Layers (Les McCann album)
1973 studio album by Les McCann
Layers | ||||
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Studio album by Les McCann | ||||
Released | 1973 | |||
Recorded | November 1972 Regent Sound Studios, New York | |||
Genre | Jazz-funk[1] | |||
Length | 44:02 | |||
Label | Atlantic SD 1646 , 32 Groove | |||
Producer | Joel Dorn | |||
Les McCann chronology | ||||
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Layers is an album by pianist Les McCann recorded in 1972 and released on the Atlantic label.[2][3]
Reception
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [4] |
AllMusic gives the album 4½ stars, stating "This groundbreaking jazz synthesizer record is really unlike any other Les McCann ever made. Aside from a three-man percussion section and electric bassist Jimmy Rowser, Layers is entirely electronic, one of the first jazz albums with such an emphasis. ...this music is truly forward-looking and ahead of its time".[4]
The song "Sometimes I Cry" has been sampled in several other songs, most notably in Slick Rick's "Behind Bars" and its drum beat in Massive Attack's "Teardrop" and "Bullet Boy".[5]
Track listing
All compositions by Les McCann
- "Sometimes I Cry" - 5:22
- "Let's Gather" - 1:13
- "Anticipation" - 0:52
- "The Dunbar High School Marching Band" - 6:07
- "Soaring (At Dawn) Part I"- 5:54
- "The Harlem Buck Dance Strut" - 5:55
- "Interlude" - 0:33
- "Before I Rest" - 3:43
- "Let's Play ('til Mom Calls)" - 4:26
- "It Never Stopped in My Home Town" - 1:54
- "Soaring (At Sunset) Part II" - 8:03
Personnel
- Les McCann - piano, electric piano, synthesizer, clavinet, drums, timpani
- Jimmy Rowser - bass, electric bass, bells, percussion
- Donald Dean - drums, bells, percussion
- Buck Clarke - congas, drums, bongos, blocks, bells, percussion
- Ralph MacDonald - congas, bells, percussion
References
- ^ Gorton, TJ (July 30, 2018). "BeatCaffeine's 100 Best Jazz-Funk Songs". BeatCaffeine. Archived from the original on August 25, 2018. Retrieved September 19, 2021.
- ^ Atlantic Records Catalog: 1600 series accessed March 8, 2016
- ^ Freed., R. Les McCann Discography accessed March 8, 2016
- ^ a b Huey, Steve. Layers – Review at AllMusic. Retrieved March 8, 2016.
- ^ "Samples of Sometimes I Cry by les McCann on WhoSampled". WhoSampled.
- v
- t
- e
Years given are for the recording(s), not first release, except where noted. As Les McCann Ltd is often used in the titles for the albums up to 1964, this has been omitted.
as
leader
or
co-leader
- It's About Time (with Teddy Edwards, 1959)
- The Truth (1960)
- The Shout (1960)
- In San Francisco (1960)
- From the Top of the Barrel (1960)
- Groove (with Richard "Groove" Holmes and Ben Webster, 1961)
- In New York (1961)
- Plays the Shampoo (1961)
- New from the Big City (1961)
- Pretty Lady (1961)
- Les McCann Sings (1961)
- Somethin' Special (with Richard "Groove" Holmes, 1962)
- On Time (1962)
- The Gospel Truth (1963)
- Soul Hits (1963)
- Jazz Waltz (with The Jazz Crusaders, 1963)
- A Bag of Gold (1963–64)
- McCanna (1964)
- Spanish Onions (1964)
- McCann/Wilson (with Nancy Wilson (1964)
- But Not Really (1964)
- Beaux J. Pooboo (1965)
- Live at Shelly's Manne-Hole (1965)
- Les McCann Plays the Hits (1966)
- Bucket o' Grease (1966)
- Live at Bohemian Caverns - Washington, DC (1967)
- Much Les (1968)
- Swiss Movement (and Eddie Harris, 1969)
- Comment (1969)
- Invitation to Openness (1971)
- Second Movement (with Eddie Harris, 1971)
- Layers (1972)
- Live at Montreux (1972)
- Talk to the People (1972)
- Another Beginning (1974)
others
- Tell It Like It Tis (Richard "Groove" Holmes, 1962)
- Stormy Monday (with Lou Rawls, 1962)
- That's Where It's At (Stanley Turrentine, 1962)
- Straight Ahead (Stanley Turrentine, 1984)
- Go Tell It on the Mountain (The Blind Boys of Alabama, 2003)
- Soul To Soul (1971)