Cure All

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Cure All album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 51:05

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Love RW

direwolf0701

got into him after his work with Steve Kimock. This release is some of the best Jazz of the decade!! super smooth, great riffs, very upbeat. You wont regret having this in your collection

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Super Jazzy

thirdeye89

Great album, upbeat, funky, melodic, smooth sometimes, rough at others. Definitely an album with substance. Money Changes, Cure All, Parts and Holes, Measure Up were my favorites

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Great Album

BanzaiBill

One of the most underappreciated Jazz/Funk albums of 2008, it seems that Palmetto is re-issuing this work in 2009. As it begins to work its way back to the airwaves, take a listen to this incredible album. Robert Walter on Hammond B-3 and piano, Johnny Vidacovich on drums, and James Singleton on bass. For New Orleanians, this album is a "no-brainer." Walter's B-3 work is superb, but his work on the piano is amazing. Take a listen to "Scores of Spores," "Parts and Holes," "Maple Plank," "Measure Up," "Hillary Street," and Singleton's signature piece "Bulldog Run." A complete album top to bottom--one of my favorites from 2008. Now--I can add it to one of my favorites for 2009. Banzai Bill White, The Jazz Set, www.live365.com/stat- ions/- - banzaibill_wwoz

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They Say All Music Guide

Robert Walter has no problem getting into funky, down-home soul-jazz when he wants to, but the organist/keyboardist/pianist also has his intellectual side. He obviously appreciates the soul-jazz that B-3 icons like Jimmy Smith, Richard “Groove” Holmes, Johnny “Hammond” Smith, and Jack McDuff offered in the ’60s, but he has also shown his appreciation of Medeski, Martin & Wood as well as the post-bop and fusion that Larry Young explored after he moved beyond soul-jazz. And both sides of Walter’s artistry serve him well on Cure All. If Walter (who forms a trio with bassist James Singleton and drummer Johnny Vidacovich) set out to offer a healthy balance of intellect and funkiness, he achieves that goal on enjoyable tracks such as “Maple Plank,” “Snakes and Spiders,” “Measure Up,” and “Coupe.” Most of the material is more cerebral than a typical soul-jazz performance would be, but at the same time, Cure All is less cerebral than Medeski, Martin & Wood’s albums. Whether he is on organ, acoustic piano, or electric keyboards, Walter usually avoids becoming either too simple or too abstract. Not that there is anything wrong with either simplicity or abstraction; the straightforward, groove-loving bluesiness of Big John Patton and Gene Harris is every bit as valid a part of jazz as the most challenging pieces that John Medeski has had to offer. But Walter obviously wanted to avoid going too far in either direction, and that outlook yields consistently worthwhile results on Cure All. – Alex Henderson

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