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Five Peace Band (Live)

Chick Corea & John McLaughlin

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Album Review

Chick Corea and John McLaughlin share one of the great pedigrees in the music of the 20th century: they were both key sidemen on Miles Davis' seminal albums In a Silent Way and Bitches Brew. They have played together since those heady days, as a duo or as sit-in guests. Five Peace Band was Corea's idea of putting together a dream band to play all kinds of jazz, and he approached McLaughlin. Corea chose the other members in saxophonist Kenny Garrett, drummer Vinnie Colaiuta, and bassist Christian McBride. The group toured for nearly a year following Corea's Return to Forever reunion tour, and this double CD was compiled from that jaunt. It's true that on paper supergroups are suspicious offerings. Not so here. This band includes three younger — yet veteran — musicians who team wonderfully with the two legends on this set. Of the eight pieces included here, five are originals — three by McLaughlin and a pair by Corea — along with Davis' "In a Silent Way/It's About That Time" (with Herbie Hancock guesting), Jackie McLean's "Dr. Jackle," and a reading of the standard "Someday My Prince Will Come" (a duet between pianist and guitarist that elegantly closes disc two). McLaughlin's compositions are fairly recent; they were recorded with his 4th Dimension group on his excellent Floating Point and Industrial Zen albums. As one can imagine, this material is played here the way it was there — only more so — as extremely engaging 21st century electric fusion. His other piece, "Señor C.S.," is reimagined from the studio version on Industrial Zen. Here it is played harder and faster yet gives away none of its Latin groove, and instead comes off as a new, much more technically ambitious mutation of samba.

It should be noted that the rhythm section here is nothing less than startling. McBride is equally at home on an electric bass, and his sense of fire, funkiness, and dynamic range is in every note. Colaiuta is simply one of the most talented and exciting drummers out there, and creates an art form of dressing his timekeeping in impeccable and imaginative ways. Corea's tunes are closer to something resembling mainstream jazz — though the gorgeous and lengthy (it clocks in at over 27 minutes) "Hymn to Andromeda" moves gradually and beautifully to the outside, with beautiful playing by Garrett and McLaughlin, who can still handle non-fusion material with invention, restraint, and taste. Disc two begins with an odd, idiosyncratic reading of McLean's "Dr. Jackle" as an attempt to stretch hard bop toward something (via Corea's arrangement) — but what it is, isn't quite clear. The version of "In a Silent Way/It's About That Time" with Hancock is the album's high point. He plays an electric piano and creates the necessary incantatory vibe in the ethereal, soft, speculative beginning for Corea to simply caress into being. McLaughlin just floats about as an accompanist to the keys, and when he does play single lines, they become hesitant, soft, direction-pointing exercises toward what is to come. When the tune splits and becomes more aggressive in the latter half, the band gels and he finds himself in the maelstrom as the two keyboardists vie for dominance and the rhythm section creates a sense of pulse and excitement. His solo is brief and to the point yet full of knots and turns — his trading lines with Garrett is especially tantalizing. Five Peace Band re-creates an extremely ambitious and beautifully executed gig, where all players were firing on all cylinders.

Customer Reviews

What An Incredible Collaboration

There was no way for me to get away to see these guys play during their tour, so I've been waiting to hear this material for quite some time! To have all of these incredible musicians in one group... wow. The musicianship, composition, arranging, and mindblowing tightness of the Five Peace Band is so astounding at times that it hardly seems possible that humans are making this music. The breadth of material is incredible, and did I mention the performances?! These players are among, if not THE, best in the world... if you have even the slightest interest in good fusion jazz, do your ear-hole a gigantic favor and click BUY right now (and while you're at it don't miss the "Return to Forever- RETURNS" album either). You will not regret it!

all star/peace band - heavenly music - give it five peace/stars

I just listened to the entire album on the radio WLRN 91.3 FM in South FL 1st disc on 4/16 and 2nd disc on 4/17 and I love it. It's a different band when they switch drummers. I never knew a drummer can influence the rest of the band so much. It was said so many times in so many ways how good these musicians are. I agree whole-heartedly so let me just mention a few minor minuses. It seems like the busy musicians didn't have time to spend in a studio so they decided to record their tour and pick up the better material for a quick release. Nothing wrong with that but... some of the tunes became waaay too long. It's OK for tunes like Dr. Jackle which changes the beat every now and then and there are other tunes interwoven within so it's not as boring as it could have been. But there are some other tunes that ask to be ended much sooner. Secondly I expected much more from Herbie Hancock's guest apperance. I couldn't recognize In a Silent Way throughout. Try to compare to the same tune with Wayne Shorter's guest appearance on the last Joe Zawinul's recording. I'd call this one a true masterpiece. And lastly what happened to all those awesome guitar electronics heard on John McLaughlin's recordings since the release of Industrial Zen? Can't wait to hear Five Peace Band's studio recordings! Are there ever gonna be any?

Cold sound

What a band. What musicians. Why doesn't it sound better than it does? I have an idea why. It's the evil digital recording process. Take this same band, same musicians, record them analogue (from the soundboard which is how I assume this was done) and it would sound amazing. This renders their sound cold and inhuman, lacking of individual personality. Even the wonderful Chick sounds like an average pianist given this cold sterile world the music takes place in. Stiil, it is great to hear Mclaughlin play electric guitar again. Some of the tunes are lacking too--who needs a sedate reading of Someday My Prince Will Come by musicians no longer fully committed to the art of jazz. Who needs Silent Way... So many great tunes to pick from and they play standards that are being played with much more conviction in any jazz club all over the world. Garrett goes for nirvana too quickly on each solo. Hopefully the next one will be more cogent and sound better. Bring back live to analogue two track!

Biography

Born: June 12, 1941 in Chelsea, MA

Genre: Jazz

Years Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s

Chick Corea has been one of the most significant jazzmen since the '60s. Not content at any time to rest on his laurels, he has been involved in quite a few important musical projects, and his musical curiosity has never dimmed. A masterful pianist who, along with Herbie Hancock and Keith Jarrett, was one of the top stylists to emerge after Bill Evans and McCoy Tyner, Corea is also one of the few electric keyboardists to be quite...
Full Bio

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