(Jazz-Rock) Cashman Vaquero Band - In Memory of Berry Oakley (Vinyl Rip) - 1979, MP3, 320 kbps
Cashman Vaquero Band / In Memory of Berry Oakley (Vinyl Rip)
Жанр: Jazz / Rock / Blues
Страна исполнителя (группы): USA
Год издания: 1979
Аудиокодек: MP3
Тип рипа: tracks
Битрейт аудио: 320 kbps
Продолжительность: 00:36:04
Наличие сканов в содержимом раздачи: да
Треклист:
01 California
02 Down In The Belly
03 Drivin' Me Crazy
04 Security
05 Good Days
06 Mountain Peak
07 There's No Tellin'
08 In Memory Of Berry Oakley
09 San Francisco Sunset
Об альбоме (сборнике)
Credits
Alto Saxophone – Lenny Mazza
Backing Vocals – Debbi Turpin (tracks: A2), Mike Villagomez (tracks: A1)
Bass – Roger Paskett
Bass, Acoustic Guitar, Rhythm Guitar, Alto Vocals – Ron Sadus
Cello – Gael Alcock
Drums – Tom Donlinger
Engineer – Ed Lapple
Graphics – Conger Brandhorst Pierce
Guitar – James Vincent
Guitar, Vocals – Robert John Guziejka (tracks: A3)
Lead Guitar, Slide Guitar – Joel Manchak
Pedal Steel Guitar – Bob Lee (13)
Percussion – Barry Thomas (3)
Piano – Will Paskett
Producer – James Mason Davis
Rhythm Guitar, Drums, Percussion, Vocals – Doug Cashman
Notes
Recorded in San Francisco's Far Out Studios and produced by James Mason Davis, most references describe 1979's "In Memory of Berry Oakley" as being Allman Brothers-styled Southern rock. That's not quite right. I certainly hear Allman-influences, particularly in some of the Cashman-Sadus guitar interplay, but the set's far more diverse than that. With the exception of a mildly-jazzy cover of John Mayall's 'California', the set boasts original material that finds the band taking stabs at conventional boogie ('Down In the Belly'), country-rock (the pretty ballad 'Driving Me Crazy') lite-jazz ('View from a Mountain Peak') and even Santana-styled Latin rock ('Security'). Cashman and Sadus share vocal duties and they both have pretty good voices. Judging by the liner notes Sadus apparently died while the album was being made, but between his work and that of guest guitarist Robert John Guziejka (who contributed a couple of songs and played with Cashman and Oakley in their garage band days), there are quite a few tasty lead guitars scattered throughout the set including some Duane Allman-styled runs on 'Good Days' and some jazzy scatting on 'There's No Tellin'. Curiously, at least to my ears the biographical tribute title track is the leas impressive effort.
Доп. информация: Взято с Ezhevika Fields.