AUTOR

Monday, July 2, 2012

Alphonse Mouzon-Mind Transplant (1974)

"Mind Transplant" is often considered Alphonse Mouzon's best recording, one of the most acclaimed drummers of the golden age of jazz fusion. In the early 1960s, he graduated from high school and subsequently pursued various careers, including drama and medicine. However, some time later, he focused on studying music with the renowned drummer Billy Taylor. His professional career began in the mid-1960s when he was barely twenty years old, performing alongside McCoy Tyner. In the 1970s, he joined the legendary Weather Report, with whom he recorded the album "Weather Report" in 1970. After this venture, he joined another jazz-rock giant, Larry Coryell's Eleventh House, contributing to the band's brilliant debut. In 1973, Mouzon released his first solo album, "The Essence of Mystery", a work focused on jazz-funk with Latin influences. After a second album that continued in the same vein, "Funky Snakefoot", Mouzon released his third album, "Mind Transplant", which featured collaborations with three great guitarists: Tommy Bolin, Lee Ritenour, and Jay Graydon; keyboardists Jerry Peters and Rocke Grace; and bassists Henry Davis and Stanley Sheldon. On this third record, Mouzon shifted his style towards a powerful jazz-rock sound, with expansive instrumental lines that almost bordered on hard rock, as evidenced by tracks like "Mind Transplant", "Snow Bound", "Carbon Dioxide", "Ascorbic Acid", and "Nitroglycerin". In the following years, Mouzon continued to release solo albums, as well as perform and collaborate with jazz and rock greats such as Herbie Hancock, Gil Evans, Al Di Meola, Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, and Miles Davis.