| | Brand X Moroccan Roll CD Brand X Discography of CDs
(4 Customer Reviews)
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"Why Should I Lend You Mine (When You've Broken Yours Off Already)à" isn't as goofy as it sounds; it's 10-plus minutes of furious guitar riffing mixed with probing drums, ruminative Fender Rhodes, synth fills, and a mosaic of engaging rhythms. "Disco Suicide" is a slice of highbrow, British jazz-funk. But at the epicenter of all this is the superb "Malaga Virgen," with Collins whipping up a percussive windstorm around which Goodsall's lightning fretwork, Lumley's waxy keys, and Jones's heavy-as-lead bass all orbit.
Forget the lush pastoral-isms and wondrous progressive rock of Genesis--Phil Collins' other band, Brand X, were really the ones subverting jazz-rock in the late '70s. This still fiercely loved cult band provided Collins the opportunity to flex his fusion muscles, and flex them he does. Together with bandmates Percy Jones, Robin Lumley, guitarist John Goodsall and Morris Pert, he injects a degree of whimsy into complex instrumental arrangements the likes of which had not been seen since National Health.
Brand X: Morris Pert, John Goodsall, Percy Jones, Phil Collins, Robin Lunmley.
Brand X Moroccan Roll Songs Moroccan Roll Music Review Average Rating: (4.5 out of 5 stars)   AWESOME! Raw innocence at it's best !
Highly recommended !
A++ Submitted by pamelasu1 (Chicago,IL)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Nice to listen to the Cat`s again.... It was so nice to get this CD and listen again. I`d only heard it once b-4, many years ago. Lumley and Phil are my favorites from back in the day. Thank you for perserving such ggreat music. IMANI Submitted by imanology1 (Fukuoka, Japan)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
moroccan OOH! If you like your jazz smooth as silk,
this is it.It will put your speakers
thur its paces. I love it. Submitted by photoman512001 (lincoln ne usa)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Indeed, more Rock'n'Roll... Brand X merge a mellow brand of jazz with progressive rock tendencies and come up with a stunning and fresh as fresh album, I say fresh because at this stage of the game the majority of acts who tasted success under the fusion genre earlier in the decade were growing dull and lacking any depth as the seventies ranout quickly and rock music fragmented. Phil Collins' act came relatively late in the day but the music is inspiring and captures a subtle dynamic as well as adding another facet to Collin's bow, and a good one at that. Brand X bridges the gap between Genesis and his solo career, while never ever sounding like either (thankfully), while it also closed the door on any creativity he would claim to have to that point. To any normal human being Collin's solo work, though starting with the odd bright spot, is drab to the point of horrific and the mainstream success he has had only punctuates this. But Brand X is hardly Collins' show. The band Brand X is well equipped with a talented bunch of artists who make a good job of creating a wide and spacious tone on Moroccan Roll. John Godsall's blends his guitar as smooth as silk, the intro piece "Sun In The Night" seemed filler to me on first listen but the guitar adds a sweet and uplifting tone to the Eastern promise of the piece before the album starts proper with "Why Should I Lend You Mine (When You've Broken Yours Already)" followed by its sister track and the wonderful fusion muzak fuzak breeze of "...Maybe I'll Lend You Mine After All" before launching through more smooth fusion and even getting funky with "Hate Zone". Keyboard player Robin Lumley gives Brand X extra room with his lines and adds a haunting nuance to the short piece "Collapsar" while the excellently titled "Disco Suicide" also contains some nice piano lines as well as some throbbing bass courtesy of Percy Jones. Moroccan Roll is a very enjoyable album, released slap bang in the middle of the year broke and became mainstream it would be interesting to hear how it went down. But unlike much from the punk scene, as well as many from the fusion era, the album has aged well and lasted the pace. An album to be played at any time, but specifically winter... or even a Moroccan summer. Submitted by philipbourke (Cork, Ireland) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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