|  

Ginger Baker - Live In London 2009 (2010) [FLAC] (Bonus DVD5 NTSC)



Size :3.2 GB
Peers : Seeders : 0      Leechers : 0
Added : 6 years ago » by Mdye56 » in Music
Language : English
Last Updated :5 months ago
Info_Hash :1004E1C93738786E7C29F1E4DFC60AD09B693C38


Torrent Description

Torrent Description



Ginger Baker - Live In London 2009 (2010) [FLAC] (Bonus DVD5 NTSC)


Label: Voiceprint – VPDVD75
Format: DVD, DVD-Video NTSC
CD, Bonus CD
Country: UK
Released: 2010
Genre: Jazz, Rock
Style: Psychedelic Rock, Fusion, Afrobeat


.: Tracklist :.


I'm old enough to remember seeing Ginger Baker playing in jazz groups, well before he became famous worldwide as a member of Cream. So I got this album in the hope that it would include some jazz, especially with the participation of Pete King, one of Britain's finest saxophonists.

And there is some jazz on this album. It is a kind of jazz-rock - yet not the sort of jazz-fusion where rock beats are added to jazz, but a mixture of rock guitars and drums with jazz saxophone. Pete King is the main attraction on such jazz numbers as Thelonious Monk's Bemsha Swing and Wayne Shorter's Footprints, soloing with swirling invention, although the clangorous guitars tend to get in the way on Footprints. And King lays out for rockier tunes like Rabbir Run.

The concert at London's Jazz Caf‚ was to celebrate Ginger Baker's 70th birthday. One might have expected him to do a drum solo but he only plays a brief and rather unexciting solo on the Cream's Sweet Wine and joins in the African rhythms laid down by percussionist Abbas Dodoo in the Nigerian folk song Iko Beiya.

Some items show signs of minimal rehearsal - for example in Sweet Wine, where the vocals sound poorly harmonised. Another drawback is the immensely drawn-out introduction from Ginger's grand-daughter and then Ginger himself, rambling at length for a five-minute segment that won't repay playing more than once.

However, there is a bonus: the inclusion of a DVD of the same tunes, with the pleasant novelty of cameras that don't move about too frequently. Like the CD, this also includes the unexpected arrival of Stevie Winwood (misspelt Windwood in the DVD credits) to play a Caribbean-style Happy Birthday.

So this package is a mixed bag, and only parts will probably appeal to jazz lovers. However, it's an interesting aural and visual record of an event recalling some of the many facets of Ginger Baker's multifarious career.


Tracklist:

DVD London's Jazz Cafe November 4, 2009
DVD-Chpt 1 Credits / Zara Baker Intro

Guest – Zara Baker


DVD-Chpt 2 Ginger Baker Intro / Alamout (Start)
DVD-Chpt 3 Alamout (Finish)
DVD-Chpt 4 Ants In The Kitchen
DVD-Chpt 5 Bemsha Swing
DVD-Chpt 6 Rabbit Run
DVD-Chpt 7 Footprints
DVD-Chpt 8 Sweet Wine
DVD-Chpt 9 Iko Beiya (Start)
DVD-Chpt 10 Iko Beiya (Finish)
DVD-Chpt 11 Steve Winwood Intro / Happy Birthday Improv / Steve Winwood Salutation / Credits

Guest – Steve Winwood


Bonus CD
CD-1 Introduction Zara Baker / Ginger Baker

Guest – Zara Baker

5:01
CD-2 Alamout 7:47
CD-3 Ants In The Kitchen 3:51
CD-4 Bemsha Swing 5:35
CD-5 Rabbit Run 6:13
CD-6 Footprints 7:04
CD-7 Sweet Wine 4:47
CD-8 Iko Beiya 9:21
CD-9 Happy Birthday Improv 0:49
CD-10 Steve Winwood Salutation

Guest – Steve Winwood



.: Other Files :.

log+cue+m3u+cover