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Steve Marcus - Tomorrow Never Knows (1968/2003) [Hard Bop]; FLAC (tracks+.cue)

Hard Bop, Post-Bop, Neo-Bop
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Mike1985
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Steve Marcus - Tomorrow Never Knows (1968/2003) [Hard Bop]; FLAC (tracks+.cue)

Unread postby Mike1985 » 06 Feb 2019, 13:35


Artist: Steve Marcus
Album: Tomorrow Never Knows
Genre: Hard Bop
Label: Water
Released: 1968/2003
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue)
Tracklist:
  1. Eight Miles High (Crosby-Clark-McGuinn) - 4:47
  2. Mellow Yellow (Leitch) - 3:55
  3. Listen People (Gouldman) - 2:28
  4. Rain (Lennon-McCartney) - 7:04
  5. Tomorrow Never Knows (Lennon-McCartney) - 11:11
  6. Half a Heart (Burton) - 5:22

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    Personnel:
  • Steve Marcus - tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone
  • Larry Coryell - guitar
  • Mike Nock - piano
  • Chris Hills - bass
  • Bob Moses - drums

Steve Marcus' first solo album was an audacious and overlooked early jazz-rock fusion effort, predating by a year or two the more celebrated innovations in this field by the likes of Miles Davis and John McLaughlin. All but one of the six tracks are instrumental versions -- mildly to radically extended -- of then-recent rock songs, among them "Eight Miles High" (a natural for the jazz treatment), the Beatles' "Rain" and "Tomorrow Never Knows," "Mellow Yellow," and the less likely Herman's Hermits hit "Listen People." In a way it's a more free jazzy, wholly instrumental outgrowth of the similarly near-forgotten early fusion group the Free Spirits, as three-fifths of the Free Spirits (who had put out a slightly earlier album on ABC) -- guitarist Larry Coryell, drummer Bob Moses, and bassist Chris Hills -- make up three-fifths of the band on Tomorrow Never Knows. Coryell contributes some fierce electric guitar work (getting into some feedback on "Tomorrow Never Knows"), and Mike Nock some psychedelic-style electric keyboards, though bandleader Marcus does assume the greatest prominence with his Coltrane-ish saxophone improvisations. Whether this would appeal to rock-grounded listeners, despite the undoubtedly rock-grounded material, depends very much on individual tastes. Though at times it sticks fairly close to the familiar riffs and melodies of the songs, at others it goes into extremely adventurous, at times even cacophonous free jazz (as they do at the end of "Mellow Yellow") that might lose some less hardy souls. "Eight Miles High" and "Tomorrow Never Knows" (where Coryell really lets loose) are the most successful tracks, with the closing Gary Burton composition "Half a Heart" taking the band back to more introspective, straighter jazz grooves. The CD reissue on Water is boosted by thorough historical liner notes, including recollections by Marcus and Nock.
Review by Richie Unterberger

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