Birds Of Fire

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (89 ratings)
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Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 39:54

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wonder how you can rate that one other than 5

wk_emusic2

This is _the_ Jazz-Rock album. If your ears are adopted to pop and lounge stuff you need to hear track 1 maybe 20 times. But then it's like taking the sunglasses off in the tunnel.

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JAN KAMMER??

FUSIONFRED

...ouch!!.....Jan Hammer!! ...please correct that typo in the credits... before he sees it!!...thanks!!

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Tops For Musicianship

Nichonym

The best for learning how music works. Music, sports, puzzles. Top artistry. The players reach the highest level of proficiency. This music stands alone, especially "Celestial Terrestrial". In history, no one improvs better as a group and under such musical challenges. Play along for best appreciation of skill.-

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fortunately you can download single tracks

djFLWB

Start with tracks 1,7,8,9&10 They are probably all you'll really need from this album. Or just start with the title track (1) which is a jazz/fusion classic. Then decide if this your cup of tea.

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They Say All Media Guide

Emboldened by the popularity of Inner Mounting Flame among rock audiences, the first Mahavishnu Orchestra set out to further define and refine its blistering jazz-rock direction in its second — and, no thanks to internal feuding, last — studio album. Although it has much of the screaming rock energy and sometimes exaggerated competitive frenzy of its predecessor, Birds of Fire is audibly more varied in texture, even more tightly organized, and thankfully more musical in content. A remarkable example of precisely choreographed, high-speed solo trading — with John McLaughlin, Jerry Goodman, and Jan Hammer all of one mind, supported by Billy Cobham’s machine-gun drumming and Rick Laird’s dancing bass — can be heard on the aptly named “One Word,” and the title track is a defining moment of the group’s nearly atonal fury. The band also takes time out for a brief bit of spaced-out electronic burbling and static called “Sapphire Bullets of Pure Love.” Yet the most enticing pieces of music on the record are the gorgeous, almost pastoral opening and closing sections to “Open Country Joy,” a relaxed, jocular bit of communal jamming that they ought to have pursued further. This album actually became a major crossover hit, rising to number 15 on the pop album charts, and it remains the key item in the first Mahavishnu Orchestra’s slim discography. – Richard S. Ginell

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