Sunday 2 November 2008

Dave Grusin - Discovered Again






Boomp3.com
Boomp3.com

DAVE GRUSIN
Discovered Again

1976


66 MB
256+ VBR LAME mp3
Vinyl rip & scans from Sheffield Labs ST500



Some background info excerpted from the much lengthier album review on Dave Grusin's website:

Over 12 years had passed since Dave Grusin was last featured player on an album when he recorded “Discovered Again” for Sheffield Labs in 1976.

This remarkable direct-to-disc recording has remained for over a quarter of a century, the subject of discussion and analysis by audiophiles around the world, a true `reference recording' in terms of music and engineering alike.


This is Dave Grusin, still not yet at the mid-point of his career, but already at the highest echelon of his chosen fields. Having served as sideman, conductor, arranger and/or producer on so many albums for other artists (not to mention composer/performer on soundtracks), at last fans again had the chance to hear him at the center point of a recording, with three original compositions as an added bonus.


The result is probably one of his most unique recorded performances, as the direct-to-disc procedure offers a spontaneous experience of the artist going from one mood to another without a break.


However, whereas those technically enchanted by the recording procedure wax lyrical about “Discovered Again,” what is in fact on record is not necessarily the sound actually produced in the studio. All the manipulation which might take place at the mixing stage, was done during the actual cutting of the master, the technology basically being in the microphones.


“For me, it was painful to record direct-to-disc. Our music didn't require the things you do with symphony orchestras,” Dave Grusin has lamented. The ambience and harmonic overtones of concert hall acoustics were nonexistent in the recording studio where the wonderful Sheffield Labs equipment could not be utilized to best effect.


He goes on to use Ron Carter's bass by way of explanation, declaring that the stellar player “had spent his life up to that point making the bottom notes of a bass ring.” Remembering the session, he declares, “his left hand was amazing. He made them ring for about half an hour.”


Dave Grusin felt that the engineers didn't quite grasp the value of this, and “rolled all the bottom off and pushed the top. They wanted to make him sound like Ray Brown.” So, in addition to having to be satisfied with a `first' rather than best performance, “things like that were really in conflict.”


While feeling that “It wasn't that difficult doing the side, going from one tune to the next,” Dave Grusin reveals, "It drove me crazy. I didn't see any reason, from a musical standpoint, to do a whole side like a program, one thing after another with a studio band,” he adds, pointing out that if they had been able to stop and work on each track separately, a more effective recording could have been created.


Still, It is, without doubt, one of Dave Grusin's most pleasurable recordings. And the pianist himself admits, “Now, when I hear the record, it sounds pretty good to me.”



Dave Grusin - Keys
Lee Ritenour - Guitar
Ron Carter - Bass
Harvey Mason - Drums
Larry Bunker - Percussion, Vibes


1 A Child Is Born
2 Keep Your Eye On The Sparrow
3 Sun Song
4 Captain Bacardi
5 Git Along Little Doggies
6 The Colorado Trail
7 Cripple Creek Breakdown
8 Adeus A Papai


If you're cruisin' for a Grusin, Soundological's got one for you HERE or HERE.

2 comments:

AMM said...

many thanks cheeba for this gem!
love anything by dave grusin!

Andy said...

Nice Cheeba,nice.Thanks