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3.821 Ft
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1. | Glassy-Winged Sharp Shooter
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2. | Aquafresh
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3. | Convex+Concave
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4. | Circle Limit
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5. | Bygones Be
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6. | Dump Truck
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7. | Easy Virtue
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8. | Clear All Wires
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9. | Bet
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10. | Underbrush
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11. | Sacred Secret
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12. | Giving Up the Ghost
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Jazz
Robert Walter - Effects, Engineer, Fender Rhodes, Organ (Hammond), Piano, Producer, Programming, Sampling, Synthesizer Chris Stillwell - Bass Chuck Prada - Percussion Cochemea Gastelum - Clarinet (Bass), Effects, Flute, Sax (Alto) George Sluppick - Drums Joe Russo - Drums Mike Fratantuno - Bass Will Bernard - Guitar
* Jeff Kelley - Engineer * Jim Brick - Mastering * Todd Burke - Engineer, Mixing
On his new record, Giving Up the Ghost, Robert Walter has added a new talent to his recording lineup. Known for his work with such jazz/soul/funk giants as Mike Clark of Herbie Hancock's Headhunters, legendary James Brown and P-Funk sideman and songwriter, Fred Wesley, and George Porter of the Meters, this time out Walter enlisted another player for his latest album -- the studio.
"I collect records. I'm into recordings," says Walter. "From doing home recordings, I started experimenting with different sounds, and I decided I wanted to do something more interesting than just record the band. On this album, I tried using the studio as an instrument. It's involved in the music and an important part of making this record what it is. I move things around, change elements. On some tracks, there's no soloing at all, and all of the solos are downplayed in favor of creating a mood, a sonic texture."
Joined by Joe Russo and George Sluppick on drums; Greyboy Allstar Chris Stillwell and Black-Eyed Pea Mike Fratantuno on bass; Will Bernard (of TJ Kirk fame) on guitar; percussionist Chuck Prada, and long-time partner Cochemea Gastelum on alto sax and various woodwinds, Walter explores new territory, incorporating elements of electronic music and dub reggae into his traditional R&B and jazz roots, all powered by the flavor of his vintage Fender Rhodes and Hammond B-3 organ. The result is a new hybrid that's distinctly Robert Walter, which is to say, the sound combines just about every form of music into a driving, syncopated groove that will move fans of jazz, soul, blues, roots rock and, yes, those ever-in-motion jam band dance fanatics.
"I've always been interested in anything that deals with rhythm and improvisation," says Walter. "Anything that combines is satisfying to me. It doesn't necessarily have to fit into one genre or another. This new record is definitely an attempt to bring in some modern influences."
Walter's eclectic musical roots trace back to his San Diego home town, where he broke into the business doing blues dates with his stepfather, a working bar band musician.
From there, he expanded into a series of bands that played everything from George Clinton to electronic punk, constantly experimenting and searching for new sounds while staying true to the primal elements of the Booker T and Ramsey Lewis records he grew up on.
Then came the epiphany that brought it all together.
"There was a bar in San Diego called the Green Circle Bar," Walter recalls. "I had gotten a call from a friend of mine about doing this project for this guy, DJ Greyboy, who spun old records, basically like '60s and '70s jazz records. I went into the place and heard all this music and quickly realized that I had been wanting to hear that music all along but didn't know where it was."
Walter soon found out. He became an original member of the Greyboy Allstars, a band whose explosive improvisations made them the a founding father of the acid-jazz revolution of the mid-90’s and a force in live music around the world.
In 1996 he released his first solo album, Spirit of ’70, and since then constant touring and recording with his band 20th Congress (Giving Up The Ghost is his fifth record) have opened him up to new audiences, earning him a place among the keepers of the jazz-soul flame.
While respecting that legacy, Walter has grown, and wants to world to know that his music offers a lot more than any label contains.
"Our music has more in common with what jazz people are doing than what a band like Phish is doing," says Walter. Spotted from the stage among his audience: "DJ kids into '70s funk records, the hippie contingency, and some older people into jazz."
All are drawn together by one unifying element.
"There's always something that's going to happen to keep you interested in coming to more than one show," says Walter.
So, come on.......
Robert Walter continues to balance on twin peaks of dance and jazz cultures with Giving Up the Ghost, whose breezy grooves cool sizzling keyboard and sax lines down to a simmer. The band includes alumni from Black Eyed Peas, T.J. Kirk, and Walter's own Greyboy Allstars, which means that the playing is consistently top-notch. There's enough angularity in the arrangements to bear occasional comparison to Medeski, Martin & Wood. And there's a cinematic aspect to some of the track sequences, as in the movement from an Eno echo in the filmy shimmer of "Underbrush," to the holy-rolling handclaps that follow on "Sacred Secret"; listeners with long memories might discern a whiff of Beaver & Krause in this formula. But these elements serve mainly to paint Giving Up the Ghost as an audio adornment, whose varied colors seem fashioned more to enhance the ambience than to draw any particular attention to themselves. --- Robert L. Doerschuk, All Music Guide |
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