Enter Snitzer who doesn't simply fill the vacated space of his predecessor he makes it his own.Īpril is too soon to choose a Best Album of the Year, but not too soon to suggest Prototype deserves to be considered a serious contender for the title. With the Haslip/Novak rhythm section already in place, the only thing missing was a dynamic saxophonist to replace the departed Eric Marienthal. Lorber, along with Bob James, is one of the last men standing in playing this kind of high energy jazz with Herbie Hancock opting out and Joe Sample and George Duke gone to that the great gig in the sky, he's pretty much cornered the market. There's not a moment on Prototype which seems phoned in. Too many records front-load the best material in the first three or four tracks and drop in the filler in the middle to the end. Jazz album: “Prototype” by Jeff Lorber Fusion, released in 2017 on Shanachie Records. Even when it as nothing out of the ordinary is happening on "The Badness" or "Hidden Agenda" beyond the standard keyboards/guitar/sax with a kick-butt rhythm section pumping up the groove, it still doesn't sound like a paint-by-numbers time filler. "What's the Deal" soars with Snitzer's tenor sax and Mann's horn arrangements echoing old school Tower of Power on a very good day. Artist information Sort name: Lorber, Jeff, Fusion, The Type: Group Founded: 1976 Founded in: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States Dissolved: 1984 (8 years) Area. One of the early progenitors of what would come to be known as smooth jazz, pianist Jeff Lorber originally made his name in the 70s and 80s with his electric jazz outfit Jeff Lorber Fusion.As the name implies, Jeff Lorber Fusion initially took inspiration from such genre-bending icons as Horace Silver, Chick Corea, and the 70s electrified sound of Miles Davis, albeit with an ear to pushing. Check out the shredding Thompson rips off at the end of "Prototype." There's some nasty rock riffing on "Test Drive" between Thompson and Jarius Mozee with Lorber doing triple duty on synth bass, guitar, and keyboards including a solo on he B3, while Snitzer soars on alto sax. The keyboards-sax-bass and drums makes up the core, but its the prevalence of those guitarists which takes Prototype to the next level. Aided, abetted and augmenting the sound are David Mann's snappy horn arrangements and some solid guitar work from Michael Thompson, Larry Koonse, Jarius Mozee, Chuck Loeb and Paul Jackson Jr. The core of the band are longtime collaborators Lorber on keyboards and Jimmy Haslip on bass with drummer Gary Novak and saxophonist Andy Snitzer as the new guy. Well, suck it up, buttercups, because Prototype is nothing if not Jeff Lorber and his crew of merrymakers rocking and rolling and funkin' it up as bad they wanna be.
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Is there a dirtier word to the refined ears of the jazz connoisseur? For them the sound of their sacred music mashed up with low-brow rock or common R n' B rhythms must be as harsh and annoying as sharpened nails dragging across a blackboard.