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Showing posts with label RONNIE FOSTER. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RONNIE FOSTER. Show all posts

BN-LA-425-G

Ronnie Foster - Cheshire Cat

Released - 1975

Recording and Session Information

A&R Studios, NYC, March 21, 1975
Ronnie Foster, organ, keyboards, vocals, arranger; Joe Beck, guitar; William Allen, bass; Dennis Davis, drums; Mtume, congas, percussion; George Benson, backing vocals.

15683 (tk.2) Funky Motion
15680 (tk.5) Like A Child

A&R Studios, NYC, March 24, 1975
Ronnie Foster, organ, keyboards, vocals, arranger; Joe Beck, guitar #2; George Benson, guitar #1, backing vocals #2; William Allen, bass; Gary King, electric bass; Dennis Davis, drums; Mtume, congas, percussion.

15684 (tk.3) Cheshire Cat
15685 (tk.4) Heartless

A&R Studios, NYC, March 25, 1975
Ronnie Foster, organ, keyboards, vocals, arranger; Joe Beck, guitar; William Allen, bass; Dennis Davis, drums; Mtume, congas, percussion; unidentified background vocals.

15681 (tk.2/8) Tuesday Heartbreak

A&R Studios, NYC, March 27, 1975
Ronnie Foster, organ, keyboards, vocals, arranger; Joe Beck, guitar; William Allen, bass; Gary King, electric bass; Dennis Davis, drums; Mtume, congas, percussion; unidentified background vocals.

15682 (tk.1/4) Fly Away

Track Listing

Side One
TitleAuthorRecording Date
Like A ChildRonnie FosterMarch 21 1975
Tuesday HeartbreakStevie WonderMarch 25 1975
Fly AwayRonnie FosterMarch 27 1975
Side Two
Funky MotionRonnie FosterMarch 21 1975
Cheshire CatRonnie FosterMarch 24 1975
HeartlessRonnie FosterMarch 24 1975

Liner Notes

You will be happy to know that this is not another jazz LP. In many ways, this record represents a movement away from the elitism which has tainted much of the progressive music of the past twenty years. Jazz artists have too often ignored many popular developments. As a result, jazz men have isolated themselves from the public. Instead of integrating pop components into their music and attracting a broader following, these performers shun anything which they feel might compromise their integrity.

Ronnie Foster rejects this narrow-minded conception of jazz. He has caught perhaps a truer musical spirit by taking the best of the sounds around him and molding them into a personal statement which is esthetically sincere and can communicate with the general public. "Cheshire Cat" explores the different sounds, colors and textures of the variegated stylistic spectrum of music, "When I was young," Ronnie said, "I was into everything. As I developed on the organ, I became exposed to all different types of music. I learned to play them as they were meant to be played. If a tune is funky, I let it be funky; if a tune is jazzy and out, then I let It be jazzy and out. I don't try to force something into a genre in which it doesn't belong. Though I'm jazz oriented, I'm really concerned with music.

"Many musicians are trying to get into all kinds of music now. People used to stick with only one kind of thing, Now they experiment, We're trying to appeal to a larger audience and that is all for the good. That is really what this LP is about."

As you will hear, Ronnie's eclectic sound shows the influences of such musical doyens as Stevie Wonder, Jimmy Smith, Larry Young, and Walter Carlos. Most importantly, Ronnie has incorporated the essence of these geniuses into his own distinctive sound.

His melodies are hauntingly lyrical, yet at times the musical tension builds and the listener can feel an almost visceral excitement. Ronnie's music is an open-ended excursion through musical modes as varied as "discofunk," free-form improvisation, and electric rock. As he says, "I never really know where I'm going to end up. I'll use whatever musical device fits."

The young organist was born in Buffalo in 1950. He performed on the piano exclusively until he attended a jam session during the early '60's. "I was told that they had a piano and an organ there. The only problem was that the piano never materialized. I was really scared. After a half hour of coaxing, they finally got me up there, and you know, they couldn't get me off!"

Like many other aspiring jazz organists, Ronnie structured his playing on the music of Jimmy Smith. As it turned out, however, it was Larry Young who provided the most important lesson. He stressed the fact that finely honed skills, through extremely important, are merely the tools with which one must communicate a unique personality. A good portion of Ronnie's success is the result of his mastery of this precept.

