LONNIE LISTON SMITH — Lonnie Liston Smith & The Cosmic Echoes : Cosmic Funk

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3.93 | 3 ratings | 2 reviews
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Album · 1974

Tracklist

A1 Cosmic Funk 5:35
A2 Footprints 6:08
A3 Beautiful Woman 6:57
B1 Sais (Egypt) 8:15
B2 Peaceful Ones 5:03
B3 Naima 4:02

Line-up/Musicians

Congas, Percussion – Lawrence Killian
Drums – Art Gore
Electric Bass – Al Anderson
Percussion – Andrew Cyrille, Doug Hammond, Ron Bridgewater
Piano [Acoustic], Electric Piano, Percussion – Lonnie Liston Smith
Soprano Saxophone, Flute, Percussion – George Barron
Vocals, Piano, Flute – Donald Smith

About this release

Flying Dutchman – BDL1-0591 (US)

Thanks to Sean Trane for the addition and snobb for the updates

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FunkFreak75
With this album we can see how Jazz-Rock Fusion's growing infatuation with Funk has taken bliss-master Lonnie Liston Smith and his Cosmic Echoes on a detour.

A1. "Cosmic Funk" (5:35) combine SLY AND THE FAMILY STONES' "Thank You (Falettinme be Mice Elf)" with RARE EARTH's "I Just Want to Celebrate" and this is what you might get. Cool, funky, and expressive (especially through Donald Smith's impassioned vocals) but a little repetitive and drawn out. (8.75/10)

A2. "Footprints" (6:08) a cover of a Wayne Shorter song, what starts out fairly mellow, turns into something more in tune with the old jazz sounds and stylings from which Lonnie emerged in the 1960s. Not really J-R Fusion or Cosmic Bliss, the song is dominated by George Barron's traditional sounding jazz saxophone expressions as well as Lonnie's piano. (8.5/10)

A3. "Beautiful Woman" (6:57) sounds like a piano version of Marvin Gaye's spiritually-uplifting What's Going On-era music over which Donald Smith gives a very nice, smooth LEON THOMAS-like performance. As usual, we get great percussion and accompaniment from the rhythm section as well as some gentle support from George Barron's winds. (13.75/15)

B1. "Sais (Egypt)" (8:15) with this song that is credited to percussionist MTUME, now we're moving back toward the hypnotic kosmische musik of Lonnie's niche-defining debut solo album, Astral Traveling. Bassist Al Anderson and the percussion team of Andrew Cyrille, Doug Hammond, Ron Bridgewater, Lawrence Killian, and drummer Art Gore establish a TRAFFIC "Low Spark of High-Heeled Boys" motif for George Barron to solo over with his reverbed soprano sax while Lonnie employs a heavily-echoed Fender Rhodes while his left-handed piano chords add a steady fullness to the rhythm track. When Lonnie takes the lead somewhere in the fourth minute the percussionists use the spacey foundation to go on a tear of show-off playing, but then George returns in the sixth minute to settle them down a bit. The music thins in the seventh minute leaving Lonnie and Al Anderson's bass more exposed--which they kind of take advantage of (but not really). (13.5/15)

B2. "Peaceful Ones" (5:03) Another beautiful and mesmerizing sonic field (with a repeating killer key change every 30-seconds or so!) supports Donald Smith's beautiful message of hope and love, sung in a gorgeous upper register voice. Metal percussion tinkles away with the congas, drums and others but far more gently than an the previous songs. The melodies, chords, and key changes feel as if they were stolen by Bruce Cockburn for his 1991 hit "The Charity of Night." Cosmically beautiful! (14.75/15)

B3. "Naima" (4:02) a cover of a famous John Coltrane song receives the Goddess worship treatment from vocal/lyricist Donald Smith. A beautiful rendition. (9.25/10)

Total time: 35:00

I have the feeling that Lonnie and or/this album in particular was one of the inspirations for Freddie Hubbard and Al Jarreau's collaboration on their 1979 song,"Little Sunflower."

A-/five stars; a minor masterpiece of Jazz-Rock Fusion. Highly recommended to all who love to move with a little funk before wallow in the beauty of bliss.
Sean Trane
After LL-S’s debut “solo” Cosmic Echoes album that was a fusionesque descendant of the Coltrane-Shepp realm, Cosmic Funk is quite a departure towards the rock world with its often-exciting jazz-funk. Outside Liston himself, only drummer Barron remains from Astral Travelling, but then again, it’s quite a different sonic world, even if the transition is still gradual. Cosmic Funk hesitates a lot between awesome jazz-fusion in the Coltrane legacy and some much more mainstream funk

Opening on the deadly funk-jazz of the title track that is strongly reminiscent of WAR, we’re greeted with some blood-curdling primal screams over a strong percussion funk. The following Shorter-penned Footprints is fast-paced McCoy Tyner-like fusion arranged piece that can transcend the mind and cosmic universe. Closing the A-side, we get the interesting fast-fusion piece of Beautiful Woman, marred by commercial sappy-lyrics sung by Donald Smith (who also plays piano and flute), but the music itself is not quite as mainstream as the title and vocals (however good a voice Smith has) would have you think. Sometimes Santana is not far away.

Over the flipside, the Mtume-penned Sais (Egypt) hints at the previous album with its hints of Alice Coltrane and transcending Echoplexed-Rhodes and quite sax lines. To some, the over-abundance of echo effects might make the music sound dated, but if you’re into mind-boggling and mind-soothing soundscapes, Sais (and the album in general) is a pure delight. Donald Smith returns to the microphone to sing out Peaceful Ones, another rather mainstream-sounding mid-tempo piece, but the whole thing remains more serene than soppy or cheesy, with some excellent bass and flute works. The closing Trane classic Naima gets an unusual treatment, but to be honest, I don’t think this version pays proper tribute to the departed giant. The album’s lower point, but it’s still acceptable for discerning jazz buffs.

While a rather different beast than its forerunner Astral Travelling, Cosmic Funk is nevertheless is an easily recommendable album, one that starts better than it ends, though. It’s easy to see, when comparing AT with CF, where LL-S will be heading in future albums. To be honest, this new direction will give a few very good jazz-funk albums, before slowly degenerating into soft funk-disco stuff. In the meantime, enjoy some excellent cosmic jazz-funk that should hit the spot without difficulty on first try.

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