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Call
First time on CD for this killer slice of kosmigroov. Michael Naura is a jazz pianist who recorded for MPS and ECM in the 70s.
Call was originally released on MPS back in 1970. MPS was a very eclectic label. They touched on electric jazz rock, free jazz, straight up jazz and pure schlock. It was a very hard label to pin down and there is a voluminous amount of releases on the label. Collectors have finally focused on digging through the MPS catalogue and prices are starting to soar. I recently picked up a vinyl copy of Call and it cost me a cool $100. Ownership of the MPS catalog has bounced around a bit and now Edel is beginning a large reissue campaign. We hope to cherry pick through the catalog and pick up titles we think would be of interest to our customers.
The Michael Naura Quartett consisted of Michael Naura (Fender Rhodes), Wolfgang Schluter (vibes), Eberhard Weber (bass), and Joe Nay (drums). If you like vibes Mr. Schluter is your guy - he's all over this album. He seamlessly integrates with Naura's electric piano. The rhythm section is amazing. Eberhard Weber's bass will rock your house and Nay is very creative. All together the music has a phenomenal flow to it that will suck you in. While it never crosses over into rock it perfectly captures that time period in the late 60s/early 70s when jazz musicians were beginning to experiment with electric instruments.
I was never much of a vibes guy but Schluter's playing really grabbed my attention. Add in the killer sounds of that Rhodes and you've won me over. For the jazz converted this is a BUY OR DIE disc.
"“The new pieces have little in common with the bebop and cool jazz influences of the old Naura quintet.” So wrote journalist Siegfried Schmidt-Joos in his 1970 liner notes to pianist and bandleader Michael Naura’s album Call. Joos went on to say that Naura had assimilated “the contemporary sounds of free jazz and rock” as well as “the collective playing styles of the younger generation of musicians.” His first album in eight years definitely showed Naura in a new light. Two members of his old quintet, vibraphonist Wolfgang Schlüter and drummer Joe Nay were still in on it, and both had effortlessly mastered – as had Naura – the new rock and blues-oriented styles. With the addition of Eberhard Weber, a jazz-rock trendsetter had stepped into the band. “This musician from Swabia with the face of an old Botticelli angel,” as Nauradescribed the electric bassist, had a substantial impact on the new quartet’s sound. The pieces on this MPS recording are all written by Naura. Born in 1934, Naura broke off his journalism studies in Berlin to become a musician. Vibraphonist Schlüter was with him when Naura formed a band in the 1950’s. This first band was heavily influenced by pianist George Shearing’s style. Naura and Schlüter have continued to play together on into the new century. Drummer Joe Nay, who Naura prized as “the perfect incendiary”, died in 1990."