Ronnie began working the club scene; in time, he gigged with Stanley Turrentine and Young-Holt Unlimited. Yet, he kept himself open to other musical trends by spending time with rock groups and such arcane entities as Polish folk bands. Ronnie's most important early engagement was with Grant Green, for it led to a long tutelage with this guitar master and a Blue Note recording contract.

Though Ronnie recorded three records for Blue Note ("Two Headed Freap," "Sweet Revival," and "On the Avenue") and worked with his own bands, he continued to play with several jazz standouts. The most important dates have been with George Benson. In fact, it was in George's band that Ronnie first began to use the Fender Rhodes and the synthesizer. "George didn't think I'd stick with the piano," Ronnie laughed, "because he knows how much I love the organ. Yet I did stick and I'm glad because it really has opened up my head. He knows what I'm about musically."

George Butler, the Blue Note impresario, recognized the respect and understanding that Benson and Ronnie have for each other. He suggested that Benson produce the striking "On the Avenue" LP. The arrangement continues to be extremely fruitful, for it is on this fourth record that the organist truly matures as a composer and a performer.

Ronnie wrote all of "Cheshire Cat's" tunes, save for Stevie Wonder's "Tuesday Heartbreak." "I was in the midst of a wonderful relationship when I wrote 'Like a Child,' " Ronnie said. "The piece sort of arose spontaneously. I just sat at the organ and it flowed right out: 'I feel like a child.' It's a light, sort of floating number. The piece is really a lot of fun.

"'Tuesday Heartbreak,' of course, is Stevie's tune. We're really very close friends and I like to do his compositions which haven't been covered. 'Tuesday' is an older tune, but still very fresh. We did it a little differently here. After the Latin section, we felt it would be interesting to take it outside before we brought it back to the main theme and rhythm.

"'Fly Away' is another love song. It deals with spiritual feelings and higher thoughts: 'take my hand and face the sun/And let's fly away.' I don't think it's really commercial because of that improvisational insert. That signifies the act of flying away, which then naturally leads us back to the original mood.

'I wrote 'Funky Motion' about a year and a half ago. When chicks move and walk, you know, there's really something special taking place. So, 'She's got funky motion/Think I've got a notion.' Of course! The tune is a disco number and it was mixed accordingly. We tried to recreate that sort of echo one hears in discotheques.

"Since I've been a little child, I've grinned like a cheshire cat. I suppose that cat is really a little part of me. Like the cat in 'Alice in Wonderland,' the tune is outside. It's also somewhat abstract. I used my voice a little differently and achieved that strange sort of vibrato. The piece has a mysterious air to it. After the organ solo, it goes right back to the top and disappears, like Alice's cat.

'Heartless' is a true mood piece. It doesn't have a real melody, for the melody is carried in the bass line alone. The synthesizer is used here with a particular finesse. I like to treat it as an instrument rather than as a machine. What I tried to catch is the state of mind that arises when people's relationships break down."

The musicians on this record are highly attuned to Ronnie's sound. They have extremely varied backgrounds and impeccable musical pedigrees. Most importantly, each has a deep respect for the other's art. As you will hear, the atmosphere that arises is highly conducive to musical creation. "I like to work with people that I know, whom I have gotten into and who have gotten into me," Ronnie explained. "The drummer, Dennis Davis, has played with Roy Ayers, Zulema, and David Bowie. He's a well-rounded cat who can play anything. It's also important to note that he plays with an open mind.

"William Allen is presently the bass player with Roy Ayers. He is an excellent composer and arranger who has really helped out in the organization of our work.

"Joe Beck plays guitar. I've seen him in clubs and he always knocks me out. Joe has done dates with giants like Miles Davis and Joe Farrell, and younger cats like Dom Um Romao and Bill Watrous. He's also recently done his first solo record in many years.

"Mtume is the percussionist. He is featured most prominently in Miles Davis' band, so you know where he's at! He has also worked with Sonny Rollins, Pharoah Sanders and many other cats.

"Gary King, who has done a lot of CTI session dates, also plays bass on 'Heartless,' 'Cheshire Cat,' and 'Fly Away.'"

"Last but not least is George Benson. He plays guitar on 'Cheshire Cat.' Listen to his background vocals on 'Like a Child.' Most people are not aware of his amazing voice."

