| | Mccoy Tyner Guitars CD Mccoy Tyner Discography of CDs
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This recording is a studio throw-down with 5 of popular music's most accomplished string specialists: Derek Trucks, Bela Fleck, Bill Frisell, John Scofield, and Marc Ribot. The song stack covers the old and new. McCoy finds common ground alongside a group of handpicked guitar and banjo players. It's a meeting of the generations. The DVD/CD set includes a DVD documenting the making of the CD replete with studio performances, chatter, and viewer options for what to see and where to look.
Personnel: McCoy Tyner (piano); Derek Trucks, Marc Ribot, Bill Frisell, John Scofield (guitar); Béla Fleck (banjo); Ron Carter (upright bass); Jack DeJohnette (drums). One of the most important and enduring jazz pianists emerging from the 1960s, McCoy Tyner needs little introduction. John Coltrane's former sideman's style has always mixed melody, beauty, invention, and volatility. GUITARS is proof he's lost none of his edge. Here, Tyner mixes it up with a seemingly disparate range of guitarists (and one banjoist!), which might shock some old-school fans. Each guitarist joins Tyner's trio for two or three tracks. Marc Ribot's jazz-informed thorniness, John Scofield's plump-toned élan, Bela Fleck's down-home sophistication and clarity, Derek Trucks's tightly wound blue-tones, and Bill Frisell's mystic, Jim Hall-inspired poetry--all meet Tyner on his own turf. Each string-bender is pushed to be his best in this setting. Although McCoy Tyner has never been well known for playing with guitarists, there have been precedents. Technically on the electric mandolin and amplified guitar, John Abercrombie was part of the 4 X 4 sessions, acoustic guitarist Earl Klugh was a participant on the Inner Voices recording, Ted Dunbar was in the group for Asante, and Carlos Santana joined Tyner for the ill-conceived album Looking Out. Tyner prominently accompanied Grant Green for legendary Blue Note label classics. So this may not be a new thing, but certainly something the great pianist has been removed from in general terms. Guitars pairs Tyner and his reunited bulletproof trio of bassist Ron Carter and drummer Jack DeJohnette with contemporary performers Marc Ribot, John Scofield, banjoist Béla Fleck, Derek Trucks, and Bill Frisell. The results are mixed no matter which string player you favor, with Tyner's role as a legend surely intimidating any of his disciples to a degree. But for these recordings, the sound and feeling of the end product is clearly decipherable. Ribot especially seems out of place, resorting to power chords during "Passion Dance," but rebounding on the soulful version of "500 Miles" and rallying on the peaceful but electrified "Improvisation 1." With Derek Trucks, Tyner's basic "Slapback Blues" is treated as the title suggests, while the 3/4 "Greensleeves" is typical, but the raga approach that Trucks emphasizes in his band would have been a welcome choice. Scofield is clearly the most comfortable with Tyner, swinging easily through "Mr. P.C." and playfully skirting away from the line of "Blues on the Corner." On his three tracks, Fleck is surprisingly the most compatible, working with a deep modal Middle Eastern feel on "Tradewinds," flying fleet and much quicker than the pianist during "Amberjack," and evoking "My Favorite Things" in a quaint mood. The two pieces with Frisell merge together as one in an homage to the world guitarist Boubacar Traore, with "Boubacar" meditative before the rhythm section explodes, then the loose "Baba Drame" works as an extension. Whereas Tyner's playing these days is beyond reproach, and the contributions of Carter and DeJohnette are always welcome, there's an aura of true amity on most of the tracks, but an imbalanced awkwardness on others. An accompanying DVD with various camera angles provides perspective and insight into how this music was created, but also where Tyner's giant visage might dwarf some of these plectrists, and not others. It's an interesting slice in time, but not a definitive reDown Beat (p.79) - 3.5 stars out of 5 -- "[H]ats off to producer John Snyder for steering him to a project that lets him blow off steam while playing against type for a bit." Signal To Noise (magazine) (p.74) - "Tyner's towering talent has again been placed in a new light, this time on a stunning series of encounters with five guitar greats." Mccoy Tyner Guitars Songs Guitars Music Review Average Rating: (2.3 out of 5 stars)   Where are the Jazz guitarists? It's a shame real hard bop jazz players weren't paired with Mr. Tyner. Was Pat Martino busy? How about Jimmy Bruno? Adam Rafferty -- surely he was available? Mark Elf? McCoy Tyner sounds great but the guitarists bite. And Bela Fleck? Great blue grass player but having him cover Coltrane's "My Favorite Things" is either the height of stupidity or incredibly daring. In any case, it doesn't work. Is jazz now heading in the sorry direction it did in the lean years of the 70s where jazz giants like Freddie Hubbard started covering pop tunes? Submitted by Casey (Twin Cities) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Thumb down It would be a nice album if you throw away the guitarists. Also the production quality is lousy. sound of guitars is thin and don't blend at all with the accoustic trio. Especially Derek Trucks tone sucks, lots of spikes and hard clipping, as if guitar was captured directly from the amp out, without a microphone or any efects. Submitted by Kuba (Poland) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 0 of 1 found this helpful.
McCoy needs no guitars! Being a guitar player, but also a long-time McCoy Tyner fan, I was very curious about this recording. Unfortunately, my worst fears were confirmed - McCoy shines as a master purveyor of open spaces in jazz, his harmonic structure based on large fourths and fifths intervals which suggest gigantic, open musical landscapes. The guitarists (plus banjo picker Fleck), as good as some of them are, tend to create small pockets of their guitar "thing" (blues-based, distorted, whatever) and confining the otherwise chordal grandeur of Tyner's music to limited - and aurally limiting - contrivances. McCoy, you don't need these guys! And if this was purely a commercially driven collaborative effort (which I really believe it was), what a sad statement on the state of jazz appreciation today... Submitted by allenlee (Cordova, TN) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 0 of 2 found this helpful.
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Buy Guitars CD  | | Land of Giants, McCoy Tyner, Bobby Hutcherson, Charnett Moffett, Eric Harland
16 x 16 inch Photographic Print
Price: $29.99 |  | | Land of Giants, McCoy Tyner, Bobby Hutcherson, Charnett Moffett, Eric Harland
48 x 48 inch Wall Mural
Price: $124.99 |  | | Land of Giants, McCoy Tyner, Bobby Hutcherson, Charnett Moffett, Eric Harland
30.625 x 30.625 inch Framed Photographic Print
Price: $154.99 |  | | Land of Giants, McCoy Tyner, Bobby Hutcherson, Charnett Moffett, Eric Harland
21.6875 x 21.6875 inch Framed Photographic Print
Price: $114.99 |
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