Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta 1993. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta 1993. Mostrar todas as mensagens

quinta-feira, 5 de novembro de 2020

EKSEPTION: The Lost Last Live Concert Tapes - "Made in Germany" + "Cum Laude"

Image

Original released on CD Box Omnium GW 80007
(NETHERLANDS 2009, March 12)

Image
"The Lost Last Live Concert Tapes" is a box containing 2 discs: a live-registration, recorded on the 25th and 26th of November 1993 in Eberbach: Kurhaus,Nürnberg, Weistersingerhalle (named "Live in Germany") and the album "Cum Laude" (1st edition in 1988 by BMG Ariola) from bandmembers Rick van der Linden and Rein van den Broek. The tapes of the live-concert registration apparently were lost, then found again somewhere in the nineties, remastered and published in this box. On the cover the word "Lost" is therefore crossed.

Image

In their eight-year existence, Ekseption came as close as any group from the European continent ever did to stealing the thunder of early classical rock outfits such as the Nice and rivaling the early work of Emerson, Lake & Palmer. In Holland, they charted singles based on classical compositions and released successful concept albums, and were - along with Focus - the top progressive rock band in the Dutch-speaking world. The group's roots actually go back to 1958 and a Haarlem-based band called the Jokers, formed by Hans Alta (bass), Tim Griek (drums), Rein van den Broek (trumpet), and Huib van Kampen (guitar, saxophone), who specialized in covers of American rock & roll. They changed their name in 1966 to the Incrowd, playing a mix of rock & roll and R&B with a heavy jazz influence, and underwent some membership shifts around this time - Rob Kruisman joined as a singer who also doubled on guitar, flute, and saxophone, but much more telling was the group's sharing a bill with the Occasional Swing Combo; Rick van der Broek was impressed with the playing of that group's keyboardman, Rick van der Linden, a conservatory-trained musician who also composed music. After playing together in an informal jam session, van der Broek invited van der Linden into the band.

After a year of working as the Incrowd, the band was notified that another Dutch group had a prior claim on the name, and they had to change their name once again - they finally settled on Ekseption. More personnel changes took place - with Tim Griek (who later produced Brainbox's self-titled debut album) and original Jokers founder Hans Alta having been replaced by drummer Peter de Leeuwe and bassist Cor Dekker, respectively. More than the group's name or membership changes at the time, however; in 1968, Ekseption had won first prize in a music competition with a trio of jazz-based numbers, two adapted from the work of Dizzy Gillespie and Art Blakey, and the third a rendition of Aram Khachaturian's "Sabre Dance," which had been a staple of pop adaptations from Woody Herman's in the '40s to Love Sculpture's version in the mid-'60s. Part of the prize was a contract with Philips Records, which the group used to record a single comprised of their rock-based renditions of a pair of Bix Beiderbecke numbers. Philips rejected the single as too old-fashioned, and it was then that Rick van der Linden stepped in to fill the void - he had seen the Nice (featuring Keith Emerson on keyboards) perform in Rotterdam and was astounded and delighted by their mix of hard rock and classical music, and suggested that Ekseption cut a single of "The Fifth," adapted from the first movement of Beethoven's Symphony No. 5, and their version of "Sabre Dance." The band went along, thinking that it was a joke, until the record was released in March of 1969. It didn't do much at first, until it was picked up by a radio station, with help from the spouse of their producer, Tony Vos - it went on to become a hit in Holland and was released successfully in much of the rest of Europe.

The group followed it up with a pair of similar singles, "Rhapsody in Blue" and "Air" (adapted from Bach), which also charted. Ironically, Ekseption were doing considerably better with their records in their own country than the Nice were in England, where they never attracted more than a large cult following. These successes, and a debut album patterned along the same lines with some jazz elements added in - which earned gold record awards in several countries - led to a new shakeup in the band's lineup, out of which Rick van der Linden became the group's new leader. Other membership changes followed, as guitarist and saxman Huib van Kampen retired from performing, and Peter de Leeuwe left the group temporarily - amid these changes, the band's second LP, a concept album called "Beggar Julia's Time Trip", was recorded. Vocalists Michel van Dijk (who was later a member of Brainbox) and Steve Allet passed through the group as well, though Ekseption's focus remained principally instrumental - by the early '70s, van der Linden's original organ was augmented by the presence of synthesizers, Mellotrons, and the usual array of advanced electric keyboards that became their dominant sound. In 1972, the group's fifth album, "Ekseption 5", became their first and only LP to be released in America - their most accomplished album, it moved from strength to strength, even adapting a great Nice original, "For Example," into an even better, more jazz-influenced piece of their own design . The album never found more than a tiny audience but in astounded most of those who heard it, and if Ekseption could have continued making music like this, they could easily have competed internationally.

