This double-disc set documents
Return to Forever's unplugged tour of 2009. Its 19 tracks consist mainly of rearranged
RTF tunes and jazz standards for piano trio, though there are wonderful surprises on disc two. Disc one is taken directly from concert appearances across the globe. The standards work well -- considering how busy
Chick Corea,
Stanley Clarke, and
Lenny White can be together as well as solo.
"On Green Dolphin Street," "Waltz for Debby," and
"Hackensack" all swing, though they do feature moments of
RTF's requisite knotty counterpoint. Originals include
Clarke's new tune, the beautiful
"La Cancion de Sophia," as well as
"Bud Powell" and
"Windows" from two
Corea solo recordings, and
"Senor Mouse" and
"No Mystery," both
RTF tunes, round it out. The small complaint is that these three play so stridently and "perfectly" that they sound more like a studio band instead of a quick-thinking live unit. Everything is exceptionally played and recorded. The gems are saved for disc two, which consists mainly of rehearsals for the tour recorded at
Mad Hatter Studios in San Francisco, complete with off-mike banter.
Corea dons his Rhodes and other keyboards for an excellent version of
"Captain Marvel" and a fully fused-out
"Senor Mouse," "Space Circus," and
"After the Rain," all with original
RTF guitarist
Bill Connors playing his ass off with his former and future bandmates (
Frank Gambale will assume guitar duties on tour). Violinist
Jean-Luc Ponty will also join the new band formally in 2012, and he begins in that role here, appearing on
"Armando's Rhumba" (he played on the original off
Corea's
My Spanish Heart LP), his own
"Renaissance," a fine rendition of
"I Loves You, Porgy" (one of two tunes with
Chaka Khan on vocals),
"After the Cosmic Rain," and
"Space Circus." The other two surprises on disc two are a very soulful duet between
Corea (on acoustic piano) and
White on
John Coltrane's
"Crescent" and a stellar acoustic trio version of
RTF's standard
"500 Miles High," which was recorded at
the Monterey Jazz Festival and contains plenty of fire. With its looseness, this second disc offers the real dynamic potential for
RTF in the future and reveals the depth of near symbiotic communication between the bandmembers. ~ Thom Jurek