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Where Have I Known You Before

Where Have I Known You Before
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Product Details
Artist : Chick Corea
Binding : Audio CD
EAN : 0042282520623
Label : Universal Music Group
Number of Discs : 1
Product Group : Music
Release Date : 1992-08-07
UPC : 042282520623
ASIN : B0000046WZ
Track Listings for
Disc-1
1. Vulcan Worlds
2. Where Have I Loved You Before?
3. Shadow of Lo
4. Where Have I Danced With You Before
5. Beyond the Seventh Galaxy
6. Earth Juice
7. Where Have I Known You Before?
8. Song to the Pharoah Kings
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Customer Reviews
Brilliant (2004-04-01)
5
-

This is one of those albums that just seems to have been laying there forever, to be discovered by a group of talented musicians. It almost flows from the musicians on it own accord; they seem as surprised and inspired in playing as we are listening.

The whole band - Chick, Al DiMeola, Stanley Clark, Lenny White - are phenoms. Their skill is stratospheric. To me, as a drummer, Lenny's performance here is magical.

Remember, this album came out in the same period as John McLaughlin's most famous works - BIRDS OF FIRE and INNER MOUNTING FLAME - so these guys were feeding off of each other (much like Paul McCartney and Brian Williams were).

This album is one of the Fusion pioneer albums. The genre didn't exist before RTF and McLaughlin. It quickly sunk under its own weight with all the copycat bands, while the founding fathers moved on to better things.

I saw RTF on tour for this album; third row front; right in front of Lenny (I could see his kick drum foot working - he had on these platform shoes, playing heel-down). It was a fabulous show, even better than the album (I remember Stanley turning to Lenny and giving him the "easy, dude" hand sign: Lenny was just a monster, in his own world!).

If you buy only ONE Corea album, or even only ONE Fusion album, this is the one!

-

Compidant But Leaves You Wanting (2004-03-30)
3
Aside from Stanley Clarke's brilliant opener "Vulcan Worlds"very little on this album even TRIES to rise above the heavy-handed prog rock-shaped hole RTF have fallen into,and that'sprogressive rock of some of it wern't very good!It's not thatthe musicians are bad-they're the creme de la' creme and THAT'Sthe dissappointing thing;not only do we all know how talented and SUBTLE these guys can be but each song starts out with the maximum of pomise but once your addicted it turns into unlistenable musical bombast for it's own pure sake.If these songs had been given substantial editing this would have been an undisputed classic.Instead it's simply too overdone.
Changed my life forever (2004-02-14)
5
How can I describe a record that changed my life forever? I was sitting in a friend's car in Buffalo while he was getting something in the dorm. Unbeknownst to me his radio was tuned to a French station from Quebec. The final track of this record, "Song to the Pharaoh Kings" came on and I had never heard anything like it. "Blown away" hardly describes the effect. At the end I prepared to memorize the artist and record, and the DJ announced it - in French! I couldn't even figure out which part of the announcement was the artist's name.

It took me two years to figure out that that song was on this album. In the intervening 30 years I've listened to the record over and over again and I never tire of it. This is the record that turned me away from rock and into the more sophisticated world of jazz forever. "Pharaoh Kings" is, in my opinion, one of the most brilliant pieces of music written, ever.

On a scale of 1 to 5, this one is 100.

P.S. Amazon has "Pharaoh" spelled wrong in the track name, so you can't find this album by searching for that song through their search engine!

I liked this in the 70s, I love it now (2003-09-17)
5
This is one of the few recordings I had in the 1970s that I really still like a lot now. My musical education between then and now has added a lot of jazz and classical music.

Let me warn jazz purists that there is a lot of funk here, a lot of fuzzy electric bass. "Earth Juice" is the closest thing to a disco song that I actually like.

Let me warn funk maniacs that the keyboard playing here is just way too good for funk. It makes you suspect that the keyboardist may have had some classical training.

This record does make a great pair with "No Mystery".

If you are one of the tiny minority that likes both James Brown and Miles Davis (as I do), you would probably like this record.

Blew me away in 74 (2002-11-20)
5
This is my favorite album by my favorite fusion artists. I was in High School when this came out. When I first heard Vulcan Worlds it just blew me away. Dimeola's quitar playing was so much different to what was being played at the time, he had balance and taste and his tone was so full and meaty. Stanley Clark's solo on Worlds was the main reason I started playing Bass. The best way I can describe his solo on Worlds is "NASTY". (If you listen you can see why Victor Wooten says his Bass playing comes from the school of Stanley Clarke more than anywhere else) I played that solo over and over on my record player, so much that I had to buy the record a couple of times. My favorite cut is Song to the Pharoah Kings (A MASTERPIECE) it's what makes the album special. It has serveral changes, infact Chick could have made at least four tunes instead of one with the music he put into that one tune. Every one got to solo on Kings except Lenny, but they way he was kicking that kit he got his off too. RTF album covers reflect the music inside, the color and the tone of the cover is the color and tone of the music inside on all of their albums. They broke up because they were all getting too big to stay in a group setting, they were all leaders. Chic tried to keep this lineup together by changing the name from RTF featuring Chic Corea to RTF. It's a shame we didn't get more albums from that 3 album lineup.
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