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We Could Be Flying
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We Could Be Flying
Current price: $20.99
Barnes and Noble
We Could Be Flying
Current price: $20.99
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Recorded for
Polydor
, six years after her landmark
Joy
album, this set features Norwegian
jazz
iconoclast
Karin Krog
in the electric company of keyboardist
Steve Kuhn
, drummer percussionist
Jon Christensen
, and
Steve Swallow
on one of his early electric bass dates. More song-oriented than her other vanguard dates,
We Could Be Flying
still showcases the singer in a restless, searching frame of creativity. Obviously influenced by the work
Flora Purim
had done with
Return to Forever
and the heyday of
jazz-rock
fusion
,
Krog
nonetheless puts her indelible stylistic stamp on all the material here. The best tunes here were written by
Kuhn
, who seems to understand the subtlest nuances in
's performing style, as evidenced by
"Meaning of Love,"
with its driven, wispy
Latin
rhythms and melodic lines that seem to bleed into one another, capturing the softness of
's enunciation. The seemingly rocked-up cover of
Joni Mitchell
's
"All I Want"
feels out of place here, the band feels stilted into trying to rein themselves into the conventional cut-time signature and fixed spaces where fills are almost unwelcome. While
Mitchell
's own version is far looser and spacier than this, the band seems to have misunderstood her original intent in this song. The co-write between
Carla Bley
and
on
"Sing Me Softly of the Blues,"
finds the band back on its square, swinging the
blues
in cool nocturnal fashion with
Christensen
's swinging cymbal work carries the band underneath the singer's husky contralto. The finest moment here is the funky
"Raindrops, Raindrops"
written by
, where his electric piano and double-time bass and drums fall in just behind
's shimmering, airy performance. This recording is a fine document of its time, capturing its naivete, sense of adventure, and its willingness to step outside the
and vanguard box while never giving in to
pop
convention. Recommended. ~ Thom Jurek
Polydor
, six years after her landmark
Joy
album, this set features Norwegian
jazz
iconoclast
Karin Krog
in the electric company of keyboardist
Steve Kuhn
, drummer percussionist
Jon Christensen
, and
Steve Swallow
on one of his early electric bass dates. More song-oriented than her other vanguard dates,
We Could Be Flying
still showcases the singer in a restless, searching frame of creativity. Obviously influenced by the work
Flora Purim
had done with
Return to Forever
and the heyday of
jazz-rock
fusion
,
Krog
nonetheless puts her indelible stylistic stamp on all the material here. The best tunes here were written by
Kuhn
, who seems to understand the subtlest nuances in
's performing style, as evidenced by
"Meaning of Love,"
with its driven, wispy
Latin
rhythms and melodic lines that seem to bleed into one another, capturing the softness of
's enunciation. The seemingly rocked-up cover of
Joni Mitchell
's
"All I Want"
feels out of place here, the band feels stilted into trying to rein themselves into the conventional cut-time signature and fixed spaces where fills are almost unwelcome. While
Mitchell
's own version is far looser and spacier than this, the band seems to have misunderstood her original intent in this song. The co-write between
Carla Bley
and
on
"Sing Me Softly of the Blues,"
finds the band back on its square, swinging the
blues
in cool nocturnal fashion with
Christensen
's swinging cymbal work carries the band underneath the singer's husky contralto. The finest moment here is the funky
"Raindrops, Raindrops"
written by
, where his electric piano and double-time bass and drums fall in just behind
's shimmering, airy performance. This recording is a fine document of its time, capturing its naivete, sense of adventure, and its willingness to step outside the
and vanguard box while never giving in to
pop
convention. Recommended. ~ Thom Jurek