Recorded in 1972, guitarist
Larry Coryell's
Offering has often been overlooked because it was the album that was released just before the debut of his legendary
fusion band
the Eleventh House. It's too bad, too, since
Coryell's playing here is so inspired and free of the intellectual trappings of some of his later work. The band on
Offering is a crack
jazz-rock outfit made up of drummer
Harry Wilkinson, bassist
Melvyn Bronson, soprano saxophonist
Steve Marcus, and electric pianist
Mike Mandel (also a founding member of
the Eleventh House). The vibe on this set is akin to the rugged
jazz-rock forging of
Soft Machine beginning on
Fourth. And while it's tempting to lump this set in with the rest of the fused-out fare of the time,
Offering is a distinctly -- and consciously -- more melodic record than those issued by
Coryell's contemporaries at the time. Compositions such as
"Foreplay," with its loping soprano and keyboard lines, stand apart from most of the
Miles Davis-inspired crowd (
Hancock,
Corea, et. al), and
"Ruminations" with its knotty, striated
bop lines, comes on strong from the middle of three entwining harmonic figures to reach out and create a melodic framer from the pathos;
Coryell's solo, which is equal parts
Jimi Hendrix and
Sonny Sharrock, is a wonderfully scorching and elusive sprite. Beginning with
"Scotland I," which closes out side one, the jams get a bit more abstract and a bit more involved with the primacy of improvisation without losing their lyrical sensibilities.
Offering is, in its own way, every bit as strong as
the Eleventh House's debut and deserves to be considered hand in hand with it. ~ Thom Jurek