Friday, April 1, 2011

Instrumental CD Reissue of the Month - "Joe Farrell: Upon This Rock"

Instrumental CD Reissue of the Month
Joe Farrell: "Upon This Rock" (CTI/Wounded Bird) 1974/2011

Rating:
***** (musical performance)
***** (recording & mix)
*** (remastered with heavy compression)

First CD reissue ever anywhere in the world (thanks to the wise guys of the Wounded Bird label) of this cult CTI album produced by Creed Taylor & engineered by Rudy Van Gelder, with a cover pic by genius photographer Pete Turner. Three tunes, including the the much-sampled title track (named by Creed Taylor, who loved to use sentences from the Bible; "You are Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church" - Matthews 16:18), were recorded in March 1974 with Joe Farrell's pianoless touring quartet at that time, featuring Joe Beck on electric guitar (great use of fuzz pedal, wah wah and other vintage electronic devices), Herb Bushler on bass and Jim Madison on drums.

A fourth track, "I Won't Be Back," my personal favorite, had been smartly saved by Creed Taylor from the "Penny Arcade" sessions recorded in October 1973 (the last time Herbie Hancock played on a CTI date), with the leader shining on flute, Hancock soloing beautifully on acoustic piano, Herb Bushler groovin' on bass, Steve Gadd (whose name, oddly, wasn't mentioned in the back cover of the original gatefold LP) playing as superb as always on drums, and Don Alias adding a latin-spice on congas. I only regret the fact that the uncredited remastering engineer used such a heavy compression, something completely unnecessary.

More problems: like the two other Farrell's CTI albums recently reissued by Wounded Bird ("Penny Arcade" and "Canned Funk"), this CD preserves most of the original cover artwork conceived by album designer Sibbie McDonough (including the liner graphics and the liner photos by Gene Laurents), but doesn't reproduces the original "CTI label," which means that the composers are not credited anywhere! The CTI logo was also deleted.

"Upon This Rock" is also being distributed in Japan by Clinck Records:
Btw, in June 2008 we had posted about a lawsuit filed by Joe's daughter, Kathleen Firrantello, in the U.S. District Court in New York, regarding unathourized sampling from the tune "Upon This Rock."
http://jazzstation-oblogdearnaldodesouteiros.blogspot.com/2008/06/joe-farrell-sampled-and-rappers-are.html

The rappers Kanye West, Methodman, Redman and Common have been sued by the daughter of the saxophonist Joe Farrell because they used parts from Farrell's composition "Upon This Rock" from 1974 without seeking permission from Farrell's estate (Reuters). The lawsuit will closely look at West's "Gone" from his album "Late Registration" (2005), at Common's "Chi-Chi" from his album "Be" (2005, coauthor and producer: Kanye West), as well as at "Run 4 Cover", a collaboration by the rappers Method Man and Redman from 1999 from their album "Blackout". Farrell's daughter seeks punitive damages of at least 1 million dollars and asks that no further copies of the songs be made or distributed.
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CTI's top connoisseur already Doug Payne wrote about this reissue on his Sound Insights blog:
Upon This Rock captures Joe Farrell on record with his own 1974-75 quartet, featuring guitarist Joe Beck, bassist Herb Bushler and drummer Jim Madison. The piano-less assemblage is considerably more rock oriented than previous Farrell outings, no doubt inspiring the album’s title, and driven home by Joe Beck’s consistently rock-edged guitar attack. Still, it’s a quartet that not only sounds comfortable mixing good rock ideas with solid jazz figures, but one that coalesces especially well together. Assembling at Rudy Van Gelder’s studio in March 1974, the quartet waxes three numbers included here, the leader’s “Weathervane” (featuring Farrell on soprano sax), the 12-minute funk-rock opus “Upon This Rock” (featuring Farrell on tenor sax and Beck, channeling Jimi Hendrix, overdubbing guitar parts) and Beck’s boogaloo “Seven Seas” (again with Farrell on tenor sax). The album’s title track in particular allows all four of the quartet’s members to contribute interesting commentary and is probably a highlight on an album brimming over with highlights. Upon This Rock is rounded out by Beck’s excellent 10-minute bossa fusion, “I Won’t Be Back,” recorded during the Penny Arcade sessions and nicely featuring Farrell on flute, Hancock sublime on piano and Beck, splendid on guitar.

To read the complete post, please visit:
http://dougpayne.blogspot.com/search?q=Joe+Farrell
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The CD is already available on DustyGroove:
http://www.dustygroove.com/browse.php?kwfilter=Upon+this+rock&incl_oos=1&incl_cs=1

And that's what they say:
Massive music from funky reedman Joe Farrell – quite possibly our favorite of his legendary 70s run for CTI – and that's saying a lot, given how great those records are! There's a lean, edgey groove to the set that's totally great – a lot more bite than usual for CTI, thanks to these wonderfully angular lines from Joe on tenor, soprano sax, and flute – backed up with some wicked guitar work from Joe Beck, who really matches Farrell's energy – in a core quartet with Herb Bushler on bass and Jim Madison on drums. One cut features a guest group – with Herbie Hancock on piano, Steve Gadd on drums, and Don Alias on percussion – and the album includes the massively break-heavy title cut "Upon This Rock", plus "Seven Seas", "I Won't Be Back", and "Weathervane".

For more details, please check: http://jazzstation-oblogdearnaldodesouteiros.blogspot.com/2010/11/three-of-joe-farrells-cti-gems-will-be.html

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