Greetings, I represent NAMM and need to know how to approach Larry for an interview. I can't get the contact link to work. Help! Someone! Urgent. Thanks,please email [email protected]
Larry played an awesome solo gig at Watercolor Caf
é last night right near my home. An unexpected surprise as Larry was an influence to me since my teens many years ago. It was a pleasure hearing him play and chatting with him between sets and after the gig. Larry graciously accepted a request from my 11 year old son Justin to play John Coltrane’s Giant Steps as he’d been endlessly hearing me play it on guitar lately. His rendition was great as was the rest of his varied and unique set that evening. So, thanks Larry! Looking forward to seeing and hearing you play again soon.
Hi, has any of the Stravinsky that Larry did for Phillips been rereleased on CD? and if so where can I get it. I have some on LP and it is so worn out from being played that I need to replace it. I also think that it is some of Larry's best work.
on Thursday 15 December 2005 by DiamondDog in review > Recordings comments: 3 author awarded score: 40/100
Larry Coryell - guitar; Mike Mandel - keyboards; Alphonse Mouzon - drums; John Lee - bass; Michael Lawrence - trumpet, flugelhorn; Steve Khan - guitar, 12 string guitar
Tracks
01 Level One 02 Other Side 03 Diedra 04 Some Greasy Stuff 05 Nyctaphobia 06 Suite: Entrance/Repose/
Exit 07 Eyes of Love 08 Struttin' with Sunshine 09 That's the Joint
LEVEL ONE is just ordinary Eleventh House album. It sounds harsh, but it it a fact. INTRODUCING ELEVENTH HOUSE was a highpoint and blows many minds with fantastic play and complicated rhythms. LEVEL ONE isn't bad, but not very original anymore.
The first track, Level One, is build-up-tune with great solo of Larry Coryell. It sounds very right and you will recognize great guitarplay and the right sound of a good Eleventh House. The Other Side is just funky. Mike Lawrence gives his trademark. He is a good trumpetblower, but he doesn't give the right and risky play you would expect. Randy Brecker is really missed here. Diedra is a slow ballad song with the proper Fender Rhodes sound. Beautiful and simple. Mike Mandel is busy with his controls here, but it sounds just right. Larry Coryell is playing well, but it isn't really 'his' sound. There is no weird wah wah/phaser guitar sound here, but just simple light disstorted. One of the weakest songs on LEVEL ONE is Some Greasy Stuff. If you hear this song you will think you are in a bad Burt Reynolds chasing movie. Some Greasy Stuff is a mix of fast country riff and with some bad taste disco beat. Skip this track. Nyctaphobia is a hell of a track. A good exciting funky song. Good ol' Alphonse Mouzon gives his trademark here. A fast difficult drumbeat here, Mike Mandel with a strange tempo on keys and Larry Coryell with a wonderful solo. How he starts is very cool and the way he continues... just perfect. This is a typical Eleventh House song; strange, fast, funk, daring, difficult and hard. Suite:
Entrance/Repose/Exit start as an intro from classical Louis the XIV/French clavier song. Very beautiful funky waltz rhythm and Larry Coryell gives a quick solo here. You can hear Mike Lawrence through the whole album, but he has a smaller part than Randy Brecker in the older days. The second part of the song is for Mike Lawrence. The band eases down and Mike Lawrence gives his solo a la Miles Runs The Voodoo Down. The Exit starts off with a crazy beat from Alphonse. The band follows him with a little but DIFFICULT riff. It reminds me of Mahavishnu Orchestra. Eyes of Love has already been mentioned in my other review of PLANET END. This is an acoustic song with only Larry Coryell on guitars. Struttin' with Sunshine is another bad song on this album. It's a real rock 'n roll song with a rock n roll beat/boogie woogie. Great distortion solo by larry though. Not interesting at all, unfortunately. That'
s the Joint kicks off with a great break by Alphonse Mouzon. This song is crazy and hard. Larry Coryell is on fire here. It has a crazy beat but it fits the song. It has Larry and Alphonse all over it. Funky, jazzy, rock all over it, man!
LEVEL ONE is not one of my favorite albums. It isn't a bad album at all, but you just can help to compare this to the album INTRODUCING THE ELEVENTH HOUSE. LEVEL ONE comes too short to be a great fusionalbum. Michael Lawrence is a weak point here, but also some of the songs. The album starts off good, but because of the bad rock n roll songs you'll get disappointed with the total album sound. One can almost say that the songs on PLANET END are much better than the songs on LEVEL ONE. This isn't the Eleventh House at their highest peak. It becomes a little bit of a drag to listen to this album from the beginning till the end.
Comments
LEVEL ONE - Larry Coryell (& Eleventh House)john 17 Dec : 20:25 Reply to this
Comments: 1
Registered: 17 Feb : 11:49
Oh man, This is my favorite Larry Coryell recording. I give it 100%. It was the first LC album I bought. I got it when it came out. I have heard most all of his works throughout the years and I have yet to find an album that thrills me as much as this one. I like back together again and of course Spaces Infinate but IMHO your rating of this is way off the mark. cheers
Thank you for your comment, john. I like to read the reader's comments. They are very essential on this site.
LEVEL ONE is an album on its own. I don't know... It doesn't give me a satisfying feeling when I listen through the whole album. Some of the songs really rocks but not as hard as for example PLANET END songs or INTRODUCING THE ELEVENTH HOUSE songs. I've compared this album with the other Eleventh House/Larry Coryell albums in the early seventies. But anyway, it's just my opinion... no harm done.
Level One has a special place in my heart. While I agree it is an uneven record (mostly due to some garden-variety tunes), the tunes that really cook, Level One, Some Greasy Stuff, and Nyctaphobia are prime jazz-rock performances worthy of re-examination.
I found out that Alphonse gives drum lessons in my neighborhood in LA, and it made me think back to the Level One record. I put on my old 1975 copy of the vinyl record today and really enjoyed hearing all of side one. Just smokin' and fun listening.
This is some of Larry's best electric fusion guitar playing on record. I have tons of his albums, having been intoxicated by him and the band when I saw them play live in 1975, touring in support of Level One and opening act for Chick Corea and Return to Forever (feat. a 20 year old Al DiMeola).
Sadly, the group disbanded not long after I saw them in 1975. I do have a live bootleg recording from 74 or so. I saw Larry play solo and some duet shows with Steve Kahn that were incredible. I saw the re-formed Coryell/Mouzon (1977?) group in concert as well.
Larry's guitar playing had a huge impact on me...it made me pick up the guitar 27 years ago, and now I have a Strat and a Les Paul, and, oh yes, a Musitronic Phase Shifter circa 1975. Rock on, Larry!
Jonny Octane
Location: Los Angeles, CA
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