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It's Fusion Week!
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One of the greatest genres to ever exist. Especially Jazz/Funk type fusion:
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Yay fusion.
I'm going to keep plugging my favourite fusion album until someone actually listens to it :) Quote:
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Filles de Kilimanjaro (1968) is my favorite fusion album.
Miles, pre-electric, acoustic jazz and rock with no hippie bullshit. |
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This is a newer fusiony release originally posted by Chumley; Panzerballett Quote:
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Yay, fusion week is good :)
I'll start with an old favorite, Return to Forever's debut, generally credited as a Chick Corea solo album. Chick Corea had played with Miles Davis, but wanted to play music which was more inclusive and more listener friendly. The result was his own fusion band, Return to Forever. Here are a couple of my favorite tracks from the album. The opener is the title track which has a very haunting opening theme worth listening to even if you don't have time for it's full 12-something minutes. Crystal silence, the second track, is another favourite and an absolute bliss to listen to. I want a fender rhodes electric piano! |
There'll Be No Tears Tonight (1987) by Eugene Chadbourne
http://www.dustygroove.com/images/pr...ellbe_101b.jpg For those who have had to endure the material that I upload on Mumuplayer, you all will have probably listened this man's music already. For those who haven't... There'll Be No Tears Tonight is basically an album by a free improvisational guitarist who decided to give country rock a go. It's very much a fusion genre in that it combines jazz/free jazz, country rock, and free improvisation. All the tracks on the album are covers of some of his favorite country songs, but... this doesn't (by any means) take away from the originality that this works holds... It's humorous, catchy, experimental, and unique... Tom Cora and John Zorn also make appearances on it (which is a plus in my book). Anyways, here's a song from it: |
Oh man, I thought this thread was all about jazz fusion :p: when I encounter the word fusion these days, it's almost always in relation to jazz / rock ..
The thematic scope for this week just became a lot bigger! edit : Sorry for posting National Health again (prog/jazz fusion), but everyone who's read any of my posts in the music sections the last year may have caught on that I absolutely adore this band and everything they ever did. The band is a Canterbury supergroup containing more talent than what usually goes well, but they managed to stay brilliant during the bands somewhat short lifetime. In the hope that someone will find them interesting, I'll post some songs (which I've probably posted before). They're a bit hard to get into maybe, but the song anyone's first likely to love by them I think would be the Bryden 2-Step for Amphibians. It has a slow building start you should try and endure before it becomes fantastic. The Collapso is a good song for showcasing their quirkier side. My wife has real struggles with it, but I love it :p: If you wanna hear an example of why the Hammond Organ is one of the coolest instruments ever played by keyboardists, just listen to the first 30 secs or so of Dreams Wide Awake (Hammond enters at about 20 secs in). |
Flamenco + pop/rock:
Celtic/folk + rock: |
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