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Burnin' Red Ivanhoe - Burnin' Red Ivanhoe CD (album) cover

BURNIN' RED IVANHOE

Burnin' Red Ivanhoe

 

Jazz Rock/Fusion

3.78 | 57 ratings

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BrufordFreak like
3 stars The second album released by Denmark's first progressive rock band results in a cornucopia of psychedelic rock with some infusion of jazz sounds and instruments.

1. "Across The Windowsill (7:40) rooted in psychedelic pop music of the Argent/Animals ilk, this is a song that sounds like it could have come from the Sixties. Oh. Wait! It did! Four chord rock for the jam in the third through minutes over which Ole Fick solos on his electric guitar. Karsten Vogel's organ sound and riffs are straight out of the Animals' repertoire and Ole's voice is pure late Sixties Steve Winwood or Mark Farner. The most interesting thing in the song is the weird sounding saxophone soloing through the seventh and eighth minutes. All in all it's a very solid song for its time. (13.25/15) 2. "Canaltrip" (5:21) with their acoustic instruments only we get a conglomeration of Django-ed "Take Five" played in a relaxed Beatnick circle. Two acoustic guitarists, two percussionists, and Kim Menzer's tenor saxophone playing over five minutes of a two-chord cycle. Interesting--especially the purposely-raunchy sax play--but not sure it's worth five minutes of attention. Though Kim's sax play is awesome (as far as saxophone play goes), perhaps this one would have been better off left in the practice room. (8.75/10)

3. "Rotating Irons" (8:19) harmonica leads us into a very laid-back, San Francisco-sounding blues-rock tune. Nice, steady play from the Lou Reed bass and drums. Free floating bluesy electric guitar joins for a bit before Ole Fick enters with a raspy shout vocal. This is as good as anything coming out of the U.S.'s West Coast psychedelic scene of the late 1960s. A slight increase in both tempo and intensity occurs at the end of the fourth minute as the organ's two chords and Kim's mouthharp rejoins, but it's really Ole's show: guitar and vocal alternating in the spotlight like a true star of the blues (B.B. King comes to mind). Very solid and engaging for this kind of music. (18/20)

4. "Gong-Gong, The Elephant Song" (5:40) opens with one chord held long and hard while multiple horns spin around with the shaker percussion. Then the band jumps into gear with a near-surfer three-chord guitar riff repeated ad nauseum within a rhythm section that is moving along at a runner's pace. Kim's mouthharp takes the lead for a good long minute before any sign of the reeds returns, but then a motif switch allows the alto sax to grab the lead while the band returns to the pseudo-surfer motif.around the four minute mark the wind group comes together for a bit to announce room for the second saxophone, and then it just kind of ends, with each instrument sticking around a bit as if unsure if they're really supposed to stop. Nice solid jamming that yields nothing very memorable. (8.75/10)

5. "Near The Sea" (3:58) here Ole sings as if he's Electric Dylan while the band accompanies him with some gentle folk R&B. Electrified folk, if you ask me. (8.75/10)

6. "Secret Oyster Service" (9:48) five minutes of spacious, pensive, bare-minimum of instrumental support for an extended tenor saxophone solo before the band breaks into a "I'm Just a Singer in a Rock 'n' Roll Band"-like rock motif only to continue to support a now-more frenetic saxophonist. in the eighth minute a second saxophone starts his engine and gets into the act while the others continue their crazy pace down the mountainside. While Karsten Vogel's alto screeches and wails, the rest of the band coalesces into a harmonically-texturalized flow for the big finish. Okay; that was that! (17.25/20)

Total Time: 40:46

I'm not convinced this album should be anywhere near the Jazz-Rock Fusion classification; if it's due to their future production (and Kim Menzer's wind instrument acumen), I get it, but I'll not be including this album among the mainline J-R F albums.

B-/four stars; a nice display of burgeoning talent getting their chops in line. Not sure I'd recommend this album to anyone other than the die-hard fans of 1960s blues psych but it's not bad!

BrufordFreak | 3/5 |

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