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John Abercrombie: Characters
By
Characters
ECM Records
1978
Guitarist John Abercrombie's emergence as a guitarist of singularity seems, in retrospect to have happened very quickly. A band member in the horn-driven jazz-rock band Dreams alongside drummer

Billy Cobham
drumsb.1944

Brecker Brothers
band / ensemble / orchestra
Barry Miles
pianob.1947

Gato Barbieri
saxophone1934 - 2016

Dave Liebman
saxophoneb.1946
But at this time, Abercrombie was still finding out who he was musically; as great as Timeless is, it's hard not to feel the spirit of

Mahavishnu Orchestra
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1971

John McLaughlin
guitarb.1942

Jack DeJohnette
drumsb.1942

Jan Hammer
keyboardsb.1948

Dave Holland
bassb.1946

Ralph Towner
guitarb.1940
While Gateway's 1975's eponymous ECM debut was extremely well-receivedsuggesting that change was certainly in the air for the guitaristit was more of a transitional album for Abercrombie. So, toobut to an even greater degreewas the 1976 debut of Abercrombie's duo with Ralph Towner, Sargasso Sea. But the real watershed album for the guitaristpositioning Abercrombie as a writer of note and a player who'd completely left his fusion days behind him, emerging as a guitarist who never seemed to play the same thing twice, was refreshingly free of the signature licks that even some of his similarly talented peers seemed to fall back upon at times, and yet never sounded like anyone else, is today's Rediscovery. Characters is a true solo recording, where the guitarist wrote all eight compositions and, overdubbing electric and acoustic guitars alongside the electric mandolin that became a personal signature through to the early '80s, remains one of the most impressive solo guitar records ever made. With a largely warm, reverb-heavy tone on electric mandolin and guitar, with Characters Abercrombie had left any vestiges of McLaughlin far behind, more akin, instead, to

Jim Hall
guitar1930 - 2013
Unlike other guitarists who enjoyed working in the solo milieu like the more mainstream

Joe Pass
guitar1929 - 1994
While other guitarists have recorded solo albums with layers of guitarslabel mate

Pat Metheny
guitarb.1954

Richie Beirach
pianob.1947

George Mraz
bass1944 - 2021

Peter Donald
drumsb.1945
Still, the "how," really matters not; the "what" is far more important on an album without a single weak track. Additionally, ECM label head/producer

The opening "Parable" begins with a reverb-drenched electric mandolin solo. "It was really a soprano guitar," Abercrombie explains, in an as-yet unpublished interview, "tuned an octave higher than a guitar. But Fender originally marketed it as an electric mandolin, tuned in fifths. I was at a jam session where [Mahavishnu Orchestra violinist]

Jerry Goodman
violinAbercrombie followed Characters with Arcade and two more albums with his newly minted quartet1980's Abercrombie Quartet and 1981's Mand, subsequently, his second (and, to date, last) record with Towner, 1982's Five Years Later. All of these albums would continue to strengthen Abercrombie's voice both compositionally and as a player. But if Sargasso Sea was the first album to reflect Abercrombie's emergence, it was Characters that demonstrated the guitarist's growing confidence by taking on that most vulnerable and naked type of recording: the solo album.
Characters was, indeed, Abercrombie's "coming of age" album; a record that still feels fresh and new 38 years after its release, it's one well worth Rediscovery.
Tracks: Parable; Memoir; Telegram; Backward Glance; Ghost Dance; Paramour; After Thoughts; Evensong.
Personnel: John Abercrombie: guitars.
[Note: You can read the genesis of this Rediscovery column here.]
Tags
John Abercrombie
Rediscovery
John Kelman
ECM Records
United States
New York
New York City
Billy Cobham
Brecker Brothers
Barry Miles
Gato Barbieri
Dave Liebman
Mahavishnu Orchestra
john mclaughlin
Jack DeJohnette
Jan Hammer
Dave Holland
Ralph Towner
Jim Hall
Joe Pass
pat metheny
Richie Beirach
George Mraz
Peter Donald
Manfred Eicher
Jerry Goodman
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