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Billy Cobham's Crosswinds Project at the Gothic Theater

The notes-per-measure count is down a bit, but the creativity and precision remain.
Gothic Theater
Englewood, CO
September 24, 2022
"Age ain't nothin' but a number." That's a common mantra chanted by the militantly aging. "Everything wears out." That's a quote from a wise auto mechanic. When those two concepts meet:
CRASH!
Saturday night, drummer

Billy Cobham
drumsb.1944

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Mahavishnu Orchestra
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1971
By the time Cobham released his first album under his own name, Spectrum (Atlantic, 1973), he'd developed a style to match the rapid-fire playing of other fusion stars such as

John McLaughlin
guitarb.1942
The album Crosswinds (Atlantic, 1974) followed with more high energy fusion and precision drumming at breakneck speed. This one reached No. 2 on the jazz charts and 23 on the Billboard Top 200 Albums. Crosswinds also continued a tradition that started with Spectrum with Cobham composing all the music on the album.
Now, nearly 50 years after these seminal albums, Cobham is still at it. Many of his bandmates from those early albums haven't been so lucky and they played their last concerts years ago. Players from those early LPs who are no longer with us include guitarists

John Abercrombie
guitar1944 - 2017

George Duke
piano1946 - 2013

Joe Farrell
saxophone1937 - 1986

Michael Brecker
saxophone, tenor1949 - 2007
Garnett Jnr Brown
tromboneb.1936
After all these years and all that drumming, Cobham has slowed just a bit. The notes-per-measure count is down a bit, but the creativity and precision remain. Saturday night's audience heard a frequent double bass-drum attack and runs across four or five tom-toms punctuated the livelier songs. In contrast to his seemingly superhuman playing in his youth, Cobham's drumming now sounds more like an extremely talented mortal. Chatty throughout the evening, Cobham discussed the worn-out parts problem when he told us of his recent hip replacement. That's on top of a new knee or two in years past.
Saturday night, Cobham brought a quartet to the Gothic Theater. The original billing called for guitarist

Mark Whitfield
guitarb.1966
Brandon Wilkins
saxophone, tenorThe other two band members have been with Cobham somewhat longer;

Scott Tibbs
keyboards
Tim Landers
bass
Jaco Pastorius
bass, electric1951 - 1987
The tour is being billed as "Billy Cobham's Crosswinds Project" so, of course, the set list included many tunes from that album, including the title track which kicked off the set. The band also played a couple tracks from Spectrum, but the evening wasn't all '70s nostalgia. Cobham has continued to write and Saturday night's set included a couple of new pieces, including "Paseo Del Mar," which Cobham said will be on the forthcoming Crosswinds II album. Another new song in the set was entitled "Becalmed." Cobham was born in Panama and he rode out the recent COVID quarantine there. He told us how, during lockdown, he could sit on his balcony and see cruise ships at anchor with nowhere to go and no passengers. As the name implies, "Becalmed" was a quiet tune and a nice break from the more intense side of Cobham. "Savannah the Serene," a song from Crosswinds, was another that emphasized melody over pure note count.
At the end of the evening, Cobham announced that the new titanium piece screwed into his femur as part of his hip replacement was screaming at him and he only had one more tune in him. So, the parts can wear out and maybe age is something more than a number. But as long as there are replacement parts out there coupled with the will to carry on, musicians like Cobham can keep on doing what they so obviously love and the rest of us can enjoy the dividends.
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