Create account Log in

Talking Only Makes It Worse

[Edit]

Download links and information about Talking Only Makes It Worse by Charlie Hunter, Scott Amendola, Will Bernard, John Schott. This album was released in 2003 and it belongs to Jazz, Contemporary Jazz genres. It contains 19 tracks with total duration of 01:14:20 minutes.

Artist: Charlie Hunter, Scott Amendola, Will Bernard, John Schott
Release date: 2003
Genre: Jazz, Contemporary Jazz
Tracks: 19
Duration: 01:14:20
Buy on iTunes $11.99
Buy on Amazon $7.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Soul Power 6:32
2. Four In One 5:11
3. Bemsha Swing 5:59
4. Skippy 3:14
5. Damn Right I'm Somebody 5:02
6. Patchouli Naked BBQ 0:41
7. Cross the Track-Thelonious 6:57
8. Now Please Don't You Cry, Beautiful Edith 6:03
9. Epistrophy 5:41
10. The Pay Back 9:14
11. Teo 3:24
12. Get On the Good Foot-- Rock Hard In a Funky Place 7:39
13. Jackie-ing 0:41
14. Band Intros 0:26
15. The Warm Up 0:32
16. No Dates, This Is a T.J. Kirk Show 0:32
17. Meeting At Termini's Corner-- I Got a Bag of My Own-- Brilliant Corners 6:00
18. Talking Only Makes It Worse 0:05
19. Jackie-ing Reprise 0:27

Details

[Edit]

Although it is not noted on the outside cover and is even difficult to discern from the inside liner notes, this is a live recording of the short-lived group, caught at a show at an unnamed venue in 1997. Regardless of the rather mysterious nature of the disc, it's a terrific representation of the foursome's phenomenal instrumental chops. The triple guitar/drums lineup cherry-picks tracks from their studio albums, both of which are out of print as of this disc's appearance in early 2004. Hence, it's the only way to hear this adventurous quartet deconstruct/reconstruct and mix and match the funk, jazz, and avant-garde qualities of the music of James Brown, Thelonious Monk, and Rahsaan Roland Kirk. Although Charlie Hunter's signature quivering eight-string guitar/bass acrobatics remain the group's signature sound, guitarists Will Bernard and John Schott along with drummer Scott Amendola are more than just backup musicians. They provide breathtaking support as tempos radically change from straight-ahead jazz to frisky funk, as on Monk's tricky "Skippy." Jaw-droppingly tight playing on the set-closing "Meeting at Termini's Corner/I Got a Bag of My Own/Brilliant Corners," which combines riffs from all three of the group's sources, keeps the music captivating and lively even if you are unfamiliar with the originals. The live recording not only catches T.J. Kirk on a superb night at the height of their powers — and just before they disbanded — but provides a fitting legacy for one of the '90s more neglected fusion bands.