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Back on the Corner

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Download links and information about Back on the Corner by David Liebman. This album was released in 2007 and it belongs to Jazz genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 01:01:07 minutes.

Artist: David Liebman
Release date: 2007
Genre: Jazz
Tracks: 11
Duration: 01:01:07
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Songswave €1.72

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. 5th Street (feat. Mike Stern & Tony Marino) 7:42
2. Ife (feat. Vic Juris & Tony Marino) 8:10
3. Bass Interlude 1:24
4. Black Satin (feat. Mike Stern & Tony Marino) 5:25
5. Bela (feat. Tony Marino, Vic Juris & Mike Stern) 7:45
6. Drum Interlude 1:32
7. New Mambo (feat. Marko Marcinko, Mike Stern & Tony Marino) 7:37
8. Acoustic Guitar Interlude (feat. Vic Juris) 1:52
9. Mesa D'espana (feat. Vic Juris, Mike Stern & Tony Marino) 7:34
10. Electric Guitar Interlude (feat. Mike Stern) 1:30
11. J.B. Meets Sly / 5th Street (Reprise) [feat. Vic Juris, Mike Stern & Tony Marino] 10:36

Details

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While listening to saxophonist Dave Liebman's 2006 release, Back on the Corner, it's pretty darn hard not to think of Miles Davis' groundbreaking early-'70s fusion period. And there are obvious reasons for this: firstly, Liebman actually played with Davis at one point (appearing on Davis' 1973 release, On the Corner), another Davis sideman plays throughout the album (guitarist Mike Stern), and lastly, two of the compositions were penned by Davis himself. Joining Liebman and Stern is renowned sessionman Anthony Jackson on contrabass, plus Liebman's own band of the last 15 years (bassist Tony Marino, guitarist Vic Juris, and drummer Marko Marcinko). And the group admirably replicates the sound and feel of all those classic fusion releases of the early '70s (no Spyro Gyra-esque blahness here), especially on the aforementioned Davis-penned tracks, "Ife" and the downright funky "Black Satin," as well as the laid-back album opener, "5th Street," and another funk workout, the properly titled "J.B. Meets Sly." If you think that vintage-sounding fusion is dead and gone circa the early 21st century, Dave Liebman's Back on the Corner should change your mind.