Cobham Sklar Bolin Hammer~ Spectrum

Started by Rhythm N. Bliss, May 22, 2008, 06:47:43 AM

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Rhythm N. Bliss

Man~ I gotta get this album...Lee Sklar gets DOWN!

http://youtube.com/watch?v=xpluKxftc6w&feature=related

Cobham was one of my fav drummers in the 70s--Rick Laird played bass with The Mahavishnu Orchestra. Somehow or other SPECTRUM slipped by me.
How could I have not bought this all these years????

Also gotta get Deep Purple's Come Taste the Band with Bolin replacing Blackmore.
That's the only Coverdale album I'm missing I think.
Tommy Bolin~ All I have of his is a cd called Whips and Roses.
The guy had some chops!!! He was in the James Gang too!!??!!
I'll be buyin' some cds tomorrow....

Barklessdog

A milestone album on many levels for many people.

Holds a special place for me as well.

uwe

#2
A defining moment in fusion. And I can play the bass line too!  ;D

DP's swan song Come Taste the Band ranks among the best DP albums ever, right up there with In Rock, Machine Head, Burn and Purpendicular. It has also aged better than either Burn or Stormbringer, Bolin was great in a studio environment, more creative than Blackmore who shone on stage. Live, Bolin's drug habit had his performance flutter like a wounded bird which did not go well with DP's workmanlike attitude of having to please the fans every night no matter how you feel. He shot himself with bad heroin on their Far East tour in 1975 and suffered from paralysis playing basic bar chords in open tunings for some shows. By the time they were in Japan for the Budokan concert, his arm was better, but still not yet there. But he could play some lead again and the Budokan concert has in feel what it lacks in Bolin's technique. Excerpts:

Love Child is from Come taste the Band, it's as Bolin freely admitted copped off an old Joe Walsh riff he played when he was with the James Gang (I also hear a bit of Zep's Heartbreaker in there, if you want to hear his great work with The Jame Gang, go no further than their "Bang!" album - James Gang Bang ..., how original ...  :rolleyes: ), interesting for its odd 7/4 meter which is untypical for DP. Nice synth solo by Herr Lord and you can hear how much Glenn Hughes' unabashed funk leanings had already crept into his (great) work with Ian Paice. 



You keep on moving, generally regarded as the Bolin line up classic (though it is one of the few songs he did not share in writing), was actually from pre-Bolin DP sessions. Blackmore just never wanted to develop the song into a recording state. I love Hughes' and Coverdale's twin lead singing on that.



From the same concert, there is also a DP version of Bolin's Wild Dogs, with him singing lead nicely. The corresponding vid footage does exist, but funnily enough not on youtube ...

We've taken too much for granted ... and all the time it had grown ...
From techno seeds we first planted ... evolved a mind of its own ...

Barklessdog

Just downloaded it from Itunes- still rocks to this day!