Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Sabicas - Rock Encounter With Joe Beck (1966)
"In my eternal quest to Prog Andaluz music, I stumbled upon this unique and very interesting musical project from 1966, probably the first musical encounter between flamenco and rock music!

In those days Joe Beck was a respected composer and rock guitarist, he had played in symphonic orchestras and performed with the top names in rock and jazz (from Tim Hardin to Steve Gadd). After making the album Middle Eastern Rock with Oud player John Berberian, Joe's producer Harvey Cowen suggested Joe to do the same with flamenco and rock. He succeeded to recruit flamenco guitar legend Sabicas (1912-1990, thanks to Sabicas' brother Diego because he wanted Sabicas to scout the musical boundaries. Now Joe decided to assemble the best New York musicians: drummer Donald McDonald (in The Satyrs he had jammed with Frank Zappa, Ritchie Havens and Jimi Hendrix), 20 year old bass player Tony Levin (introduced to jazz and rock by Steve Gadd, later he joined Peter Gabriel his band and King Crimson, playing on the distinctive Stick) and keyboardplayer Warren Bernhardt (he has accompanied singers like Donald Fagen, Carly Simon, Art Garfunkel, Ritchie Havens and Liza Minelli), wow, what an awesome line-up!

1.- Inca Song (5:15) : The first and final part deliver the jaw-dropping art of the flamenco guitar, from twanging and rhythm to speedy runs (picados), very exciting! Halfway an accellaration featuring a powerful rhythm-section, howling electric guitar and an organ solo. This is the typical 1966-1969 Sixties rock sound and its captivating to hear the blend of passionate flamenco guitarwork and raw rock.

2.- Joe's Tune (3:49) : This track contains a Moorish atmosphere with flamenco guitar, jazzy piano and again howling electric guitar, culminating in an exciting duel between wah-wah drenched electric guitar and speedy flamenco guitar runs.

3.- Zapateado (9:36) : This word means tapping with the shoes, its all about speed and control in a cheerful climate. The first part contains pure flamenco with guitar and zapateado, the second part sounds like Jimi Hendrix inspired rock, two different worlds but very enthralling!

4.- Zambra (4:02) : The zambra is the most Moorish influenced flamenco rhythm and Sabicas is a master in playing the zambra (my recommendation: the DVD Sabicas: King Of The Flamenco). You can also enjoy the tremolo technique (imagine the guitar piece Recuerdos De La Alhambra by F. Tarrega), wonderful! Then rock with organ and fiery guitar, very powerful with that warm undertone of The Sixties.

5.- Handclaps (0:31) : In the flamenco it is named palmas, a very distinctive part of the flamenco.

6.- Flamenco Rock (7:25) : Halfway through this album the band starts to rock, in a bluesy climate we can enjoy a blend of Hammond organ, howling electric guitar and exciting flamenco guitar (from picados to tremolo), this is great Prog Andaluz!

7.- Bulerias (7:25) : This track contains vocals in the flamenco tradition (very emotional), it fits perfectly with the compelling work on Hammond organ and sensitive electric guitar, the blend of flamenco and rock sounds like early Triana, goose bumps!

8.- Farruca (4:45) : The first part contains the art of the flamenco guitar (beautiful tremolo), then a slow rhythm with swirling Hammond organ, powerful drums and bass and Paco De Lucia-like flamenco guitar runs, again goose bumps, what a hot session!

The circumstances in the recording studio were not easy: it was hard to communicate between the Spanish guitarist and the English musicians and its still very difficult to amplify an acoustic guitar and also quickly overshadowed rock instruments like the drums, bass, guitar and organ. Sabicas was not really satisfied about the result (I did it for my brother) but in my opinion this album contains lots of captivating and exciting musical moments. And especially from the song Flamenco Rock the musicians seem to have reached a kind of chemistry, it sounds like embryonal Prog Andaluz. Highly recommended to all Prog Andaluz aficionados, fans of progressive folk music and adventurous progheads! " (Erik Neuteboom www.dlsi.ua.es)

"Hard to believe that this strange rarity was reissued on CD and reissued legitimately, but here it is on the Long Hair label, who do these things well! Sabicas was a famous Spanish flamenco guitarist who lived in the USA for a number of years. In 1966, under pressure from his brother, he recorded this fusion of Spanish music with psychedelic rock and jazz in a band that features US guitarist Joe Beck, Tony Levin on bass, Warren Bernhardt on piano and organ and Donald McDonald on drums. It's a surprisingly solid progressive album, especially for how early this is and considering the meeting of Spanish traditionalist with NY rockers, it could have been a mess, but it compares very well with Spanish bands doing a similar thing several years later. "This album shows a fantastic mixture of authentic traditional flamenco, progressive and psychedelic rock by Spanish legend Sabicas and extraordinary electric jazzrock guitar by Joe Beck with congenial backing band among others Donald MacDonald on drums, Warren Bernhardt organ and Tony Levin on bass. This is an album for those who are willing to look over the edges of their progressive and psychedelic horizon. Great guitar playing (lots of electric and acoustic guitars) all over. Unique and hypnotizing! Originally released in 1970 and for the first time on CD. Digitally remastered from the mastertape." (waysidemusic.com)

1. Inca Song
2. Joe's Tune
3. Zapateado
4. Zambra
5. Handclaps
6. Flamenco Rock
7. Bulerias
8. FarrĂșca

Sabicas - Flamenco Guitar
Joe Beck - Electric Guitar
Tony Levin - Bass
Warren Bernhardt - Keyboards
Donald McDonald - Drums

EAC-FLAC-LOG-CUE-SCANS 312MB

Part 1__Part 2

See ya

10 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thanks 8 days another classic as usual(hotroder)down under.

11:40 PM, January 21, 2010  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

There is no way this is from '66; just listen to the playing and you'll see it's a type of fusion that wasn't around bzck then...

9:55 AM, January 24, 2010  
Blogger GarColga said...

Hello hotroder!

Hi anon - it says 1966 in the liner notes, also the photos of the players look like 1966.

10:01 AM, January 24, 2010  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thanks !! Indeed an album precursor of flamenco-rock.

11:13 AM, January 25, 2010  
Anonymous LB said...

I've been gone for a few months, but I'm glad to see you're still keeping up this awesome blog. Now it's time for me to get caught up! Cheers!

1:56 PM, January 25, 2010  
Blogger GarColga said...

Hi anon, you're welcome!

Welcome back LB!!

4:05 PM, January 25, 2010  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Jazz dudes rock(hotroder)

12:41 AM, January 29, 2010  
Blogger Neroon001 said...

GarColga wow where did you find this,nevermind I don't need to know looks like a heck of an album thanks for sharing

4:07 PM, January 31, 2010  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Like LB, I've been gone for months. It's great to see these interesting recent uploads, and in lossless format, which will keep your blog at the top of my list. Thanks for your efforts to make this music available.

10:27 AM, February 01, 2010  
Blogger GarColga said...

Hi Neroon001, you're welcome!

Welcome back t-ador!

2:54 PM, February 01, 2010  

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