Oregon – Music of Another Present Era [1972; Vanguard]

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On their first album, the fusion jazz group Oregon keeps things gentle, with the assorted strings, percussion, and wind instruments winding through a range of world music styles.  Largely absent of vocals, the compositions manage their sizable ensembles well, and the passing-off of melodies and beat-lines through the group is done with disarming deftness.  The songs also move fairly quickly for their style, averaging about three minutes and change for the fourteen tracks, aided by the focused song-writing to keep the music free of repetitive bloat.  While none of the tracks lend themselves to humming, the hooks do have a tendency to lie in memory and unexpectedly resurface.  A nice debut, if a bit light in its form, with an impressive base of technique laid for further expansion.

Here’s the cover art used on some reissues.

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Grover Washington, Jr. – Inner City Blues [1971; Kudu]

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Packing six cover songs (two of them originally by Marvin Gaye), this jazz album moves in bursts, whether shrilling along on hard saxophone blats, dodging about on staccato drum-work, or giving the spot-light over to one of the other musicians, almost two dozen of whom feature alongside Grover Washington.  As the first album released under Washington’s own name, the all-cover line-up makes sense for the purposes of proving himself using pre-tested material, but the saxophonist operates so smoothly and confidently with his collaborators that any roughness there might have been is effectively erased.

Though the majority of the songs are fully instrumental, the rare deployments of vocals (most noticeably on “Ain’t No Sunshine”) match the rest of the arrangements in the clear consideration of how to make the numerous elements best work together in service of the music.  Too spiky and twisting to fit the smooth jazz label, it does still share some of the lulling effects of that style, so that while the musicianship is excellent, it can feel, if not dull, at least a little soporific.  That slickness is impressive for a first album, but at the same time, a little more rawness would have helped bring some of the emotionality out into clearer relief.

Here’s the cover art used for the album’s Spanish release as Jazz & Blues, Vol. 28.

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