Ronnie is extremely happy with "Cheshire Cat." It is his most satisfying record because it clearly delineates the foundation of his artistic sensitivity. "I always have tried to discover what music is about and what the musicians are trying to lay out. I just wish everyone would do that with everyone else's music." So, check it out. You won't be disappointed.

Steven Marks

BN-LA-261-G

Ronnie Foster - On The Avenue

Released - 1974

Recording and Session Information

Electric Lady Studios, NYC, April 30, 1974
John E. Gatchell, Dean Robert Pratt, trumpet, flugelhorn; Gerald Ray Chamberlain, trombone; Joel L. Kaye, baritone sax; Ronnie Foster, organ, Clavinet, synthesizer, vocals; Phil Upchurch, guitar, electric bass; Marvin Chappell, drums; Ray Armando, percussion; Alfred "Pee Wee" Ellis, horn arranger.

14182 Serenade To A Rock
14187 (tk.5) Big Farm Boy Goes Latin City
14183 (tk.8) On The Alamo
14184 What Happened To The Sunshine
14186 To See A Smile

Electric Lady Studios, NYC, May 1, 1974
John E. Gatchell, Dean Robert Pratt, trumpet, flugelhorn; Gerald Ray Chamberlain, trombone; Joel L. Kaye, baritone sax; Ronnie Foster, organ, Clavinet, synthesizer, vocals; Phil Upchurch, guitar, electric bass; Marvin Chappell, drums; Ray Armando, percussion; Alfred "Pee Wee" Ellis, horn arranger.

14188 (tk.1) First Light
14185 (tk.2) Golden Lady

Track Listing

Side One
TitleAuthorRecording Date
Serenade to a RockRonnie FosterApril 30 1974
On the AvenueRonnie FosterApril 30 1974
What Happened To The SunshineRonnie FosterApril 30 1974
Side Two
Golden LadyStevie WonderMay 1 1974
To See A SmileRonnie FosterApril 30 1974
Big Farm Boy Goes to a Latin CityRonnie FosterApril 30 1974
First LightFreddie HubbardApril 30 1974

Liner Notes

...
Ronnie Foster - organ, clavinet, synthesizer, vocals
John E. Gatchell, Dean Robert Pratt - trumpet, flugelhorn
Gerald Ray Chamberlain - trombone
Joel L. Kaye - baritone saxophone
Phil Upchurch - guitar, electric bass
Marvin Chappell - drums
Ray Armando - percussion
Alfred "Pee Wee" Ellis - horn arranger

BN-LA-250-G

Ronnie Foster - Live At Montreux

Released - 1974

Recording and Session Information

"Montreux Jazz Festival", "Casino De Montreux", Switzerland, July 5, 1973
Ronnie Foster, organ; Gregory Miller, guitar; Marvin Chappell, drums.

14100 East Of Ginger Trees
14101 Chunky
14102 Boogie Juice
14103 Sameness

Track Listing

Side One
TitleAuthorRecording Date
East Of Ginger TreesSeals-CroftsJuly 5 1973
ChunkyRonnie FosterJuly 5 1973
Side Two
Boogie JuiceRonnie FosterJuly 5 1973
SamenessRonnie FosterJuly 5 1973

Liner Notes

It is the evening of July 3, 1973. The orange-colored auditorium, layered with billows of smoke is filled to capacity with nameless faces; crowded under the semi-angled ceiling to hear and see the Blue Note Records presentation of Jazz music. The city of Montreux, Switzerland, set beneath the mountains and bordering the Rhone River overlooks valleys of densely populated terrain. Distant glances into an unclouded sky reveal the country of France.

It is a gala event. Television dollies slowly make their way towards the unmanned stage. Reporters and cameramen whisper in their native tongues. The sun has set, and the evening Sights of Montreux gently cast rays upon the musical mecca. The audience will soon be "Cookin' with Blue Note" at the 1973 Montreux Jazz Festival.

The B-3 Hammond organ is not properly adjusted. The amplitude of the organ must be attuned to the acoustics of the hall. For Ronnie Foster, born Buffalo, New York, 1950, this debut performance at Montreux is important. Important in light of his stature as a Jazz artist. Professionally, his first big break was in 1972 when Ronnie was signed to Blue Note Records by George Butler, Director of the Label. Gigging off and on with Grant Green, Stanley Turrentine, and George Benson, Ronnie decided to form his own group and work the club circuit throughout the United States. He has recorded two albums, "Two Headed Freep" and "Sweet Revival."

