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Tony Levin:
Prime Cuts
(From His Magna Carta
Sessions)
back to the Main Artists Page
Those who complain that critics categorize their music and pigeonhole
their
work would do
well to heed the example of Tony Levin. The bassist and
multi-instrumentalist, who departed
Rochester in 1970 to take on New
York
City and subsequently the world, is one of the rare
few that lives a
life of
sacrifice to the creative muse—wherever it takes him. Over the last
thirty-some years, that muse has lured him into recording collaborations
with the major
artists
of our era, everyone from John Lennon to Peter
Gabriel, King Crimson to Alice Cooper,
T Bone Burnett to David Bowie,
Tracy
Chapman to The Indigo Girls.
Although nominally a bassist, Levin has transcended the bounds of that
instrument. Few
can
equal his pursuit of excellence on projects that
find
him comfortable in the largest of
stadiums
and the smallest of clubs.
Invariably Levin generates well-considered parts that
are
compositional
and
not merely rhythmically or harmonically interesting. When Tony Levin
agrees
to participate with an artist, witness the stellar examples in this
Magna
Carta comp-
ilation, he
becomes a key actor, never part of the scenery. Always
he demonstrates an
abiding
awareness of the traditional role of bass
while
challenging himself to explore the
possibilities
.
When
Tony found the
Precision bass limiting, or at least inappropriate, he
seized the Chapman
Stick
and became one of the world’s greatest exponents of the multi-
stringed
instrument that is
tapped rather than plucked. That tapping component
also
figures
in a Tony Levin innovation,
the Funk Fingers—drumstick extensions
of
his fingers used to
generate ultimate attack and
tone. Then there is
the
three-string bass.
What you hear on Tony Levin Prime Cuts are six examples of his ability
to
inject a contem-
porary edge. When an artist asks Tony Levin to record,
he or
she knows that the music will
gain a hip awareness that goes far beyond
the
itinerant session bassist’s stock and trade.
Speaking in praise
of Levin,
Magna Carta’s Pete Morticelli notes that, “Tony is a special,
mystical kind
of guy. He is the one everyone calls when they need someone special
to play
bass. He’s unparalleled when it comes to reputation, credibility,
and
recognizeability. We
were lucky to have worked with Tony on several
projects
that he really invested himself in:
That music is on this disc.”
Within the Magna Carta fold Tony joined similarly driven musicians. Thus
on
Prime Cuts’
“Kindred Spirits”, we see Levin in Liquid
Tension Experiment alongside Mike Portnoy,
Jordan Rudess, and John
Petrucci. This is no timid track! Although the energy suggests a
live
recording, this is studio mastery
and features Levin weaving strands of bass, Stick, and
upright. Here
we see
his essential traits in abundance: his ability to anchor a piece of
music
while injecting adrenaline; his knack of providing harmonic depth and
interest; and, not least,
his mission to rock!
“T & T Vignette” is a treat, an unreleased track from
the Black Light
Syndrome sessions,
fea
turing Levin and another pioneer, Terry Bozzio,
who
together create a probing collage
of sounds.
An appropriate title we have in “Another Dimension”, one
culled from the
repertoire of Liquid
Tension Experiment2. Again, Tony stretches the
boundaries of Stick and bass to achieve
the
required intensity, balancing
himself against Mike Portnoy, John Petrucci, and Jordan
Rudess.
Check
out
the brilliant shift from a probing ostinato to a flamenco-Argentinean
folkloric passage
(roughly 6:22). Talk about tension and release!
“Dark Corners” is a remix from the Bozzio Levin Stevens album
Sonic Residue
From Vapour-
space produced by Mark Gage. Vapourspace’s Gage captures
the
symbiosis that is so inte-
gral to this ensemble and spotlights the
sonic side
trips to the nether regions that provide a
foil to the pressing rhythmic
motifs.
From Magellan’s album Hundred Year Flood, “Brother’s
Keeper”, begins
pastoral-it could
be
Steeleye Span—until Levin enters with
a gaunt, growling
bass line that signals the
Industrial
Revolution! Trent Gardner, Wayne
Gardner, and Joe Franco match Levin’s ferocity.
Take note
of how
Levin
maintains a consistent, top-of-the-beat surging where others might
tend to
drag.
“Endless”, from Bozzio Levin and Stevens’ Situation
Dangerous presents
numerous
interesting
facets. One of these rears up at 6:26 and features
Levin holding down a
plundering tonality and
unflinching groove in
what
seems to be a 9/8 time signature. In
typical Levin style he maintains
a
selfless balance, letting Stevens soar while staying
himself grounded.
Ever searching, ever lucid in his thoughts, and creative output, Tony
Levin
continues to deliver
his eminently contemporary approach to a multitude
of
projects large and small. In terms of
raw
creative force, technical
execution, and brute energy, Levin puts men half his age to
shame.
Magna
Carta is proud to salute a vibrant creative entity with Tony Levin
Prime
Cuts,
released
in recognition of a long and fruitful association.
Notes by T. Bruce Wittet,
Muzik Etc editor, Modern Drummer writer, and
People Will Talk Media founder.
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