John Mclaughlin

John McLaughlin, Al Di Meola, Paco De Lucía - Passion, Grace & Fire (1983) [SME Records SRCS 9657, Japan]

John McLaughlin, Al Di Meola, Paco De Lucía - Passion, Grace & Fire (1983)
EAC | Flac(Image) + Cue + Log & MP3 CBR 320Kbps
2001 | SME Records, SRCS 9657 | ~ 184 or 75 Mb | Scans(jpg) -> 49 Mb
Fusion, Flamenco

Two years after they recorded Friday Night in San Francisco, John McLaughlin, Al di Meola and Paco de Lucía reunited for another set of acoustic guitar trios, Passion, Grace and Fire, If this can be considered a guitar "battle" (some of the playing is ferocious and these speed demons do not let up too often), then the result is a three-way tie…
John McLaughlin - Molom - A Legend Of Mongolia (1995) {Verve 529 034-2}

John McLaughlin - Molom - A Legend Of Mongolia (1995) {Verve 529 034-2}
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© 1995 Verve / Polydor/PolyGram S.A. France | 529 034-2
Jazz / World / Fusion / Etnic Fusion

This McLaughlin album is a rare limited edition French release - soundtrack to a limited edition film "Molom - A Legend Of Mongolia" . All this combination sounds a bit strange, so I almost missed that album. It could be a big mistake! Album contains 22 compositions, only around half of them is McLaughlin pieces, all others are original Mongolian folk songs played and recorded very tastefully, with all acoustic mysticism possible!

John McLaughlin - Music Spoken Here (1982) {Warner}  Music

Posted by tiburon at Oct. 24, 2018
John McLaughlin - Music Spoken Here (1982) {Warner}

John McLaughlin - Music Spoken Here (1982) {Warner}
EAC 0.99pb4 | FLAC Image level 8 | Cue+Log | Full Scans 300dpi | 217MB + 5% Recovery
MP3 CBR 320 Kbps | 89MB + 5% Recovery
Genre: Jazz, Fusion

Though this fitfully inspired yet always intelligently musical record is an electric album, McLaughlin is more often heard on acousticintet, along with bass and drums, contained two keyboard players, Francois Couturier and the noted classical pianist Katia Labeque (who was McLaughlin's companion). Labeque, seated at a Synclavier and a grand piano, has acres of technique and almost no feeling for jazz, though she is adept at providing moody backdrops, and her rapid-fire synth runs and Jarrett-like etudes on the Steinway aren't too far away stylistically from McLaughlin's helter-skelter flurries. In a continued homage to McLaughlin's once and future employer Miles Davis, "Blues for L.W." brazenly quotes "Blues for Pablo," and sometimes the music texturally resembles the heavily synthesized things that Miles would soon be putting out.

John McLaughlin - Black Light (2015) {Abstract Logix ABLX 050}  Music

Posted by ruskaval at Oct. 31, 2020
John McLaughlin - Black Light (2015) {Abstract Logix ABLX 050}

John McLaughlin - Black Light (2015) {Abstract Logix ABLX 050}
XLD rip (secure mode) | FLAC (tracks)+CUE+LOG -> 351 Mb | MP3 @320 -> 112 Mb
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© 2015 Abstract Logix | ABLX 050
Jazz / Jazz Rock / Fusion / Guitar

“Playing and working with the same musicians in a band is a living process which unfolds as time goes by,” reflects guitarist, composer, and bandleader John McLaughlin when considering the release of his latest album, Black Light – the third studio album to feature his band, the 4th Dimension. Available via Abstract Logix on September 18, 2015, Black Light finds the relentlessly inquisitive, exploratory McLaughlin continuing to uncover new melodic and rhythmic pathways with the same fearless zeal that has made him one of modern music’s most admired and influential figures. And, in the 4th Dimension – drummer/vocalist Ranjit Barot, keyboardist/drummer Gary Husband, and bassist Étienne M’Bappé – McLaughlin has gathered a trio of fellow travelers with the collective discipline, technical ability, musicianship, and imagination to support, enhance, and enrich McLaughlin’s challengingly expansive new material and methods.

John McLaughlin - Electric Guitarist (1978) {Columbia}  Music

Posted by tiburon at April 20, 2019
John McLaughlin - Electric Guitarist (1978) {Columbia}

John McLaughlin - Electric Guitarist (1978) {Columbia}
EAC 0.95b4 | FLAC tracks level 8 | Cue+Log+M3U | Full Scans 300dpi | 227MB + 5% Recovery
MP3 CBR 320 Kbps | 90MB + 5% Recovery
Genre: Fusion

Since John McLaughlin's first two post-Shakti albums – Electric Guitarist and Electric Dreams – featured the word "electric" in their titles, it seems that the guitarist wanted to emphasize his more plugged-in side to those who might not have followed along on three previous releases featuring his acoustic world music band. He also thumbed through his impressive phone book to call in some of the cream of the 1977 crop of jazz fusionists to help him out on Electric Guitarist, a true return to form. Ex-Mahavishnu members Jerry Goodman and Billy Cobham assist in kicking things off just like in the old days with "New York on My Mind," a tune that could have been an outtake from his earlier Mahavishnu Orchestra work.