Ronnie Foster is the next generation of greats that are happening today. His dedication to the organ is evident for his self-taught approach to the organ is realized through his individual technique and styling. His music is young and energized as in the composition, "East of Ginger Trees." He successfully extrapolates jazz riffs from conventional song-form. In the tune "Chunky" the drummer's single stroke roll on the high-hat creates energy behind the lush vibrations of the Hammond, as if the train is speeding down the track, or the sprinter is rounding the bend.

Ronnie's affinity for incorporating rhythm 'n' blues in the tune "Boogie Juice" unearths the happy marriage of jazz and soul. The adroit manner in which the synthesizer is adapted in his performance never becomes offensive to the jazz ears of Montreux. "Sameness," a richly rewarding original, emits fierce notes of rage and holocaust. The trio then breaks into a free-form interplay between the melody line and the improvisation of the organ. Throughout, the guitar of Gregory Miller picks delicate, balanced chord runs that compliment Foster's musical adventure.

It is obvious that Ronnie Foster's debut performance at the Montreux Jazz Festival will one day be a collector's item. for this is only the beginning. He will be playing to capacity crowds for years to come. Sample what's happening in Jazz Music today.

TAKE THIS MUSICAL RIDE TO MONTREUX
Jere Hausfater - Blue Note Records





BN-LA-098-G

Ronnie Foster - Sweet Revival

Released - 1973

Recording and Session Information

Generation Sound Studios, NYC, December 14 & 15, 1972
Garnett Brown, trombone; Seldon Powell, tenor sax; Ronnie Foster, organ; Ernie Hayes, electric piano; David Spinozza, John Tropea, electric guitar; Wilbur Bascomb Jr., electric bass; Bernard Purdie, drums; unknown, percussion; unidentified horns, strings and female vocal group, Horace Ott, arranger, conductor.

11433 Sweet Revival
11434 (tk.9) Lisa's Love
11435 Backstabber
11436 It's Just Gotta Be This Way
11437 (tk.1) Alone Again (Naturally)
11438 Where Is The Love
11439 Me And Mrs. Jones
11440 (tk.10) Some Neck
11441 Superwoman
11900 (tk.1) Inot (as Enot)

Track Listing

Side One
TitleAuthorRecording Date
Sweet RevivalJoe SampleDecember 14, 15 1972
Lisa's LoveRonnie FosterDecember 14, 15 1972
Back StabbersLeon Huff, Gene McFadden, John WhiteheadDecember 14, 15 1972
Me and Mrs. JonesKenny Gamble, Cary Gilbert, HuffDecember 14, 15 1972
Alone Again (Naturally)Gilbert O'SullivanDecember 14, 15 1972
Side Two
Where Is the LoveRalph MacDonald, William SalterDecember 14, 15 1972
Some NeckRonnie FosterDecember 14, 15 1972
It's Just Gotta Be That WayWayne HendersonDecember 14, 15 1972
SuperwomanStevie WonderDecember 14, 15 1972
InotRonnie FosterDecember 14, 15 1972

Liner Notes

Let me begin by saying that this is not greatest Jazz album you've ever heard. I couldn't write words that would convince you that you've heard something that isn't on this record as so many writers try to do. But let me point out that in purchasing this album I don't believe that you have made a mistake. While this is commercial album that could have just as easily been titled "Ronnie Foster plays the Top-40 " hits of the Seventies with Horns, Strings end Voices," even Jimmy Smith has done essentially the same thing. This album represents the second chapter in the unfolding career of a very promising young player. Ten years from now, when he is a genuine star, his early albums will be in great demand and your friends, who passed this one up, will be sorry.

Let us now go back to the beginning. Ronnie Foster was born May 13, 1950 in Buffalo, New York. He was first exposed to the piano and while he learned to play the Classics, he didn't play "classicly." When he went to his first jam session as a teen-ager he was promised there would be both a piano and on organ. The piano turned out to be figment of the imagination. "It took them half an hour to get me up there, then they couldn't get me off." an organists. Ronnie listened to Jimmy Smith at first, but it was only after hearing Larry Young that the possibilities the organ presents became apparent to him.

