Known Unknown

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 47:43

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not just a wanker album

Ju

I haden't even thought about Vernon Reid for several years, and when I saw this album on emusic I thought I'd give it a chance. At first listen the first two songs are a little cheezy but if you give it a chance, this album really gets going on the third song, and stays strong the rest of the way through. Vernon's Guitar playing is straight up sick. His playing is almost a mixture of John McLaughlin, Greg Ginn and Dr. know. The band is incredible, especially the drums. This is mostly a jazz record. It has moments where the recording has a wonderful low-fi quality that adds a raw live sound to this recording. Sure Known Unknown is focused on the guitar for most of the record, but it is far from a guitar wanker record. I like it!

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They Say All Media Guide

Vernon Reid finally follows up his solo debut with Known Unknown, a mere eight years (!) after Mistaken Identity. The template is basically the same: Reid and his longtime bandmates keyboardist Leon Gruenbaum and bassist Hank Schroy (drummer Marlon Browden is new for this recording) set up deceptively simple little heads and then just throw down. Reid gets some amazingly thick tones out of his guitar, and his playing sounds like no one else. Mistaken Identity was graced with some great clarinet blowing, courtesy of Don Byron. Byron sits out this date (although one of the solos in “Outskirts” sure sounds like clarinet), but that just gives Gruenbaum more room to stretch out. Byron’s presence is missed, to be sure, but Gruenbaum turns in some absolutely head-spinning solos, often on his own keyboard invention, the Samchillian Tip Tip Tip Chee Peeee. The production is a good bit more straightforward as well: Reid co-produced Known Unknown with engineer Joe Johnson, while the last one was helmed by Reid with Prince Paul and Teo Macero (what a producer lineup!). This album is totally instrumental, whereas the last one had a moment or two with vocals and many samples, and the loopiness and sense of humor Prince Paul brought to the table are largely absent. Interestingly, they try out a couple of covers on this album: Monk’s “Brilliant Corners” and Lee Morgan’s “The Sidewinder,” the latter of which is ultimately more successful (it ain’t easy doing justice to Monk tunes). DJ Logic joins for “Voodoo Pimp Stroll,” one of the album’s highlights, along with the beautiful “Time.” Known Unknown may not reach the highs of Mistaken Identity, but it’s great to hear Vernon Reid’s guitar out front again on an all-instrumental album. – Sean Westergaard

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