Stanley Clarke - The Toys Of Men (2007) 320kbps

Artist: Stanley Clarke
Title: The Toys Of Men
Year Of Release: 2007
Label: Heads Up
Genre: Jazz
Quality: Mp3 / 320kbps
Total Time: 58:12
Total Size: 132 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: The Toys Of Men
Year Of Release: 2007
Label: Heads Up
Genre: Jazz
Quality: Mp3 / 320kbps
Total Time: 58:12
Total Size: 132 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
---------
01 The Toys of Men
02 Come On
03 Jerusalem
04 Back in the Woods
05 All Over Again
06 Hmm Hmm
07 Bad Asses
08 Game
09 La Cancion de Sofia
10 El Bajo Negro
11 Broski
12 Chateauvallon (Dedicated to Tony Williams)
13 Bass Folk Song No. 6
It has been somewhat of a frustrating run for fans of uber-bassist Stanley Clarke's legendary, genre-defining '70s work. After establishing himself as the world's premier four-string jazz-rock maestro with his work in Return to Forever and solo albums such as School Days, Clarke altered his focus by churning out middling commercial funk pop and soundtracks. They diluted his status as a talented musician whose fleet-fingered style and elaborate picking technique influenced a generation of bass players. But he's back now, with an anti-war-propelled set that is an encouraging and convincing return to form. The opening 11-minute, six-part suite, featuring fiery fiddle from the intriguingly named Mads Tolling, sounds like prime-era Mahavishnu Orchestra, and also highlights Clarke's frantic yet precise staccato technique on his instrument. It alone is worth the price of this disc, but the remaining dozen tracks emphasize Clarke's intentions to prove he's never lost his touch. He shifts between acoustic and electric settings, inserting stark solo and duo interludes that spotlight his prodigious talent between longer work-outs with his tight group. "Bad Asses," where he is accompanied only by drums, sizzles with thumb-numbing, lightning-hot funk and "Chateauvallon 1972 (Dedicated to Tony Williams)" finds Clarke in fusion territory again working a sizzling, dramatic slow riff as powerful and vital as anything he has done in decades. Long-time admirers now have an album that indisputably proves Stanley Clarke hasn't lost a step as the foremost bass player of his generation. --Hal Horowitz
IsraCloud : Download