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Sean Malone - Cortlandt CD (album) cover

CORTLANDT

Sean Malone

 

Jazz Rock/Fusion

3.80 | 37 ratings

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Mellotron Storm
Prog Reviewer
4 stars This is a Sean Malone solo album (his first and only so far) and it's pretty much an all instrumental affair except for some female vocal melodies on one track. This was originally released on a label that sort of specializes in releasing albums from bass players. I have the remastered edition from the "Free Electric Sound" label with a bonus track. Malone's buddy Sean Reinert is the drummer here. I don't think Malone does anything without him. They both played in CYNIC and GORDIAN KNOT. Actually this album was released between those two projects. Sean calls it a "transition" album between the two. There certainly isn't the heaviness of CYNIC on here, it's if anything closer to GORDIAN KNOT but this is more Fusion. By the way the bonus track "Unquity Road" was originally released on the Japanese release of GORDIAN KNOT's first album.

"Controversy" settles into a jazzy mode quickly with guitar playing over top. Bass leads before 2 1/2 minutes. "Splinter" opens with drums and some powerful guitar too. A bass show before a minute as the drums pound. The guitar is back a minute later. "Fischer's Gambit" features drums, keyboards and bass early. Some laid back guitar arrives after 1 1/2 minutes. "Hand Full Of Earth" opens with percussion as drums, bass and keyboards join in quickly. It settles right down 1 1/2 minutes in with percussion and bass only. Guitar joins in as themes are repeated. Love the spacey atmosphere before 5 minutes to the end. "Sinfonia" is a Bach tune. No I don't know who he is either. My least favourite as Malone plays his stick solo on this classically themed tune. It's actually pretty cool. "Giant Steps" is a John Coltrane tune that Sean has re-arranged. Drums, guitar and bass here. It sounds so good before 1 1/2 minutes.

"At Taliesen" opens with percussion. Guitar a minute in and it sounds amazing the rest of the way. "Big Sky Wanting" has a guest appearance from Trey Gunn on his warr guitar. Percussion to start and bass leads before a minute.The guitar after 2 minutes is tasteful. This sounds really good. It turns surprisingly heavy 5 minutes in. Nice. The drumming to open "The Big Idea" sounds great. Guitar and bass join in. Just an excellent tune.The female vocal melodies are like a pale of cold water on it though. "Unquity Road" is the bonus track written by Pat Metheny (no idea who he is either) this is a powerful yet intricate track.

If your into instrumental Fusion you should check this album out.

Mellotron Storm | 4/5 |

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