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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Give it a few listens,
By
This review is from: Thick (Audio CD)
OK, so the first time I heard "Thick" I thought it sounded like jammedout takes from the last 3 Henderson/Willis & co.'s CD's. I hadn't read anything about the album being "more improvised"; in fact, I didn't even know it was coming out and just stumbled across it in a record store (can I admit that I bought it at a store?). But though on first listen it was easy to yearn for the angular-but-memorable melodies on "Face First" or "Illicit," the more I listen to this CD, the more I realize that this is the essence of what Tribal Tech is all about: incredibly sympathetic interplay, at a level one generally expects only of be-bop giants (Miles, Coltrane, Rollins, et al): the kind that requires of its players the deepest, most empathetic degree of listening and turn-on-a-dime, almost offhand instrumental virtuosity. Excepting the fact that from a "formal" and harmonic standpoint this music charges beyond the parameters of bebop, it's really more like the classic albums of the 50's and 60's; this record is the electrified "fusion" equivalent of "Kind of Blue" or Lucky Thompson's "Trichrotism" or one of Coltrane's early "free" records. Twenty five years ago, groups like Return to Forever, The Dixie Dregs and Of course, it hasn't been a smooth upward road. Lots of fusion fans Guess what?
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fusion meltdown,
By
This review is from: Thick (Audio CD)
When Tribal Tech, probably the greatest fusion band of all time, decided to record a disc of in-studio improvisations, it set the industry--not to mention their fan base--on their collective backsides.Many have still not recovered (see the clueless negative reviews). Their loss. Anyone, it seems to me, with ears even slightly open, should rejoice, exult, turn back flips in the presence of this altogether astounding music. For one thing, this is the obvious forerunner of John Scofield's brilliant fusion discs. For another, it proves that Scott Kinsey (keys) is a player of huge consequence. Gary Willis does nothing but solidify his standing as among the absolute greatest e-bassists of all time. And Kirk Covington grounds the proceedings in rock-solid and brilliantly imaginative percussive moves. Of Scott Henderson, little need be said, except that here, stripped down from some of the guitar gimmickry and wizardry that characterized Illicit and Reality Check, he perhaps casts an even longer shadow both in terms of his monster chops and his wacky tonal sensibility, fully on display, e.g., on the title cut. Maybe it's just perversity on my part, by I'm entirely taken by the bizarro vibe of "Clinic Troll." Maybe I've spent too much time in SoCal; maybe I'm just terminally weird--I don't know. But I'm totally down with what's happening on this number. If fact, I'm pretty much just blown away by the easy, laconic, off-the-cuff supercharged vibe happening here. Spooky, noir, scarily dazzling, this is among the finest discs I own.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Tribal Tech's most improvisational work to date speaks much.,
By Brett Tucker (the book's editor) (White Mountains NH USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Thick (Audio CD)
When I first listened to this disc, I thought maybe it lacked the melody and thematic development of Tribal Tech's previous efforts. Now, though, I've come to love it for what it is: a jam session of sorts, invented as it goes along, steered in new directions by the whim of the moment. The sound this band creates here is bold, unusual, ecclectic, and yet surprisingly accessible to a broad range of listener tastes. As music, across all genres, becomes ever more cliched over time, Tribal Tech has once again found a way to break out of the mold. Theirs is a musical voice all their own, and the instrumental music of "Thick" is a free-flowing conversation.
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