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(Fusion, jazz-funk) [LP][24/96] Miles Davis - A Tribute To Jack Johnson - 1971, FLAC (tracks)

Miles Davis - A Tribute To Jack Johnson
Жанр: Fusion, jazz-funk
Год выпуска: 1971
Лейбл: Columbia KC 30455
Страна-производитель: Canada
Аудио кодек: FLAC
Тип рипа: tracks
Формат записи: 24/96
Формат раздачи: 24/96
Продолжительность: 52:18
Треклист:
Side One: "Right Off" [26:49]
Side Two: "Yesternow" [25:29]
Personnel:
The first track and about half of the second track were recorded
on 7 April 1970 by this sextet:
Miles Davis - Trumpet
Steve Grossman - Soprano saxophone
John McLaughlin - Electric guitar
Herbie Hancock - Organ
Michael Henderson - Electric bass
Billy Cobham - drums
The "Willie Nelson" section of the second track
(starting at about 12:55) was recorded on 18 February 1970
by a different and uncredited lineup:
Miles Davis - Trumpet
Bennie Maupin - Bass clarinet
John McLaughlin - Electric guitar
Sonny Sharrock - Electric guitar
Chick Corea - Electric piano
Dave Holland - Electric bass
Jack DeJohnette - drums
At the end of the "Yesternow" there is a sound clip recorded by actor Brock Peters saying:
"I'm Jack Johnson - heavyweight champion of the world! I'm black!
They never let me forget it. I'm black all right; I'll never let them forget it."
Источник оцифровки: выполнена автором раздачи
Код класса состояния винила: VG+
Устройство воспроизведения: Micro Seiki DD7
Предварительный усилитель: Audio-Technica ATPEQ20 + картридж Audio-Technica AT150E/G
АЦП: Tascam US-122mkII
Программа-оцифровщик: Audacity 1.3.12.
Обработка: отсутствует, вручную удалил крупные щелчки, мелкие оставил для аутентичности
 
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Доп. информация
A Tribute to Jack Johnson is a studio album by American jazz musician Miles Davis, released February 24, 1971 on Columbia Records. It also serves as the soundtrack for a documentary by Bill Cayton about the heavyweight world champion boxer Jack Johnson.
The first major recording session for the album, which took place on April 7, 1970, was almost accidental: John McLaughlin, awaiting Miles's arrival, began improvising riffs on his guitar, and was shortly joined by Michael Henderson and Billy Cobham. Meanwhile, the producers brought in Herbie Hancock, who had been passing through the building on unrelated business, to play the Farfisa organ. Miles arrived at last and began his solo at about 2:19 on the first track.
The album's two long tracks were assembled in the editing room by producer Teo Macero. "Right Off" is constructed from several takes and a solo by Davis recorded in November 1969. It contains a riff from Sly and the Family Stone's "Sing a Simple Song". Much of the track "Yesternow" is built around a slightly modified version of the bassline from the James Brown song "Say It Loud - I'm Black and I'm Proud"; this may be a deliberate allusion to the song's Black Power theme as it relates to the film's subject. "Yesternow" also incorporates a brief excerpt of "Shhh/Peaceful" from Davis's 1969 album In a Silent Way and a 10-minute section comprising several takes of the tune "Willie Nelson" from a session on 18 February 1970.
Jack Johnson was less commercially successful than Davis's previous electric album, Bitches Brew, reaching only #159 on the Billboard 200 where Bitches Brew had risen as high as #35. Some fans and critics, however, consider Jack Johnson to be the musically superior album. In his consumer guide for The Village Voice, critic Robert Christgau gave the album an A+ rating, indicating "an organically conceived masterpiece that repays prolonged listening with new excitement and insight". Christgau dubbed it "a great one" and commented that "all the flash of Bitches Brew coalesces into one brilliant illumination". In a review of the album followings its reissue, John Fordham of The Guardian noted Davis's "whispering electric sound to some of the most trenchantly responsive straight-horn improvising he ever put on disc" and commented on its legacy, stating:
Considering that it began as a jam between three bored Miles Davis sidemen, and that the eventual 1971 release was stitched together from a variety of takes, it's a miracle that this album turned out to be one of the most remarkable jazz-rock discs of the era. Columbia didn't even realise what it had with these sessions, and the mid-decade Miles albums that followed - angled toward the pop audience - were far more aggressively marketed than the Jack Johnson set [...] Of course, it's a much starker, less subtly textured setting than Bitches Brew, but in the early jazz-rock hall of fame, it's up there on the top pedestal. —John Fordham
Both The Penguin Guide to Jazz and Rolling Stone Album Guide gave A Tribute to Jack Johnson their maximum star-ratings. In a retrospective review of the album, Allmusic editor Thom Jurek complimented its "funky, dirty rock & roll jazz" and "chilling, overall high-energy rockist stance", stating "Jack Johnson is the purest electric jazz record ever made because of the feeling of spontaneity and freedom it evokes in the listener, for the stellar and inspiring solos by McLaughlin and Davis that blur all edges between the two musics, and for the tireless perfection of the studio assemblage by Miles and producer Macero".
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