VA - Come Together: Guitar Tribute To The Beatles (1993) Lossless
Artist: VA
Title: Come Together: Guitar Tribute To The Beatles
Year Of Release: 1993
Label: NYC Music
Genre: Jazz, Fusion
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 58:41
Total Size: 312 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist: Title: Come Together: Guitar Tribute To The Beatles
Year Of Release: 1993
Label: NYC Music
Genre: Jazz, Fusion
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 58:41
Total Size: 312 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Come Together - Mark Whitfield
02. She's Leaving Home - Toninho Horta
03. Here, There and Everywhere - Ralph Towner
04. Medley: Within You, Without You/Blue Jay Way - Steve Khan
05. Eleanor Rigby - Zachary Breaux
06. Blackbird - Adrian Belew
07. And I Love Her - John Abercrombie
08. Michelle - Allan Holdsworth
09. Norwegian Wood - Leni Stern
10. Something - Larry Coryell
11. Yesterday - Toots Thielemans
Strictly speaking, this isn't just a guitar tribute to the Beatles, although stringed instruments that are plucked, strummed, and otherwise manipulated are in abundance, representing styles and sounds that will recall Django Reinhardt at one moment and the Mahavishnu Orchestra at the next. Toots Thielemans adds some astonishingly tasteful harmonica (and whistling) to "Yesterday" and Thomas Dawson's organ is almost a lead instrument on "Come Together." But it's the guitars (plus some superb bass) that make up the core of this delightful recording. Larry Coryell, Steve Khan, Ralph Towner, Adrian Belew, John Abercrombie, Allan Holdsworth, Toninho Horta (whose Brazilian-flavored rendition of "She's Leaving Home" is worth the price of admission by itself), and others do what they do best, and the results are revelatory and dazzlingly entertaining. This reviewer's favorite cut was Khan's medley of "Within You, Without You/Blue Jay Way," but that's just because it's that much more unexpected than anything else here. Mark Whitfield's lead work on the title cut, which is also the leadoff track, sets the bar pretty high for the rest of the CD, but everyone clears it and then some, each in his own way. One only wishes there'd been a follow-up album.