Planetary Citizen/Braek History ???
batmon
27,574 Posts
I just copped the Mahavishnu Orchestra - Inner Worlds just to get Planetary Citizen.
One of my favorite "breaks". Ive only owned it in the Break Records form.
Im wondering who chose that record? Was it the comp dude that knew themselves?
Did they get advised? Were their consultants involved?
Was it a jam staple that got recognized or was the record creator throwin it on there themselves?
"Oh u gotta throw that John McLaughlin on there, cats dig that shit!"
Anybody have stories on how those Braek joints got complied?
Ive always took them for granted. And thought dudes just threw on what was hot in jams.
Is there a backstory?
Old dudes? Young Research dudes?
One of my favorite "breaks". Ive only owned it in the Break Records form.
Im wondering who chose that record? Was it the comp dude that knew themselves?
Did they get advised? Were their consultants involved?
Was it a jam staple that got recognized or was the record creator throwin it on there themselves?
"Oh u gotta throw that John McLaughlin on there, cats dig that shit!"
Anybody have stories on how those Braek joints got complied?
Ive always took them for granted. And thought dudes just threw on what was hot in jams.
Is there a backstory?
Old dudes? Young Research dudes?
Comments
here is another common rock ubb break nmw is famous for from the same period:
I remember the old man behind the counter at Music Factory.
And for what it's worth, I have a faint memory of reading somewhere that Charlie Chase was the one who really broke "Planetary Citizen."
http://www.discogs.com/Mahavishnu-John-McLaughlin-My-Goals-Beyond/master/75623
spiritual, acoustic fusion record featuring a host of ex-miles side-men and future members of mahavishnu orchestra mach 1. first side is a 2-part modal suite with a strong bassline from charlie haden, side 2 is a mix of standards and originals. no braeks yo! but it has both intensity and pastoral moments; lots of chordal playing and some indian flavour in the mix. i think most would find it more palatable than many of the bombastic electric sessions that followed. it's not rare at all and you should be able to get a copy for no more than 5 bucks.
I know Narada's on that album, but I thought it was Ed Greene who played on Come Dancing.
i didn't even realize ed greene played on this album.
so a quick wiki search shows that "come dancing" is a narada tune and that ed greene plays second drum kit but only on that song.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wired_(album)
We really need Phill to drop a little science here but, as I always understood it, rock breaks and left-of-centre shit were one of Charlie Chase's trademarks. In that Born In The Bronx book from a few years ago, there's this one shot taken at a Cold Crush show where The Long Run can be seen peeking out of the top of the crates, and that picture must have been taken back when it was still a fairly new record.
not sure who first broke it or if it was any specific dj's trademark though
- it pops up on this as well
Live Convention 77-79