Ego
Download links and information about Ego by Tony Williams. This album was released in 1971 and it belongs to Jazz genres. It contains 9 tracks with total duration of 42:36 minutes.
Artist: | Tony Williams |
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Release date: | 1971 |
Genre: | Jazz |
Tracks: | 9 |
Duration: | 42:36 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Clap City | 0:54 |
2. | There Comes a Time | 6:01 |
3. | Piskow's Filigree | 3:55 |
4. | Circa 45 | 6:27 |
5. | Two Worlds | 4:33 |
6. | Some Hip Drum S**t | 1:36 |
7. | Lonesome Wells (Gwendy Trio) | 7:30 |
8. | Mom and Dad | 5:25 |
9. | The Urchins of Shermêse | 6:15 |
Details
[Edit]Easily the weirdest record the Tony Williams Lifetime ever released, 1971's Ego is an experimental blend of post-hard bop jazz and the spacier end of psychedelic rock. Larry Young's wafting organ parts and Ted Dunbar's rockist guitar (as opposed to the more traditional jazz bent of the guy he replaced, John McLaughin) combine to make parts of the album sound like Atom Heart Mother-era Pink Floyd, particularly on "There Comes a Time" and "Lonesome Wells (Gwendy Trio)." Unfortunately, both of those tracks are bogged down by vocals (by Williams and Jack Bruce, respectively) singing Williams' own earnest and not terribly inspired verse. The best tracks are those that dispense with the lyrical claptrap — the liner notes are also a terribly dated hoot — and get down to the creation of some roiling atmospheres and powerful group improvisation. In that regard, things really pick up at the end, with the ghostly "Mom and Dad" and the cacophonous closer "Urchins of Shermese," on which Williams splits the narcoleptic mood of the introduction with some of his most fractured and arrhythmic fills ever, while simultaneously maintaining a groove that's typically snaky and propulsive. Drum geeks will particularly adore the two brief solo pieces, "Clap City" and "Some Hip Drum S**t," which are both technically impressive and short enough not to get dull. Solid jazz-rock, from the days before fusion got painfully dull.