England's
Beat Goes On Label does two-fers better than almost anyone else. They remaster the music, pop the CDs into durable, slim-line jewel cases, and offer authoritative liner notes as well as a tidy, if not overly attractive, paper slipcase. This double-disc includes the two middle period
Return to Forever releases,
Where Have I Known You Before, originally issued in 1974, and
No Mystery, released in 1975, which was also the band's final album for
Polydor -- they moved to
Columbia for 1976's classic
Romantic Warrior. The first of these two discs introduced the band's legendary -- though not original -- lineup: with
Chick Corea on keyboards, bassist
Stanley Clarke, drummer
Lenny White, and new guitarist
Al DiMeola, who replaced
Bill Connors. The now corny sci-fi imagery was perfect for the mid-'70s, and the stellar blend of knotty compositions and intense solo improvisation made for one of
RTF's most compelling albums.
No Mystery, featuring the same personnel, generally got shorter shrift, but hindsight being 20/20, that's unwarranted. Time has proven it to be a very consistent -- though admittedly less groundbreaking -- offering; it's worthy of real reconsideration in the 21st century. These records were, along with
Hymn of the Seventh Galaxy and
Romantic Warrior,
Billy Cobham's
Spectrum,
Tony Williams'
Lifetime, the
Mahavishnu Orchestra's
Inner Mounting Flame and
Birds of Fire, the epitome of jazz-rock fusion;
Miles Davis' music of the era was always something more mysterious, more speculative, and far funkier than this muscular -- and masculine -- blurred out blend of instrumental pyrotechnics. The
BGO versions of these albums sound a whole level or two better than the domestic budget reissues. ~ Thom Jurek