Another Buffalo organist, Joe Madison helped him out ("Joe has a distinctive sound but it hasn't happened for him yet"). Later Ronnie would rent a studio with an organ for sixty cents an hour until he became such a fixture there that sometimes he wouldn't get charged.

Ronnie has already worked with Grant Green, Stanley Turrentine, George Benson, Young-Holt Unlimited and Billy Wooten. He leads his own group "Energy II" and be appearing at the Montreaux Jazz Festival this year. He came to the of attention of Blue Note impresario Dr. George Butler, through his work on Grant Green's album "Alive" Blue Note BST 84360). Ronnie's first album "Two Headed Freap BST 84382) was a delightful oasis of Funk-soul Organ albums that glut the market almost daily.

The sidemen on this date include Bernard Purdie on drums. The "L'il old hitmaker," whose career ranges from a number of "top-40" hits to Leon Thomas recordings seems to be on just about every third album to out of New York. David Spinoza, one of two guitarists on the album, has graced recordings ranging from the Johnny Hodges, Leon Thomas, Oliver Nelson collaboration to recent Buddy Rich albums. The other guitarist is John Tropea who first came to my attention as the soloist on Eumir Deodato's "Prelude," the LP that spawned the smash "Also Sprach Zarathustra (2001)." Wilbur Bascomb Jr, heard here on Fender Bass was most recently heard on the album by Alphonse Mouzon (Blue Note BN-LA-059-F). It would be hard to top this group in any way and to avoid falling into the usual cliches about how cohesive they sound, I'll move on.

The title tune, "Sweet Revival" a composition of Joe Sample of The Crusaders. Joe, in recent years, has emerged as one of the finest composers in Jazz. The tune was first recorded by the Crusaders but the Trombone solo here is by Garnett Brown and the Tenor Sax is Seldon Powell. "Lisa's Love," "Some Neck" and "Inot," (pronounced "E-not") all show Ronnie Foster as a composer, while showing three different sides of the man as a player. The conception and execution of these tunes seems to coma from a mind that much further advanced than the 22 years it had developed at the time of this recording.

In the future there be more from this fertile mind. He is buying a Synthesizer and additionally has an idea in the back of his head to try something with two organists. "I'd love to hear McCoy Tyner on an organ sometime." Between his first album, his playing here and the myriad of ideas in his head, Ronnie Foster can't help but become the organist that all other organists will be listening to in the future; thus making your investment in "Sweet Revival..." long term, but very wise one.

serenity.
Harry Abraham
WHAM Rochester NY
Editor-DIFFERENT DRUMMER




BST 84382

Ronnie Foster - Two-Headed Freap

Released - 1972

Recording and Session Information

Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, January 20, 1972

Eugene Bianco, harp; George Devens, vibes, cabasa, shakers, cowbell; Ronnie Foster, organ; Gene Bertoncini, guitar; George Duvivier, bass; Gordon Edwards, electric bass; Jimmy Johnson, drums; Arthur Jenkins, congas; Wade Marcus, arranger.

9213 Drowning In The Sea Of Love
9216 Let's Stay Together
9217 Don't Knock My Love
9218 Mystic Brew

Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, January 21, 1972
Eugene Bianco, harp; George Devens, vibes, cabasa, shakers, cowbell; Ronnie Foster, organ; Gene Bertoncini, guitar; George Duvivier, bass; Gordon Edwards, electric bass; Jimmy Johnson, drums; Arthur Jenkins, congas; Wade Marcus, arranger.

9212 Chunky
9214 The Two Headed Freap
9215 Summer Song
9219 Kentucky Fried Chicken

Track Listing

Side One
TitleAuthorRecording Date
ChunkyRonnie FosterJanuary 21 1972
Drowning in the Sea of LoveKenneth Gamble, Leon HuffJanuary 20 1972
The Two-Headed FreapRonnie FosterJanuary 21 1972
Summer SongRonnie FosterJanuary 21 1972
Side Two
Let's Stay TogetherAl Green, Al Jackson Jr., Willie MitchellJanuary 20 1972
Don't Knock My LoveWilson Pickett, Brad ShapiroJanuary 20 1972
Mystic BrewRonnie FosterJanuary 20 1972
Kentucky Fried ChickenRonnie FosterJanuary 21 1972

Liner Notes

...