<< MP3 Everette Harp - My Inspiration (2007)
Everette Harp - My Inspiration (2007)
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Category Sound
FormatMP3
SourceCD
Bitrate320kbit
GenreJazz
TypeAlbum
Date 04/03/2011, 00:13
Size 150.14 MB
 
Website http://www.everetteharp.com/
 
Sender phasmid
Tag SmoothJazz
 
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Post Description

It's taken a long time, but he finally nailed it. Everette Harp is a bona fide star in the smooth, or "contemporary" jazz genre. As a saxophonist, his talent is undeniable. One can hear everyone from Junior Walker to Grover Washington, Jr to Stanley Turrentine, Cannonball Adderley, and David Sanborn in his playing, which is forceful, song-like and emotive. He cops to it in the liner notes, and that's just fine; that honesty is what frees him up to make the kind of music he wants to and acknowledging those influences places his own music in a direct line from his predecessors. That said, while some of his records have been very good, he's never gotten exactly what he needed from a label or a producer -- or an engineer for that matter -- to really make it all come together in a way that knocks the ball out of the park. Until now, that is. With his move to Shanachie Records in 2006, Harp found a new creative freedom, to let his jazz chops shine right along with his soul and funk grooves. Harp brought in a bunch of old friends for this date, George Duke is here, as is Jeff Lorber and James K. Lloyd from Pieces of a Dream, but he's done that before. What really gets it here is that the band he put together on this set is tight, sympathetic, and ready to punch it up a notch. Harp wrote seven of these ten tunes, with one each by Lloyd and Lorber, and there's a nice little cover of "Don't Look Any Further." Lloyd's "Juke Joint" opens the set, and it's pure funky J.B.'s funk all slicked up with a slippery backing groove, punched up horns, and a melody that exists because the groove is so pronounced. The Rhodes solo by Lloyd is smokin' but it's Alex Al's rubbery bassline and Harp leading off a three-piece horn line that makes it pop. The production on this tune is a bit compressed, but there are enough raw edges to really make it pop. Harp's "All Jazzed Up (And Nowhere to Go)" comes right out of the '70s CTI catalog . This could have appeared on either Washington's Feels So Good or Mister Magic LPs, and that's a very high compliment. The composition is seamless with an elegant soulful melody line, and the keyboard work by Rex Rideout and Harp is perfect, moving like a snaky Bob James in his prime, with Harp finding the right solo for the groove. The doubling of A. Ray Fuller's guitar, Teddy Campbell's neat cowbell touches on the drums, and percussion by Lenny Castro all over the sound is superb, but it's the larger horn section that's pushing Harp out front in his solo, and he goes for it without ever leaving the tough yet romantic funky party line. This is one of the hippest tunes Harp has ever written or cut. The ballads are fine, too, as "In My Time" illustrates; its lithe Rhodes lines by Rideout and Harp's melodic invention and vamping on the melody move the tune into a spacious groove. The guitar fills by Fuller are simply superb. "Old School" is exactly what it claims to be: pure, funky, silky soul-jazz that emerges from the late-'70s/early-'80s school complete with CTI-style synth-string arrangements. Lorber and Harp's "Funky Palisades" is in the pocket, tough, lean and meaJazzTimes (p.131) - "[a]n honest record, one that stands out as among his best..."   

Tracks:

1 Juke Joint
2 All Jazzed Up (And Nowhere to Go)
3 In Time
4 Old School
5 Funky Palisades
6 In My Father's Eyes
7 Chasin'
8 Wait 4 U
9 Don't Look Any Further
10 My Inspiration

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