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Liquifyed Liquifyed 2002
Reviewed by Steve Nathan
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When I was in college, I had a roommate who complained about the music that I listened to. At the time, Jeff Beck's Blow By Blow was in heavy rotation on my stereo (and if you have never listened to Blow By Blow, you can ignore anything else I ever say, but you must listen to this album at least once in your life). I thought it was funny at the time when he referred to my music as "crying guitars." Since I have continued to listen to instrumentals -- from Stanley Clark, Al DiMeola, Paco DeLucia, John McLaughlin, (the list goes on and on and now includes Liquifyed) -- I have come to realize that what my roommate referred to as crying guitars was actually fairly accurate. I also came to realize that "instrumental bands" are as expressive, if not more so, than bands with a vocal lead. Instrumentals are as old and varied as any music.
Spanning the centuries and generations from classical
orchestral, jazz, electronica and film soundtracks,
instrumentals have always been an integral part of our
culture. Take film soundtracks, for example, when, during
the silent film period of the early 1900s, movies were
accompanied by music played by live orchestras. When
"talkies" came along, instrumentals continued to play an
important role in establishing the emotional tenor of the
film. This continues to be true to this day, in large part
because filmmakers understand that music evokes emotional
responses. For example, Chris Faison takes the lead with his
plaintive sounding and funk-inspired sax playing. Chris is
then joined and surpassed by the rock-influenced guitar
sounds of Brian Dickerson, who plays some smooth and
inspired guitar. While Chris and Brian are "talking" to each
other, the rhythm section, with strong and creative playing
by Mike Barsky, who demonstrates his Latin-influenced
training on a variety of instruments, including congas and
other assorted percussion, and Ed Gross on drums and Mark
Shin on Bass, more than hold their own. This rhythm section
provides a great counterpoint to the lead established by
Chris and Brian. (c) 2002 Steve Nathan, licensed for use by Blue Coupe magazine. |
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