Inner WorldsMahavishnu Orchestra
Release Date: 04/28/2009
Original Release:
1975
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 746740_CD
UPC # 5099747690525
Label: Sony Music Distribution (USA)
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Buying Info
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Disc: 1
1.
All in the Family
2.
Miles Out
3.
In My Life
4.
Gita
5.
Morning Calls
6.
Way of the Pilgrim
7.
River of My Heart
8.
Planetary Citizen
9.
Lotus Feet
10.
Inner Worlds Part 1 & 2
Performer: Mahavishnu Orchestra
Distributor: MSI Music Distribution Notes: /John McLaughlin. Mahavishnu Orchestra: John McLaughlin (guitar, guitar synthesizer, background vocals), Narada Michael Walden (vocals, piano, organ, marimba, drums, percussion), Ralphe Armstrong (vocals, bass), Stu Goldberg (piano, organ, Clavinet, synthesizer, background vocals). Reissue producer: John Snyder. Recorded at Le Chateau Herouville, France in July and August, 1975. Includes liner notes by Lee Jeske. All tracks have been digitally remastered. All songs written or co-written by John McLaughlin and/or Narada Michael Walden except "Planetary Citizen" (Ralphe Armstrong). This is part of the Columbia Jazz Contemporary Masters series. The state of the second Mahavishnu Orchestra continued to be volatile in 1975, with violinist Jean-Luc Ponty out, keyboardist Gayle Moran replaced by Stu Goldberg, and all string and horn backings removed, leaving just a steaming quartet and this lone remarkable album. The addition of Goldberg, a more interesting musician than Moran, is significant, but the biggest charge is provided by the leader who, in tandem with the latest electronic equipment, turns in some of his most passionately alive playing of the whole Mahavishnu series. The leadoff track, "All in the Family," has fantastic energy and drive, pushed on by Narada Michael Walden's drums and marimba. "Miles Out" has John McLaughlin doing some inspired jamming with his guitar hooked into a "360 Systems Frequency Shifter" (an electronic device with the wildly fluid sound of a ring-modulator), and he moves over to an early guitar synthesizer on "Morning Calls," "Lotus Feet," and the streaking title track. There is some funk residue from Visions of the Emerald Beyond on "Planetary Citizen," yet oddly enough, the so-so soul vocals from Walden on several tracks, and one by bassist Ralphe Armstrong, do not harm the cause, as the playing of the quartet is so fiery. But this somewhat overlooked album would be the last hurrah for the Mahavishnu concept for nearly a decade -- and when it returned, the sounds it produced would bear little resemblance to this power-packed music. ~ Richard S. Ginell
After graduating from the Miles Davis school of jazz-rock, British guitarist John McLaughlin formed the pioneering fusion group Mahavishnu Orchestra, which laid much of the groundwork for jazz-rockers to come. The blazing, electric energy of McLaughlin, keyboardist Jan Hammer, and drummer Billy Cobham brought jazz improv to a rock context.
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