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First Cuckoo [Japan version] |
Deodato |
japán első megjelenés éve: 2001 |
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(2006)
[ LIMITED ]
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 CD |
Kérjen árajánlatot! |
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1. | Funk Yourself
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2. | Black Dog
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3. | Crabwalk
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4. | Adam's Hotel
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5. | Caravan/Watusi Strut
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6. | Speak Low
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7. | First Cuckoo (On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring)
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Jazz
Deodato - Clavinet, Keyboards, Piano, Producer Alan Rubin - Flugelhorn, Trumpet David Nadien - Violin Elliott Randall - Guitar (Electric) Gene Orloff - Violin George Marge - Clarinet, Flute Harry Cykman - Violin Harry Lookofsky - Violin Hubert Laws - Flute Hugh McCracken - Guitar, Guitar (Electric) Irving Spice - Violin James Buffington - French Horn John Tropea - Guitar Lou Marini - Sax (Soprano) Max Ellen - Violin Max Pollikoff - Violin Nick Remo - Drums Rubens Bassini - Conga Russ Savakus - Bass Sam Burtis - Trombone Selwart Clarke - Violin Will Lee - Bass
* Alberto Cacciola - Associate Producer * Carmine Macedonia - Cover Photo, Photography * Charlie Conrad - Engineer * Danny Gershon - Production Coordination * Jeffrey Kawalek - Engineer, Mixing Engineer * Jim Bonnefond - Assistant
This Japanese reissue of Brazilian jazz-funk artist Eumir Deodato's 1975 album FIRST CUCKOO has seven tracks, including his renditions of songs by Led Zeppelin, Duke Ellington, and Marcos Valle.
Three albums into his MCA contract and only a bit over two years after 2001, Deodato's music reached a state of funk stasis. Through much of this record, he seems bored, wilting under the pressure to repeat the hit formula, comping listlessly on clavinet and electric piano while sidekick John Tropea is equally out of gas on rock guitar. Deodato roams far afield for material, from Led Zeppelin ("Black Dog") all the way to English classical composer Frederick Delius, whose gorgeous orchestration for "On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring" he lifts shamelessly. Deodato's own tunes are supremely uninteresting; "Funk Yourself" (same to you, fella!) and "Watusi Strut" (onto whose opening he grafts "Caravan") are boring electric funk workouts, and "Crabwalk" goes nowhere to the beat of a cowbell. Marcos Valle's "Adam's Hotel" is the sole throwback to Deodato's roots, a pretty Brazilian tune traced out on an electric piano, with whistling and subtle strings for that Jobim effect. Again, MCA's drab, tight sound is a far cry from the luxurious treatment he received from CTI. ---Richard S. Ginell, All Music Guide |
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