John McLaughlin - After The Rain (1995) {PolyGram}  Music

Posted by tiburon at April 20, 2019
John McLaughlin - After The Rain (1995) {PolyGram}

John McLaughlin - After The Rain (1995) {PolyGram}
EAC 1.3 | FLAC tracks level 8 | Cue+Log+M3U | Full Scans 300dpi | 412MB + 5% Recovery
MP3 CBR 320 Kbps | 131MB + 5% Recovery
Genre: Fusion, Post-Bop

In the early '70s John McLaughlin was one-third of the supergroup Lifetime with drummer Tony Williams and organist Larry Young. This particular CD from 1994 matches him with drummer Elvin Jones and organist Joey DeFrancesco, but the music has little in common with Lifetime. Instead many of the tunes can be considered to be tributes to John Coltrane; Jones's participation certainly reinforces that connection. McLaughlin, back on electric guitar after several years sticking almost exclusively to acoustic, is in top form on such numbers as "Take the Coltrane," "My Favorite Things," "Crescent," and "Afro Blue." The improvising is advanced and colorful with DeFrancesco keeping the proceedings swinging, and even if the results are not quite classic, the collaboration is somewhat unique.
John McLaughlin & The Free Spirits - Tokyo Live (1994) {Verve 314 521 870-2}

John McLaughlin & The Free Spirits - Tokyo Live (1994) {Verve 314 521 870-2}
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© 1994 Verve / Polydor / PolyGram | 314 521 870-2
Jazz / Fusion / Post Bop / Guitar / Hammond B-3 Organ

Although it is tempting to think that The Free Spirits (the trio featured on this CD), due to the similarity of the instrumentation (guitarist John McLaughlin, organist Joey DeFrancesco and drummer Dennis Chambers), would be an updating of Tony Williams's groundbreaking fusion group Lifetime, the reality is somewhat different. McLaughlin may get top billing but this music sounds very much like a Joey DeFrancesco-led Jimmy Smith revival date with most of the selections being blues-based. There are some introspective moments for the guitarist (who plays strictly electric here) but DeFrancesco dominates the ensembles and takes the lion's share of the solo space.

John McLaughlin - Where Fortune Smiles (1971) {Dawn}  Music

Posted by tiburon at June 23, 2020
John McLaughlin - Where Fortune Smiles (1971) {Dawn}

John McLaughlin - Where Fortune Smiles (1971) {Dawn}
EAC 0.99pb4 | FLAC Image level 8 | Cue+Log | Full Scans 300dpi | 191MB + 5% Recovery
MP3 CBR 320 Kbps | 83MB + 5% Recovery
Genre: Fusion, Post-Bop

Where Fortune Smiles is really a John Surman recording, but subsequent re-releases have passed the credit on to John McLaughlin (for obvious reasons). The music is similar to but more dense than Extrapolation. McLaughlin's raw sound was starting to take shape by this time and his impeccable chops are on full display. So too are those of the underrated vibraphonist Karl Berger and, of course, soprano saxophonist Surman. The foundation is held loosely in place by bassist Dave Holland and drummer Stu Martin. It's a challenging but interesting listen, especially given McLaughlin's later success and popularity.
Various Artists - Abstract Logix Live! The New Universe Music Festival 2010 (2011) {Abstract Logix ABLX030} (John McLaughlin)

Various Artists - Abstract Logix Live! The New Universe Music Festival 2010 (2011) {Abstract Logix ABLX030} (John McLaughlin)
EAC rip (secure mode) | FLAC (image)+CUE+LOG -> 914 Mb | MP3 @320 -> 307 Mb
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© 2011 Abstract Logix | ABLX030
Jazz / World Fusion / Jazz Rock / Guitar

On the face of it, this live double-album is an expert genuflection to jazz-rock fusion, with five guitarists and a crop of punchy drummers (including Return to Forever's Lenny White and percussion virtuoso Zakir Hussain) to confirm it. But the playing of the seven bands is anything but predictable. The members sit in with each other here, and their embrace of risk and the pleasure they take in spontaneous performance are palpable. John McLaughlin and the 4th Dimension have Hussain sit in for usual drummer Ranjit Barot in two fiercely vivacious pieces, including an infectious, choppy, 20-minute Hussein showcase, Mother Tongues. Barot leads a violin-dominated Indian-inflected sextet featuring the New York guitar maverick Wayne Krantz as a guest; Krantz also appears with an edgy avant-fusion trio. The chord-crunching, metal-inspired guitarist Alex Machacek opens proceedings with a fast-moving group extensively featuring electric bassist Neal Fountain.

John McLaughlin - Electric Dreams (1978) {Columbia}  Music

Posted by tiburon at April 20, 2019
John McLaughlin - Electric Dreams (1978) {Columbia}

John McLaughlin - Electric Dreams (1978) {Columbia}
EAC 0.95b4 | FLAC Image level 8 | Cue+Log | Full Scans 300dpi | 285MB + 5% Recovery
MP3 CBR 320 Kbps | 90MB + 5% Recovery
Genre: Jazz, Fusion

At this point, it is easy to see that the John McLaughlin story has become a peripatetic journey of electric-acoustic switchbacks, with the formation of the One Truth Band that plays on this LP being just another short chapter in the saga. And this time, McLaughlin is thoroughly in charge: there is little of the competitive dueling or tightly drilled, high-volume unison lines of the past; it's the guitarist and his sidemen, although sometimes keyboardist Stu Goldberg steps out with some wicked chops. McLaughlin returns Miles Davis' favor of naming a piece on Bitches Brew after him by turning the tables, and indeed, "Miles Davis" often has the loose, jamming feeling (and a quote of "It's About That Time") of the maestro's own jazz-rock sessions.