Tom Scott & the L.A. Express/Tom Cat/New York Connection

Tom Scott & the L.A. Express/Tom Cat/New York Connection

by Tom Scott & the L.A. Express, Tom Scott
Tom Scott & the L.A. Express/Tom Cat/New York Connection

Tom Scott & the L.A. Express/Tom Cat/New York Connection

by Tom Scott & the L.A. Express, Tom Scott

CD

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Overview

The second chapter in BGO's reissue program from saxophonist Tom Scott's Epic period assembles three albums from the mid-'70s on two discs. Unlike his GRP sides of a decade later, these three dates all feature Scott blowing with imagination and power, even at the funkiest of times. Included are 1974's Tom Scott & the L.A. Express, and 1975's Tom Cat and New York Connection. The first of these albums featured Scott's best all-around band with Joe Sample on keyboards, guitarist Larry Carlton, drummer John Guerin, and bassist Max Bennett. Polished? Yeah, but gritty, too: check the utterly reivisioned reading of John Coltrane's "Dahomey Dance" as a jazz-funk groover, or uptempo jams such as "L.A. Expression" and "Nunya." Sample and Carlton left the band before Tom Cat and were replaced by guitarist Robben Ford and keyboardist Larry Nash, and the results are just as compelling. Hard groovers like "Rock Island Rocket," the melodic bump of the title track, and the popping "Backfence Cattin," make this a prime exercise. Joni Mitchell even shows up for a bit of wordless vocalizing on the languid "Love Poem." New York Connection, while more polished and less intensely funky than its predecessors, is still completely worthwhile. Scott works with a rotating cast of sidemen who include Bob James, Richard Tee, Hugh McCracken, Eric Gale, Ralph MacDonald, Steve Gadd, Chuck Findley, and Dick Hyde. Former Beatle George Harrison takes a signature slide guitar break on the sweet "Appolonia." Other standouts include the fingerpopping "Uptown & Country" (which borrows equally from Motown and Stax) and the dancefloor strut of "Midtown Rush," with its wild meld of synth and treated harmonica. These records may be of their time, but they also stand its test. ~ Thom Jurek

Product Details

Release Date: 02/11/2014
Label: Beat Goes On / Bgo
UPC: 5017261211378
Rank: 54868

Tracks

Disc 1

  1. Bless My Soul
  2. Sneakin' in the Back
  3. King Cobra
  4. Dahomey Dance
  5. Nunya
  6. Easy Life
  7. Spindrift
  8. Strut Your Stuff
  9. L.A. Expression
  10. Vertigo
  11. Rock Island Rocket
  12. Tom Cat
  13. Day Way
  14. Keep on Doin' It
  15. Love Poem

Disc 2

  1. Good Evening Mr. & Mirs. America & All the Ships at Sea
  2. Backfence Cattin'
  3. Mondo
  4. Refried
  5. Dirty Old Man
  6. Uptown & Country
  7. New York Connection
  8. Garden
  9. Time and Love
  10. Midtown Rush
  11. Looking Out for Number 7
  12. Appolonia
  13. You're Gonna Need Me

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Tom Scott & the L.A. Express   Primary Artist
Tom Scott   Primary Artist,Arp String Ensemble,Moog Synthesizer,Sax (Baritone),Sax (Soprano),Sax (Tenor),Percussion,Saxophone,Horn,Flute,Lyricon,Woodwind,Harmonica
Eric Gale   Bass,Guitar
George Harrison   Slide Guitar
Hugh McCracken   Guitar,Harmonica,Slide Guitar
Richard Tee   Keyboards
Max Bennett   Bass
Ralph McDonald   Percussion
Dick Hyde   Trombone,Trumpet (Bass)
Gary King   Bass
Larry Nash   Organ,ARP Synthesizer,Piano (Electric)
Larry Carlton   Guitar
Chuck Findley   Trumpet
Bob James   Piano (Electric)
Steve Gadd   Drums
Joe Sample   Keyboards
John Guerin   Drums,Percussion
Robben Ford   Guitar (Acoustic),Guitar (Electric)

Technical Credits

Richard Tee   Composer
Milt Calice   Assistant Engineer
Hank Cicalo   Mixing,Engineer,Producer
Charles Waring   Liner Notes
Kevin Herron   Assistant Engineer
Chuck Tremmel   Assistant Engineer
Andrew Thompson   Remastering
Colombier   Composer
Hank Ciaclo   Engineer
Bennett Carlton   Composer
Tom Scott   Arranger,Producer
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