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The Ultimate Adventure

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Album Review

For the second time in two years, Chick Corea has assembled a band to give aural illustration to the fantasy writings of L. Ron Hubbard. For those who have trouble with Hubbard and his teachings, this may be a red flag to avoid the record altogether. The Ultimate Adventure is a tale that draws on characters from the Arabian Nights — there is an ad for the book in the back of the CD booklet. With that out of the way, one has to deal with the music entirely on its own terms. Corea has spent decades playing both electric and acoustic jazz. This is the first time since 1976's My Spanish Heart that he has woven his love of both so completely into a single album. There are more than a few echoes here that call upon the ghosts of the earliest Return to Forever band — primarily in the gorgeous flute playing of Hubert Laws and Jorge Pardo, in the saxophone artistry of Tim Garland, the drumming of Steve Gadd, and the percussion wizardry of not only Airto Moreira, but also of Hossam Ramzy — just to name a few of this album's players. But as always, it's Corea's compositions and playing that make or break any of his outings. This one is complex, knotty, and contains nuevo flamenco sketches and exotic melodic grooves and rhythms from "North Africa" and the Middle East. The second part of the opening suite "Three Ghouls" — which makes it ghoul number two, apparently — showcases Corea on the electric piano and electronic percussion with Laws playing soulful and slightly funky. His flute gets double-tracked as it floats above Moreira and bassist Carles Benavent. It's spacey, airy groove is intoxicating. It morphs into the knotty percussive and slightly "out" part three, where palmas — handclapped rhythms — by Corea, Gadd, and Benavent are contrasted to the dissonant acoustic piano and funky Rhodes woven side by side in counterpoint. This stands in contrast to the electric, short, fused-out, three-part suite entitled "Moseb the Executioner." The first part is a tangled mix up of Garland and Corea's Rhodes. It ends in a percussion orgy by Moreira and Ruben Dantas with palmas by the entire band. There are gorgeous melodic interludes in "North Africa" courtesy of Pardo and Corea. "Flight from Karoof" is simply a fusion gem. Ultimately, Ultimate Adventure works extremely well; it's inspired, takes chances, and is compositionally a small wonder. Above all, it sounds like Corea and his band had a ball making it. Recommended for fusion-heads.

Customer Reviews

A less confusing, more melodic Chick outing

While I've enjoyed certain musical moments, and certainly marveled at the assembled virtuosity of Chick Corea's Elektric Band years, it was the 70's stuff, like Return to Forever's 'Romantic Warrior' , and the soul-jazz of 'Three Quartets' that got my attention and made me a fan back in high school, and held onto me through music school. This record is a bit of a long-winded, but nonetheless acessible return to the feeling of that material, with an emphasis on percussion and hand drumming. I still don't quite get the futuristic fable titles, or what they have to do with the melodies, but I'm enjoying these grooves and this music, and this is some Chick that I can listen to while I drive, and not get into an accident.

Great music

This is good stuff, a lot of good songs. Most of it sounds like it was composed instead of improvised. BUT before you buy the album, let me warn you that the last two songs are the same song! They have different names, but check the times, they are the same. Oops. I was listening and it was like WTF?

BRAVO!

Welcome back, Chick. This CD is the first Chick Corea release in years that reaches back to his Return To Forever and "Friends"-era solo work. Nice smooth fusion sound -- not sell out smooth jazz, but chilled jazz and PURE Chick Corea. I recommend this to Chick fans from back in the day and to first-timers. Gotta run ... going to listen to it again!

Biography

Born: June 12, 1941 in Chelsea, MA

Genre: Jazz

Years Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s

Chick Corea has been one of the most significant jazzmen since the '60s. Not content at any time to rest on his laurels, he has been involved in quite a few important musical projects, and his musical curiosity has never dimmed. A masterful pianist who, along with Herbie Hancock and Keith Jarrett, was one of the top stylists to emerge after Bill Evans and McCoy Tyner, Corea is also one of the few electric keyboardists to be quite...
Full Bio