Hot Potato
Jeff Arenson | Colorado Springs, CO United States | 02/26/2002
(4 out of 5 stars)
""Live At the Baked Potato" is a two part cd series that features guitarist Jeff Richman with various fusion performers. This is the first volume and is also the better of the two. Jeff Richman is a very good guitarist with his own non-flashy style of jazz fusion. The disc contains covers as well as a couple of Richman originals. The things that make this disc worth getting are the performances by some of the other musicians. Peter Gabriel's "Mercy Street" is the opener on this disc and this is a spectacular version. Abraham Laboriel and Vinnie Colaiuta form a dynamic rhythm pairing and Tavaglione and Richman both add quality solos. The ending of the song is Vinnie cleaning house in a most impressive fashion. The other highlight of this disc is the cover of Marcus Miller's '"Splatch". A short piano imrovisation by Peter Wolf is soon joined by Richman who establishes the melody. This time Laboriel teams up with drumming sensation Dave Weckl to form an undeniably great groove. Richman delivers a fine solo and then Dave Weckl shakes the room with his drumming insanity. The rest of the tunes are solid but unspectacular fusion. If you like fusion then I suggest that you pick this one up; the two highlight songs are worth it by themselves."
Tasty L.A. fusion without the muzak tendencies
PotatoHead | 08/07/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Bought this on a whim, and have been pleasantly surprised. Richman is a tasteful player with an unique sound and surrounds himself with some some serious musicians. Each tune is stretched out for maximum blowing potential, can't wait to hear Volume two!"
Need more Vinnie!!
PotatoHead | Oakland, CA USA | 08/12/2004
(3 out of 5 stars)
"I grew up near the original (and now only) Baked Potato in North Hollywood, which opened in 1970. I've attended literally hundreds of shows there. While this CD has some special moments, most notably Vinnie Colaiuta's spectacularly slippery drumming on "Mercy Street", it falls short of capturing the true BP sound and improvisational spontaneity. I've seen Jeff Richman a couple of times at the original BP and he's better than this 2-disk set represents. My advice to fans of this disk is to pick up Greg Mathieson's "Live at the Baked Potato 2000" double CD. It features Vinnie, Abe Laboriel and Mike Landau shredding from start to finish. Better yet, just go there."