Billy Cobham Spectrum Pop Music CD Review
Richly talented Dad creative person Truncheon Cobham have released him up-to-the-minute record album titled Spectrum and Wow! It's good.
I wish it weren't the lawsuit but, it's not mundane that I acquire a cadmium from an creative person that I can just protrude in and comfortably listen to from beginning to end. There is usually a song or two that I just can't coerce myself to acquire through. Not at all the lawsuit with Spectrum. Every path is gratifying and was pretty easy for me to listen to from start to finish.
Spectrum is a pleasantly varied, premix of 6 paths that are very well written songs by this clearly outstanding artist. With many of the songs displaying a batch of the sort emotion that brands for a really great listen. Seemingly drawing from what I can only conceive of are him have existent life experiences. At different points touching on the most existent emotions like love, and the hurting of failing human relationships can certainly be heard.
Overall Spectrum is a solid release. Quite possibly Truncheon Cobham's best to date. Really dramatic from beginning to end. If you're level mildly into Dad music you'll bask this CD.
While the full cadmium is really very good the truly standout melodies are path 2 - Searching For The Right Door / Spectrum, path 5 - To The Women In My Life / Lupus Erythematosus Lis, and path 6 - Snoopy's Search / Red Baron.
My Bonus Pick, and the 1 that got Sensitive [...as in "Stuck On REpeat"] is path 1 - Quadrant 4. This is a great track!
Spectrum Release Notes:
Billy Cobham originally released Spectrum on February 25, 1992 on the Rhinoceros Records label.
CD Path List Follows:
1. Quadrant 4
2. Searching For The Right Door / Spectrum
3. Anxiety / Taurian Matador
4. Stratus
5. To The Women In My Life / Lupus Erythematosus Lis
6. Snoopy's Search / Red Baron
Personnel: Truncheon Cobham (percussion); Joe James Thomas Farrell (soprano & alto saxophone, flute); Jimmy Jesse Owens (flugelhorn, trumpet); January Hammer (piano, electrical piano, Moog synthesizer); Toilet Tropea, Tommy Bolin (guitar); Bokkos Howard Carter (acoustic bass); Spike Lee Sklar (electric bass); Beam Barretto (congas).
Labels: Billy Cobham, CD Review, Pop Music, Spectrum
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home