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Album
Originally issued in 1996 when he was 54, The Promise offers a summation of all the places John McLaughlin has been in his career, and points directly toward his future. Featuring a wide range of musicians including appearances by the fi]Free Spirits, the Guitar Trio, and an electric version of Shakti, The Promise is easily the most wide-ranging and diverse offering of McLaughlin's long career. Its contents encompass everything from straight post-bop and swinging soul-jazz to fusion to modern takes on East Indian music as it meets the West. As if this weren't enough, there are even moments with spoken word laced throughout, such as a verse of Dante read by Stefania Bombi toward the end of his scorching, funky, soul-jazz number "Thelonius Melodius" with B-3 organist Joey DeFrancesco and drummer Dennis Chambers. The set kicks off with one of its finest moments, a guitar-to-guitar reading of John Lewis' "Django" with Jeff Beck (bassist Pino Palladino, drummer Mark Mondesir, and drummer Tony Hymas round it out). Jeff Beck's solo is first; it is expansive as it moves from a gorgeous restating of the melody through slinky harmonic extrapolations. McLaughlin's answer is ambitious and intuitive. They then move toward one another and the melody, complementing each other perfectly. "El Ciego" is a complex, flamenco-tinged jazz number with McLaughlin trading knotty lines and soulful solos with Al di Meola and Paco de Lucía. "Jazz Jungle" is late 20th century fusion at its blazing best w
Django
John McLaughlin
Thelonius Melodius
John McLaughlin
Amy And Joseph
John McLaughlin
No Return
John McLaughlin
El Ciego
John McLaughlin
Jazz Jungle
John McLaughlin
The Wish
John McLaughlin
English Jam
John McLaughlin
Tokyo Decadence
John McLaughlin
Shin Jin Rui
John McLaughlin
The Peacocks
John McLaughlin