Jef Lee Johnson - News From The Jungle (2001)

  • 19 Oct, 00:10
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Artist:
Title: News From The Jungle
Year Of Release: 2001
Label: Universal Music[016 414-2]
Genre: Jazz, Rock, Fusion
Quality: FLAC (image + .cue,log,scans) | MP3/320 kbps
Total Time: 61:42
Total Size: 398 MB(+3%) | 146 MB(+3%)
WebSite:

Tracklist

01 Open Season 09:11
02 Take The Coltrane 03:54
03 Insomniac Dance 02:27
04 The Mooche 04:14
05 Jungle 04:18
06 The Dreamcoat 04:56
07 Jass 04:50
08 This Guy Is In Love With You 04:06
09 Diving In F 03:54
10 Drop Me Off In Harlem 04:57
11 RSJ 03:24
12 Land Each Limb 02:08
13 Little Leo 05:44
14 In This Life 01:25
15 Take The A Train 02:14
Jef Lee Johnson - News From The Jungle (2001)

personnel :

Guitar, Vocals - Jef Lee Johnson
Drum Box, Drums - Michael Bland
Bass, Guitar, Vocals - Sonny Thompson

It's somewhat amazing that this bold, bizarrely eclectic CD by three guys from Minneapolis would come out on a French label. All three players on this CD are renowned session musicians who have played with everybody from Miles Davis to Billy Joel, but News From the Jungle is anything but the slick production you might expect from a trio of session men. The album starts out with a heavy, menacing sound portrait of a bad night in a bad neighborhood, with Sonny Thompson grimly reciting crime statistics over a pounding beat, wailing guitar, and a collage of police calls and urban sound effects. About a third of the way through the nine-minute track, the vocals stop and the guitar takes over for a instrumental freakout that is jaw-dropping. After this long, tense start things swerve suddenly into free jazz for "Take the Coltrane," and the experimental, improvisational feel doesn't let up from there. Several of the pieces that follow have intensely distorted guitars and pounding drum and basslines that verge on heavy metal, but with a freedom, vigor, and wildness that take them far into other territory. When this approach is applied to Duke Ellington pieces, the result is eye-opening. The bizarre version of "The Mooche" is a change of pace, the normally swinging piece given a ghostly, eerie feel by slow-motion tempo and bent guitar notes. The restrained, tasteful vocal performances by "Sonny Thompson" are another surprise; he sounds relaxed and natural on a solo performance of the Burt Bacharach chestnut, "This Guy's in Love With You," which is a refreshing change of pace from the crunching performances that precede it. The stylistic shifts throughout this album may distance some listeners, but those who are adventurous will revel in the unpredictability as well as the virtuosity of this exceptional trio.~Richard Foss