All Artists: Return to Forever Title: Musicmagic Members Wishing: 6 Total Copies: 0 Label: Sony / Bmg Japan Release Date: 12/15/2007 Album Type: Import Genres: Jazz, Pop Style: Jazz Fusion Number of Discs: 1 SwapaCD Credits: 1 |
Return to Forever Musicmagic Genres: Jazz, Pop
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CD ReviewsInnovative J. C. Polach | Minnesota | 10/30/2005 (4 out of 5 stars) "It is always disappointing for me to hear other reviewers of music turn the squelch on when a favorite performer decides to move off the beaten path and try something new. Of course Chick Corea is the man of electronic jazz fusion; however, Music Magic is a nice diversion that still satisfies the electric junkie while experimenting with the eclectic. You gotta love genius, and genius grows from infancy to adulthood like anyone. Thanks, Chick, for the romantic, enticing voice of Gayle Moran, and especially the smooth vocals of another musical genius, Stanley Clarke. A favorite cigarette or beer does not preclude the existence of other great cigarettes or beers." Songs Of Many Musical Shades Andre S. Grindle | Brewer Maine | 02/06/2008 (5 out of 5 stars) "After four highly successful albums of high powered fusion Return To Forever end up here without Lenny White and Al DiMeola,whose solo careers and session work made them too busy to work in the group context anymore. Of the original lineup on Stanley Clarke remained-the only member to be with the group from the very beginning to the very end. There is also a theory that RTF albums WERE essencialy Clarke/Corea albums with guest musicians but with people like Lenny,Al,Flora and the powerful contributions they made to the group over the years I find that hard to believe.On 'Musicmagic' RTF were in for more of a lineup change:Gayle Moran,singer,keyboard player and wife of Chick Corea himself is now a member-contributing the first vocals to be heard on an RTF album since the Light as a Feather days.On most of the songs she shares vocal duty with Clarke who,as I've already discussed is not the worlds most technically gifted singer to put it mildly. There is also a musical change on the horizon:the pyrotechical fusion sound that RTF had forged on it's previous albums,due mostly to the musicians great chemistry rather then displays of ego,is replaced by more coherent song structures and craft. Not only that but funky grooves,always a part of RTF's sound are emphasized over instrumental passges. Also of note is the addition of a big brass section to most of these songs. All this considered this "new" RTF,despite weak reviews is BY ALL MEANS as creative and stylistically clever as anything they ever recorded. The first three tracks "The Musician","Hello Again" and the title track all blend a great sense of R&B/funk with improvisation and pure experimentation:the vocals are a bit surreal to say the least (from BOTH Moran and Clarke) but everyone pulls together for a clever take on Mingus's "So Long Mickey Mouse"."Do You Ever" is another vocal piece,although softer and with more emphasis on the lyrics and "The Endless Night" harkens back to the bands previous "prog-rock/fusion" style but again the feeling is warmer and sudtle. Taken together as the swan song for RTF 'Musicmagic' borrows a little from both the first and second versions of the band to create what definately could've been a whole new direction for the group to presue. But after this album Chick Corea elected to discontinue the whole RTF band and simply concentrate on solo,session and live work. It sometimes makes me wonder what might've been with RTF had done if they'd soldiered on like Herbie Hancock or Mahavishnu Orchestra;you have to ask what would RTF have sounded like during the disco-jazz era and when the fusion genre was eclipsed by the electro hip-hop of the early 80's? Although it is by no means a shinning example Chick's 1986 recording The Elektric Band is about the closest I can think of to what RTF's sound might've morphed into had they survived into the mid 1980's. Even so we're left with this and we can only wonder." Steve gadd ! August West | long beach, ny | 11/12/2006 (4 out of 5 stars) "i just finished listening to endless night for the first time in a long time , and for that song alone this is an album worth buying for any chick fan . i always remembered that song for the drummer steve gadd , it was the first time i had heard him and i remembered him being the highlight .
well i remembered correctly ! a classic chick number and it turned me onto steve gadd . exquisite drumming . you gotta hear it ! at six minutes max the volume and get up on your feet . " |