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Lonnie Liston Smith & The Cosmic Echoes: Expansions
ByJazz-funk divided the jazz world in the 1970s as much as free-jazz had done a decade earlier. And with reason. Much of it was crap. Just like a lot of jazz-rock was crap. More or less desperate attempts by jazz musicians to make a living in the face of an all-conquering rock culture. If you could hardly blame them for trying, that did not mean you had to like it. But just as

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
Actually, Smith did it with three back-to-back Flying Dutchman albums, of which Expansions was the last and the crème de la crème. It was preceded by Astral Traveling (1973) and Cosmic Funk (1974).
The credentials Smith brought to jazz-funk (which he preferred to call cosmic-funk) were impeccable. He began the 1960s playing in

Betty Carter
vocals1929 - 1998

Art Blakey
drums1919 - 1990

Pharoah Sanders
saxophone, tenor1940 - 2022
Smith's 1973 -1975 Flying Dutchman albums remain his finest work, recorded with ex-Sanders and Davis colleagues including

Cecil McBee
bassb.1935

Badal Roy
tablas
James Mtume
percussionb.1947

Cecil Taylor
piano1929 - 2018

Andrew Cyrille
drumsb.1939
Amiable, melodic and groovadelic, if you only have one jazz-funk album in your library, make it Expansions. ">
Track Listing
Expansions; Desert Nights; Summer Days; Voodoo Woman; Peace; Shadows; My Love.
Personnel
Lonnie Liston Smith
keyboardsDonald Smith
piano and vocalsDavid Hubbard
saxophoneCecil McBee
bassLawrence Killian
percussionMichael Carvin
percussionArt Gore
drumsAlbum information
Title: Expansions | Year Released: 2020 | Record Label: Ace Records
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