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Wayne Johnson Trio - Keeping the Dream Alive (1993) [Fusion]; FLAC (tracks+.cue)

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Mike1985
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Wayne Johnson Trio - Keeping the Dream Alive (1993) [Fusion]; FLAC (tracks+.cue)

Unread postby Mike1985 » 21 Feb 2026, 18:16


Artist: Wayne Johnson Trio
Album: Keeping the Dream Alive
Genre: Fusion
Label: MoJazz
Released: 1993
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue)
Tracklist:
01. Bedrock (Johnson) - 4:23
02. Kite Music (Johnson) - 5:39
03. An Occasion for Jackson (Johnson) - 7:26
04. Nu Blooz (Johnson) - 5:41
05. Wonder Mountain (Johnson) - 5:54
06. Keeping the Dream Alive (Johnson) - 5:07
07. No Excuse (Johnson) - 7:09
08. Tangletown (Johnson) - 5:46
09. Rock Runner (Johnson) - 4:03
10. Portrait of a Yak (Johnson) - 6:23
11. Blue Solanum (Johnson) - 6:35

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Personnel:
Wayne Johnson - guitars: electric, acoustic & synthesizer
Bill Berg - drums, percussion
Gary Willis - basses
with:
John Leftwich - electric bass, acoustic bass (#1,6)
Rob Whitlock - keyboards (#1,6)
Don Roberts - bagpipes (#1)

After focusing primarily on R&B for over 30 years, Motown started flirting with jazz when it launched its MoJazz label in the early '90s. Commercial, formulaic, radio-oriented releases by guitarist Norman Brown and others indicated that MoJazz wouldn't be a serious jazz outfit à la BlueNote, Concord, Contemporary, or Muse, and the label was dismissed by bop hard-liners as well as fusion lovers. But MoJazz did have a decent release in Keeping the Dream Alive, which provided a likable, improvisatory blend of jazz, rock, and pop and demonstrated that Wayne Johnson was someone to keep an eye on. Forming a trio with electric bassist Gary Willis (best known for his work with Scott Henderson's Tribal Tech) and drummer Bill Berg, Johnson shows himself to be a melodic guitarist whose main influences include Pat Metheny and Al DiMeola. But the improviser doesn't go out of his way to emulate either of them, and he comes across as his own man on originals that range from the Celtic-influenced "Bedrock" and the gutsy "No Excuse" to the lilting "Kite Music." Unfortunately, Keeping the Dream Alive received very little publicity and didn't do much commercially, but it's worth acquiring if you come across a copy.
Review by Alex Henderson

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