Dizzy Gillespie - Free Ride (CD)

Free Ride
$74.01
5 out of 5.0 stars 1 Rating (1 Review)

Album Details: Free Ride

Release Date:06/05/1995
Label:Ojc
UPC:025218678421

User Reviews: Free Ride

  • Overall:

    Music:

    I thought it was Theivery Syndicate

    By David  Jun 15, 2004

    Pros: So dated wannabe disco that it is ultra swag

    Cons: Would be better on vinyl

    This is such an unintended inspiration for electronica. The setting: of a bunch of (at the time) passe middle aged hipsters trying to make it on disco after getting destroyed by the Beatles. The result: a tour de force of proto-electronica. The overl...y slick musicianship makes this record like a hand-carved model of future computer-generated drum-n-bossa. Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Free Ride

  • All Music Guide

    Although Lalo Schifrin is justifiably praised for his soundtrack work, many jazz purists turn up their noses at his jazz dates, such as his '60s work with Jimmy Smith and Wes Montgomery. The things that make Schifrin an anathema to the diehards -- the huge orchestras, the pop and soul riffs, the general air of over the top theatricality -- are all over 1977's Free Ride, his reunion date with Dizzy Gillespie. (Schifrin had been Gillespie's arranger in the late '50s.) In fact, Free Ride is so painfully dated that it's transformed into cockeyed cool, just the sort of record ironic hipsters should listen to while they're reading the novelizations of '70s cop shows that they bought for a bundle off of eBay. Gillespie plays with his usual wit and panache, but most of the time, he sounds like a sideman on his own album; the real focus of Schifrin's arrangements is the funky wah-wah guitars and ARP synthesizer solos that take center stage on tracks like "Fire Dance" (which sounds exactly like ...it should be the theme for a Charlie's Angels spinoff) and the mellow disco of the closing "Last Stroke of Midnight." Occasionally, Gillespie gets to break out on his own album, with the lovely solo on "Love Poem for Donna" his particular standout. For what it is, Free Ride is really quite good (guests include Lee Ritenour and future star Ray Parker Jr.), but it's very much a record of and for its time. - Stewart Mason, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Dizzy Gillespie

Dizzy Gillespie's contributions to jazz were huge. One of the greatest jazz trumpeters of all time (some would say the best), Gillespie was such a complex player that his contemporaries ended up copying Miles Davis and Fats Navarro instead, and it was not until Jon Faddis' emergence in the 1970s that Dizzy's style was successfully recreated. Somehow, Gillespie could mak... Read more