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John McLaughlin and the 4th Dimension to release To the One on Abstract Logix on April 20 2010
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Passionate new recording reflects the ongoing profound impact of John Coltrane’s A
Love Supreme on McLaughlin’s musical and spiritual quest.
(New York, NY) – Fiery yet disarmingly open-hearted, the new album from John McLaughlin and the 4th Dimension, To The One,
bravely takes on the artistic and spiritual challenges first offered by
Coltrane’s jazz masterpiece A Love Supreme, while making extensive use
of the pioneering musical and technical vocabulary that McLaughlin has
honed since the beginning of his storied career.
Available via Abstract Logix on April 20, 2010, To The One
is the result of a burst of inspiration that struck the legendary
English guitarist and composer in summer of 2009. “This music started
to come to me,” McLaughlin explains, “without any call from my part.
The sound and feel of this new music took me back to 1965, to when I
first heard A Love Supreme. I was 23 years old at that time,
and struggling with questions of existence that we all confront sooner
or later. Some of us discard them or don’t bother to delve deeper, but
that’s not my nature. I was asking big questions: What is the meaning
of life? What is this word ‘god’? What is this spirit? It was then that
Coltrane came along and single-handedly brought this dimension of
spirituality into jazz…it was a pivotal experience to me. It was so
encouraging to me in both my musical and spiritual quests. To The One,
as an album, is about those two aspects of my life – music and
spirituality – crystallized by this recording of Coltrane’s, and how A Love Supreme coincided with my search for meaning in life.”
It is a search that he never surrendered, as McLaughlin’s musical
journey took him from session work and jazz sessions in the UK to
recording and performing in America with the likes of Tony Williams and
Miles Davis, through to the founding of the incredibly influential
exploratory fusion outfit the Mahavishnu Orchestra and Shakti, his
ensemble dedicated to exploring Indian music and spirituality. Over the
past three decades, McLaughlin has continually sought out bold new
contexts for his expressive and inventive playing.
The six original compositions on To The One
were mostly written in July and August of 2009, and set down in the
studio in November and December, with very few overdubs, by
McLaughlin’s current performing outfit, the Fourth Dimension: Gary
Husband (keyboards, drums), Etienne M’Bappe (electric bass), and Mark
Mondesir (drums). Compositional devices clearly inspired by Coltrane
are fused with elements of McLaughlin’s own multi-faceted approach, all
delivered with a group empathy and shared vision that harkens back to
Coltrane’s fearless mid-‘60s quartet of Elvin Jones, McCoy Tyner, and
Jimmy Garrison. The effect of Jones’ kaleidoscopic approach to rhythm
and drumming is especially felt, brilliantly recast and explored via
McLaughlin’s gift for complex metrical structures.
From the surging opener “Discovery” to the gently propulsive title
track which closes the compact, forty-minute program, McLaughlin’s own
playing is at its very peak: emotional and probing, exploding into
flourishes of rapid-fire sixteenth notes one moment, candid and
unguardedly vulnerable the next. “For the band to play my tunes is a
challenge,” McLaughlin explains, “and in return, I want them to
challenge me. This is part of what jazz is – it’s very interactive. You
play with the musicians. You’re not just playing the notes.”
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