Alas, that album and the tour that followed marked Ekseption's artistic peak. In 1973, saxman Dick Remelink and drummer de Leeuwe quit, to be replaced by Jan Vennik and Pieter Voogt, respectively. The group seemed to lose momentum, however, and their subsequent releases didn't sell nearly as well as their previous records. Van der Linden, who was very much a star in Holland, quit in 1974 to pursue a solo career, and Ekseption carried on with new keyboard player Hans Jansen, whose arrival heralded a much more jazz-oriented sound for the group. This change seemed to lose the group whatever audience it had, and following the release of "Mindmirror" (1976), they broke up. Van den Broek, Vennik, and Jansen co-founded Spin, a jazz-rock fusion band that recorded two LPs during the mid-'70s. By the end of the decade, Ekseption had re-formed for an album, "Ekseption '78", and in 1980, Rein van den Broek and Rick van der Linden - who had formed a group called Trace with Focus drummer Pierre van der Linden (who was no relation), and also cut a pair of albums, the second with Catalin Tircolea - became a duo called "Cum Laude" and cut an LP together, which embraced a classical rock sound akin to their old band. Ekseption had one more go-around in 1989 with Ekseption '89 before calling it quits once and for all. In the '90s, their music began surfacing on CD. (Bruce Eder in AllMusic)

quinta-feira, 13 de abril de 2017

SHERYL CROW: The First 2 Albums

Image
Original released on CD A&M 0126
(US 1993, August 3)

Image
ImageSheryl Crow earned her recording contract through hard work, gigging as a backing vocalist for everyone from Don Henley to Michael Jackson before entering the studio with Hugh Padgham to record her debut album. As it turned out, things didn't go entirely as planned. Instead of adhering to her rock & roll roots, the record was a slick set of contemporary pop, relying heavily on ballads. Upon hearing the completed album, Crow convinced A&M not to release the album, choosing to cut a new record with producer Bill Bottrell. Along with several Los Angeles-based songwriters and producers, including David Baerwald, David Ricketts, and Brian McLeod, Bottrell was part of a collective dubbed "the Tuesday Night Music Club." Every Tuesday, the group would get together, drink beer, jam, and write songs. Crow became part of the Club and, within a few months, she decided to craft her debut album around the songs and spirit of the collective. It was, for the most part, an inspired idea, since "Tuesday Night Music Club" has a loose, ramshackle charm that her unreleased debut lacked. At its best - the opening quartet of "Run, Baby, Run," "Leaving Las Vegas," "Strong Enough," and "Can't Cry Anymore," plus the deceptively infectious "All I Wanna Do" - are remarkable testaments to their collaboration, proving that roots rock can sound contemporary and have humor. That same spirit, however, also resulted in some half-finished songs, and the preponderance of those tracks make "Tuesday Night Music Club" better in memory than it is in practice. Still, even with the weaker moments, Crow manages to create an identity for herself - a classic rocker at heart but with enough smarts to stay contemporary. And that's the lasting impression "Tuesday Night Music Club" leaves.

Image
Original released on CD A&M 31454 0587 2
(US 1996, September 24)

Image
ImageHiring noted roots experimentalists Tchad Blake and Mitchell Froom as engineer and consultant, respectively, Sheryl Crow took a cue from their Latin Playboys project for her second album - she kept her roots rock foundation and added all sorts of noises, weird instruments, percussion loops, and off-balance production to give "Sheryl Crow" a distinctly modern flavor. And, even with the Stonesy grind of "Sweet Rosalyn" or hippie spirits of "Love Is a Good Thing," it is an album that couldn't have been made any other time than the '90s. As strange as it may sound, "Sheryl Crow" is a postmodern masterpiece of sorts - albeit a mainstream, post-alternative, postmodern masterpiece. It may not be as hip or innovative as, say, the Beastie Boys' "Paul's Boutique", but it is as self-referential, pop culture obsessed, and musically eclectic. Throughout the record, Crow spins out wild, nearly incomprehensible stream-of-consciousness lyrics, dropping celebrity names and products every chance she gets ("drinking Falstaff beer/Mercedes Ruehl and a rented Leer"). Often, these litanies don't necessarily add up to anything specific, but they're a perfect match for the mess of rock, blues, alt-rock, country, folk, and lite hip-hop loops that dominate the record. At her core, she remains a traditionalist - the songcraft behind the infectious "Change Would Do You Good," the bubbly "Everyday Is a Winding Road," and the weary "If It Makes You Happy" helped get the singles on the radio - but the production and lyrics are often at odds with those instincts, creating for a fascinating and compelling (and occasionally humorous) listen and one of the most individual albums of its era. (Stephen Erlewine in AllMusic)

sábado, 12 de novembro de 2016

COHEN Live at the Kongresshaus, Zürich

Image
Image
Image
ImageImage
This is a double live set unofficial release - 20 great tracks, with an excepcional sound, recorded at the Kongresshaus, in Zürich, on May 21st, 1993. Enjoy!

Image
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...