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Lonnie Liston Smith - Astral Traveling (1973) [FLAC]

Lonnie Liston Smith - Astral Traveling (1973) [FLAC]

BAND/ARTIST: Lonnie Liston Smith

  • Title: Astral Traveling
  • Year Of Release: 2002
  • Label: RCA Victor
  • Genre: Jazz, Bebop
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue, log)
  • Total Time: 60:28
  • Total Size: 383 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Astral Traveling (5:33)
02. Let Us Go Into the House of Lord (6:21)
03. Rejuvenation (5:33)
04. I Mani (Faith) (6:12)
05. In Search of Truth (7:19)
06. Aspirations (4:36)
07. Astral Traveling (5:41)
08. Rejuvination (6:38)
09. Imani (6:04)
10. In Search of Truth (6:29)

Lonnie Liston Smith made his name as a sideman. He had played piano for Pharoah Sanders, Gato Barbieri and then Miles Davis. His elevation to Miles' band led to him becoming very in-demand and he was offered the opportunity to record an LP for Flying Dutchman as leader. Astral Traveling was the result, the first showing of Lonnie's 'cosmic jazz' philosophy, which mixed spiritual jazz with a touch of funk. Over a dense backing rhythm he and saxophonist George Barron improvise beautifully. The LP marks the start of Lonnie's successful career as a leader in some style. Contains four alternate versions that were not available until its original CD release in 2002.

Lonnie Liston Smith was 32 when, in 1973, he finally got around to recording his first album as a leader, Astral Traveling. By that time, the pianist/keyboardist had a great deal of sideman experience under his belt, and this superb debut made it clear that former employers like Pharoah Sanders, Rahsaan Roland Kirk, Gato Barbieri, and Betty Carter had taught him well. One hears a lot of Sanders, John Coltrane, and McCoy Tyner influence on Astral Traveling; Smith obviously shares their passion for all things spiritual. Nonetheless, this LP leaves no doubt that the improviser is very much his own man and has a wealth of brilliant ideas of his own; thankfully, he has a cohesive band to help him carry them out. On Astral Traveling, Smith's 1973 edition of the Cosmic Echoes includes George Barron on soprano and tenor sax, Joe Beck on guitar, Cecil McBee on bass, David Lee Jr. on drums, James Mtume and Sonny Morgan on percussion, Badal Roy on Indian tabla drums, and Geeta Vashi on the Indian tamboura. An impressive lineup, and one that shows a great understanding of Smith's spiritual nature. Ninety-five percent of the time, Astral Traveling is serene and tranquil; but on "I Mani (Faith)," the unexpected interesting happens when Barron goes outside during his sax solo and gets into the type of dissonant, forceful screaming one would expect from Albert Ayler or late-period Coltrane. "I Mani (Faith)" has a hauntingly peaceful melody, but Barron's out-of-left-field solo makes it the most avant-garde track that Smith ever recorded as a leader. Produced by the late Bob Thiele -- an eclectic heavyweight who worked with everyone from Coltrane, Ayler, and Charles Mingus to Coleman Hawkins, Count Basie, and Louis Armstrong -- Astral Traveling is among Smith's most essential and rewarding albums.


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  • GalacticKat
  •  wrote in 23:46
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Thanks for the LONNIE in flac.