Lost Tribe didn't so much start out as a band but as a collective of excellent studio musicians working on the side. Like the 1970s British group
Brand X (
Phil Collins' jazz fusion alter ego getaway from
Genesis),
Lost Tribe became a melting pot of the styles popular in the 1990s, mixing rhythmic
jazz and rock with even some hip-hop elements. Saxophonist
David Binney's sparse lines and the twin-guitar assault of
Adam Rogers and
David Gilmore blended above the rhythmic muscle of bassist
Fima Ephron and drummer
Ben Perowsky on
Lost Tribe's self-titled 1993 debut CD. Most of the music was instrumental, but the occasional
rap track ("Letter to the Editor") and chanted vocal ("Mofungo") provided a changeup between dizzying jazz fusion pieces like "Mythology" and "Cause & Effect." The group's 1994 follow-up, Soulfish, was even harder-edged without losing any rhythmic focus. Perowsky's thunderous drumming on "Whodunit" and the guitar interplay on "Second Story," "Planet Rock," and "Fuzzy Logic" made for a nouveau
fusion of
funk and metal. But just as a collective from the
rap-
jazz-
opera hybrid the Screaming Headless Torsos (Ephron), jazz fusion guitarist
Mike Stern (Perowsky) and African-influenced
jazz saxophonist
Steve Coleman (
Gilmore) was required for
Lost Tribe's elemental sound, the nature of the session musicians' beast had to signal an eventual slowdown. Binney released solo CDs and
Rogers focused on freelance work while Ephron, Perowsky, and
Gilmore (ever-confused with
Pink Floyd guitarist
David Gilmour) toured and recorded elsewhere over the next four years. By the time
Lost Tribe released Many Lifetimes in 1998,
Gilmore had left the band, as much to pursue teaching as playing. The titles alone ("The River," "Kyoto," "Jordan") signaled a kinder, gentler, and more melodic
Lost Tribe -- but not without fiery moments, especially from Ephron and Perowsky. Adding percussion and Fender Rhodes electric piano to his regular duties on Many Lifetimes, the regular touring drummer for
Stern shows why there's no road -- letdown after the guitarist records with virtuosos like
Dennis Chambers or
Vinnie Colaiuta. And the spectacular yet virtually unknown bassist is now a part of both guitarist
David Fiuczynski's vocal (
Screaming Headless Torsos) and instrumental (Headless Torsos) groups, so there's no telling when
Lost Tribe will be in session (in the studio or on stage) again. ~ Bill Meredith, All Music Guide