mid-70's, as here the music is very accessible resembling some kind of brass rock, as the cast of guest on Bob's first album is an impressive who's who of Phillips-related musicians, pictured assembled on the inner gatefold. The outer gatefold presents a wild collage electronic devices, wild psychedelic colours and Downes in full action, the whole thing permeating a white dummy head; stunning, especially once you'll be that white faceMade of short tracks (except the closing opus), the album has splendid up-tempo rhythms, juicy horn arrangements, great virtuoso musicianship and acceptable vocals. Yup, Downes' vocals are not the main asset of this album yet, Bob's lyrics (all his except for the opening No Time like The Present, which is from poet Robert Cockburn, foreseeing their collab of Deep Down Heavy) are always interesting, but let's face it, we want his flute and sax and he doesn't disappoint. Indeed the fabulous Keep Off The Grass, Dawn Until Dawn (where Downes shows his passion for sax as well), the pedestrian Walkin' On (Bob goes nuts on the sax), the tense Crush Hour, the explosive Piccadilly Circles (waaaah, the pun) and its direct continuity into the lengthy (7-mins+) Gonna Take A Journey, which plunges into free improvs.

Other titles are more R'nB, like Don't Let Tommorrow, Go Find Time, and the bossa nova West II (the worst track of the album, even if saved by a high-flying sax solo) are less enthralling, but all remain high energy. Although we are in full brass-rock delire with this album, it never gets cheesy or pompous or bombastic as BS&T. No we're facing some of the best of the genre, right up with Brainchild, Galliard and a few more. Although Electric City is a fine album, one that epitomizes his first three efforts, it sounds NOTHING like the later works of his. But this one is definitely worth a shot and should be the introduction to Downes' world of sounds.


Bob Downes - vocals, sax, flute, production
Chris Spedding - guitars
Herbie Flowers - bass
Harry Miller - bass
Alan Rushton - drums
Clem Cattini - drums
Kenny Wheeler - trumpet
Ian Carr - trumpet, flugelhorn
Bud Parks - trumpet, flugelhorn
Harold Beckett - trumpet, flugelhorn

01. "No Time Like The Present" 3:05
02. "Keep Off The Grass" 2:46
http://youtu.be/cJPf4gknSUE
03. "Don't Let Tomorrow Get You Down" 2:56
04. "Dawn Until Dawn" 4:29
05. "Go Find Time" 2:40
06. "Walking On" 5:01
07. "Crush Hour" 3:21
08. "West II" 3:28
09. "In Your Eyes" 2:21
10. "Piccadilly Circles" 2:52
11. "Gonna Take A Journey" 7:08



4 comentários:

FrBrGeorge disse...

Sorry, pal, all links are dead :(

DoKtor Alphonzo disse...

links worked fine for me - what a stunning album!!!! had never heard of this before - many thanks for this wonderful post

FrBrGeorge disse...

Oh yeah, sorry again... Was just local download problem. Thanks!

Anônimo disse...

Thanx a lot!