| フォーマット | CDアルバム |
| 発売日 | 2014年05月10日 |
| 国内/輸入 | 輸入(アメリカ盤) |
| レーベル | Higer Plane |
| 構成数 | 1 |
| パッケージ仕様 | - |
| 規格品番 | HPCD5501 |
| SKU | 639857550125 |
構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:40:08
Personnel includes: Gabor Szabo (acoustic & electric guitars); Mark Levine (piano); Bobby Womack (electric guitar); Wolfgang Melz, Phil Upchurch (bass); Jim Keltner (drums); Felix "Flaco" Falcon (congas); Carmelo Garcia (timbales)
Recorded in Hollywood, California in 1970-71. Originally released on Blue Thumb (28).
Personnel: Gabor Szabo (acoustic guitar, electric guitar); Bobby Womack (electric guitar); Jim Keltner (drums); Felix "Flaco" Falcon (congas); Tommy LiPuma (tambourine).
Recording information: The Record Plant.
Photographers: Tom Wilkes ; Barry Feinstein.
Recorded in 1970 for Blue Thumb with producer Tommy LiPuma and engineer Bruce Botnick, High Contrast, issued in 1971, represents one of the more remarkable collaborations in Gabor Szabo's career. The Hungarian guitarist enlisted Bobby Womack as both rhythm guitarist and as a composer -- he contributed four of these seven tunes. The rest of the band included drummer Jim Keltner, bassists Wolfgang Melz and Phil Upchurch, and conguero Felix "Flaco" Falcon, as well as a couple of other percussionists. Predating Bob James' One by three years, and issued in the same annum as Grover Washington, Jr.'s Inner City Blues, High Contrast is a truly wonderful early exercise in highly polished, funky jazz. The opener is "Breezin'," a cut that would become a standard after George Benson's smash version in 1976, but it's arguably the first smooth jazz tune. The instrumental version of "If You Don't Want My Love" is a precursor to the vocal one that appeared on the soundtrack for Across 110th Street (the classic union of Womack with J.J Johnson) in 1972, and the funky "Communication" that would appear in many forms over the rest of the singer's career. Szabo also delivers a few stellar originals, showcasing his signature fusion of Hungarian folk music, jazz, psychedelic rock, and Eastern modal sounds, including the punchy, serpentine "Amazon" and "Azure Blue," with its CTI-styled string charts swirling in the backdrop amid the interplay between Szabo and Womack. High Contrast sounds as if the many musical experiments Szabo had undertaken up to this point had gelled into a seductive, grooved-out whole that created a real template for crossover jazz to follow. It stands with his very best work, as soulful and visionary in the 21st century as it was upon its release. ~ Thom Jurek
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