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Charles Earland - Cookin With The Mighty Burner (1999) 320 kbps+CD Rip

Charles Earland - Cookin With The Mighty Burner (1999) 320 kbps+CD Rip

BAND/ARTIST: Charles Earland

  • Title: Cookin With The Mighty Burner
  • Year Of Release: 1999
  • Label: HighNote[HCD 7014]
  • Genre: Jazz, Soul Jazz, Funk, Hard Bop
  • Quality: FLAC (image + .cue,log,scans) | MP3/320 kbps
  • Total Time: 57:38
  • Total Size: 395 MB(+3%) | 140 MB(+3%)
  • WebSite:
Tracklist

1. Milestones
2. Sister Sadie
3. Killer Joe
4. Seven Steps to Heaven
5. Will You Love Me Tomorrow
6. Five Blind Mice
7. Seven of Nine
8. Stella By Starlight

personnel :

James Rotondi - Trumpet
Eric Alexander - Tenor Saxophone
Melvin Sparks - Guitar
Charles Earland - Organ [Hammond B3]
Bobby Durham - Drums
Gary Fritz - Percussion
Charles Earland - Cookin With The Mighty Burner (1999) 320 kbps+CD Rip

Organist Earland is known far and wide as one of the more inventive, awe-inspiring, soul-sending practitioners of the B-3. On this set, he still sounds like the man to beat, but in many instances he instead allows his bandmates to shine. Those mates include younger firebrands (trumpeter Jim Rotundi and saxophonist Eric Alexander), as well as longtime sidemen (guitarist Melvin Sparks and drummer Bobby Durham), helped by percussionist Gary Fritz. Of course, when Earland wants to burn, he can, and does on many occasions. He recapitulates a piece from Front Burner which was titled "Mom & Dad," but is re-named "Seven of Nine." It's a modal cooker in 10/8 that is even more relentless than the original with a reworked head for the horns. Earland leads the way on Carole King's half-speed "Will You Love Me Tomorrow," but the trumpet and tenor, separately or together, inspire the charge on other cuts; Rotundi quite naturally on "Seven Steps to Heaven," "Milestones," and "Stella By Starlight." Alexander is really hitting his stride, getting fluttery and animated on "Seven Steps" and "Seven of Nine." And Sparks, who is woefully underdocumented these days, proves why he is still one of the all-time greats. His shimmering chords on "Milestones" and fleet single lines in the middle of "Seven Steps" provide plenty of evidence for this contention. At first you think this is a head-solo-tail fest, with the first four cuts running true to predictable form. But then Earland steps forward, turns up the heat, and things cook along nicely until the end. This is one of Earland's better efforts in the last ten years of his life, consistent from start to finish. The burner is in the house, and mightier than ever.~Michael G. Nastos




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