Take
Your Pick tratto
da "Allaboutjazz.com" autore: John Kelman - 5 settembre
2010
It's a shame that artists' careers are reduced to oversimplifications of who they are and what they're capable of.
Guitarist Larry Carlton, for example - despite releasing kick-ass
blues-centric records like Sapphire
Blue (Bluebird, 2004) and,
more recently, the exciting yet unfailingly tasty Live
in Tokyo (335 Records, 2007),
not to mention delivering iconic solos on Steely Dan albums
like The
Royal Scam (MCA, 1976) and Gaucho (MCA,
1980) - is, more often than not, associated with the smooth
jazz of albums like Alone/But
Never Alone (MCA, 1986).
Not that there's necessarily anything wrong with that, especially
when it's real players playing music that's easy on the ears
but has its own set of challenges, but it's too easy to forget
that Carlton can play through changes with the best of them,
as his still-stunning bop-centric solo on "Mulberry
Street," from Strikes Twice (MCA, 1981),
amply proved nearly thirty years ago.
If Carlton can be criticized of anything, it's his emphatic
lyricism and unfailing taste, though it seems incredulous that
the words "too" and "melodic" could ever
be used together in the same sentence. Take
Your Pick teams the veteran
session man and, yes, smooth jazz hit maker with Japan's Tak
Matsumoto - guitarist for B'z and, with over 80 million
albums sold in his country alone, no less an icon, at least
in some parts of the world. Carlton's name may come first,
but this is a truly collaborative effort, with the two guitarists
splitting the writing and arranging duties right down the middle;
Matsumoto even arranges two of his tunes for a Japanese horn
section, while Carlton brings in some American ringers to spice
up three of his tunes. But regardless of where the music was
recorded - from Franklin and Nashville to Los Angeles and Tokyo
- the core rhythm section of drummer Billy
Kilson (Dave Holland, Chris Botti), bassist Michael
Rhodes ((J.J. Cale, Aaron Neville, and keyboardist Jeff
Babko (Sheryl Crowe}}, James Taylor) keeps things
honest on a set that leans towards a lighter complexion, though
between Carlton and Matsumoto, there's plenty of grit to give
the music some edge and energy.
Carlton's sweeter tone, recognizable vibrato and slightly broader
language makes him easily distinguishable from the largely
fuzzier-toned and rockier Matsumoto, especially on tracks like
the Japanese guitarist's opening "JAZZY
BULLETS," a finger-snapping
tune with some tasty twin-guitar melodies and ass-kicking solos.
But Matsumoto proves capable of a cleaner tone and twangier
disposition on "Nite
Crawler 2010" - an update
on Carlton's self-titled 1978 MCA debut - and the similarly
light funk of the Japanese axe-slinger's "THE
WAY WE WERE."
Surprisingly, the more oriental-sounding references come on
Carlton tracks like "Islands of Japan," with its koto samples. The lighter disposition at the start of the disc kicks into higher gear on Carlton's rocking, horn-driven "Easy
Mystery," and the greasy funk of Matsumoto's closing "A
girl from China." Throughout, Carlton may navigate the changes with a little more finesse, but he's well-matched, in tone and feel, with Matsumoto, making the easygoing but undeniably satisfying Take
Your Pick less a matter of "either/or" and more a case of "and."
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