Search - Chick Corea :: Past, Present & Futures

Past, Present & Futures
Chick Corea
Past, Present & Futures
Genres: Jazz, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (11) - Disc #1

Chick Corea is a musician of extraordinary abilities and sometimes maddening shifts in artistic perspective. On Past, Present & Futures, he returns to the trio format that gained him some early renown in 1968 with Now ...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Chick Corea
Title: Past, Present & Futures
Members Wishing: 2
Total Copies: 0
Label: Stretch Records
Release Date: 4/10/2001
Genres: Jazz, Pop
Styles: Modern Postbebop, Bebop
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 013431903529

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Chick Corea is a musician of extraordinary abilities and sometimes maddening shifts in artistic perspective. On Past, Present & Futures, he returns to the trio format that gained him some early renown in 1968 with Now He Sings, Now He Sobs. This time, instead of Roy Haynes and Miroslav Vitous, he's got drummer Jeff Ballard and bassist Avishai Cohen. Like most Corea sidemen, they are gifted players, though lacking the personality of someone such as Stanley Clarke or Barry Altschul. Past, Present & Futures only partially fulfills its title. Corea rows into the mainstream, drawing from Fats Waller's jazz standard "Jitterbug Waltz" to original compositions that owe more to Chick's post-bop roots than to his avant-garde or fusion strains. While much of the music is extremely competent and buoyantly played, only a few tracks lift off, such as "Dignity," with its off-center melancholy, and improvisations that take some pieces deeper. On "Chelsea Shuffle" a hard-bop homage to his old stomping grounds in Chelsea, Massachusetts, you can hear the Horace Silver soul-groove sound that was influencing Corea at the time. Every few years, people think Chick Corea has lost it, and every few years Chick does an album that shows that he may not be on the bleeding edge anymore, but he hasn't lost a thing. --John Diliberto

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Member CD Reviews

Candido J. (CTHEWIND) from ROBSTOWN, TX
Reviewed on 9/8/2009...
Listen to the Jitterbug track. Excellent. Other tracks are good,very update. Most of them done in Chick Corea style,syncopated straight style. Jeff Ballard-drummmer does a good job interacting with Chick.

CD Reviews

It's all about the tunes...death to standards!
Jack Cade | New York, NY | 10/07/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"What I have always loved about Chick is his interest in formal structure. He rarely composes "heads" just so he can get on to the blowing, but through-composes most of his songs, which gives the music wonderful depth and breath. And of course, what seperates Chick from anyone is his rhythmic sense. This session crackles with energy and passion - it's not just another "white guy" jazz trio designed for sleep inducement and 'abstract' reinventions of standards. And thank god he echews playing "standards." Can anyone really stomach another record by anyone that covers jazz tunes written 50-60 years ago? My exhortation to new jazz artists - smash the busts of the hallowed giants and compose, compose, compose!!!"
For those who like JITTERBUG WALTZ, this album is a "must bu
Tom Brody | Berkeley, CA | 09/27/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"PAST, PRESENT, & FUTURES, by the Chick Corea Trio contains 11 compositions and over an hour of music.



FINGERPRINTS is quickly paced, but is not thunderous or violent. The introductory theme is simple. It is a tone cluster that does like, "Tick-DAH-DAH, Tick-DAH-DAH, followed by a little arpeggio, "doodley-woodley-doodley." Often, the bass provides a repeated arch-like motif, skittering up and then back down. This is repeated many times. At one point, we hear a glissando where the bass zooms up, up, up. At another point, the bass rapidly plucks the same note over and over, sounding like a vibrating knife. FIVE STARS.



JITTERBUG WALTZ is the reason I bought the album. It begins with a slow introduction, lasting one minute, it is just a pleasant meandering sound collage. Then comes the familiar Eric Dolphy tune. The piano plays the tune as though there were two pianos, the second piano lagging an eighth second behind the first piano. Later on, the piano plays the familiar Jitterbug Waltz tune, but with notes, but with 3-note chords. The bass takes a turn with the melody, sometimes playing each note separately with one plunk, and sometimes playing a note repeated with rapid plucking. FIVE STARS.



CLOUD CANDY starts with a descending motif, sounding a bit by HYMN OF THE SEVENTH GALAXY from Mr. Corea's earlier recording with RETURN TO FOREVER. The theme for CLOUD CANDY is three chords in a row, the first two chords the same, and the third is often different. At the 6-minute point, there is a robotic sequence, where the piano's part sounds like robot movements. Not really the most inspired of pieces. THREE STARS.



DIGNITY. There is a descending motif where the bass does short glissandos downward. The descending motif is repeated several times, with other music intervening. DIGNITY is more dignified than interesting, and is on the sleepy side. THREE STARS.



RHUMBA FLAMENCO. This piece finds the piano playing a little weird tune with bass playing exactly the same notes, the tune sounding like flying saucer music from a 1950s science fiction movie. The drumming contains plenty of sharp-sounding clackety-clacking. At two points, this piano plays a tune form HYMN OF THE SEVENTH GALAXY. FIVE STARS.



ANNA'S TANGO. This is a subdued number. AT one point, the bass momentarily sounds like a cow. Bongos are played most of the time, rather than the drum kit. At four minutes, there is a descending motif that leads to a conclusion at 4 ½ minutes. I liked the conclusion. THREE STARS.



CHELSEA SHUFFLE. There are plenty of bouncy chord changes. At two minutes, we are treated to a waling bass line that lasts an entire minute (I like walking bass lines). The piano returns with more hopping, bouncy chord changes. FIVE STARS.



NOSTALGIA seems more like a notated composition than the other pieces on the album, something that a student might like to learn. The bass solo manages to find its way all the way up and down the fretboard (or whatever it is called on basses that do not have frets). A gentle piece. FOUR STARS.

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