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John McLaughlin: From Miles and Mahavishnu to The 4th Dimension
By
Matt Phillips
287 Pages
ISBN: # 978-1-5381-7094-6
Rowman and Littlefield
2023
In fall 2023

John McLaughlin
guitarb.1942

Shakti
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1974

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Tony Williams
drums1945 - 1997

Mahavishnu Orchestra
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1971

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967
McLaughlin's work with Davis was largely in the studio and, after Lifetime broke up, he has worked almost entirely as a leader, with only a handful of collaborative projects and guest appearances, and he has lived mainly in Europe. Although his bands have included extraordinary players such as

Jan Hammer
keyboardsb.1948

Billy Cobham
drumsb.1944

Narada Michael Walden
drumsb.1952

Jean-Luc Ponty
violinb.1942

Trilok Gurtu
tablasb.1951

Gary Husband
drumsb.1960

Jonas Hellborg
bass
Matthew Garrison
bass, electricb.1970
There are several fine books on McLaughlin's life and work. Despite its subtitle, Paul Stump's Go Ahead John: The Music of John McLaughlin (2000) includes more biography than musicology. Walter Kolosky's Power, Passion and Beauty: The Story of the Legendary Mahavishnu Orchestra (2006) is the definitive account of that band, based on original interviews with every member. Kolosky followed it up with Follow Your Heart: John McLaughlin Song By Song (2010) which did not dig as deeply but does incorporate commentary from McLaughlin himself. Colin Harper's Bathed in Lightning: John McLaughlin, the 60s and the Emerald Beyond (2014)gives a fascinating and detailed portrait of the 1960s London scene, where McLaughlin began working as a studio musician, often playing alongside the young

Jimmy Page
guitarMatt Phillips' new John McLaughlin: From Miles and Mahavishnu to The 4th Dimension is the latest addition to the McLaughlin bookshelf. It endeavors to combine biography and album guide, and to cover up to 2020. Readers interested in McLaughlin's work before 1975 should seek out the authoritative Power, Passion, and Beauty and Bathed in Lightning. Phillips' book will be useful to those seeking a guide through the almost forty years since.
McLaughlin's first post-Shakti album, Johnny McLaughlin: Electric Guitarist (Columbia, 1978), was a quasi-retrospective, taking its title and cover art from his teen years and featuring reunions with members of Lifetime, Mahavishnu, and with

Carlos Santana
guitarb.1947
This book will be an aid to McLaughlin fans who may have lost track of his work in the last few decades. However, there are some significant gaps in the research. There are no academic publications in the bibliography. The absence of Kevin Fellez' Birds of Fire: Jazz, Rock, Funk, and the Creation of Fusion (2011) is especially surprising, since it contains chapters on Lifetime and Mahavishnu and is named for a Mahavishnu album. Paul Lavezzoli's The Dawn of Indian Music in the West (2006) also has a McLaughlin chapter, focused on Shakti.
Phillips also chooses to deal only with albums in their original form, which means the Columbia/Legacy Miles Davis box sets featuring unreleased material from the sessions for In a Silent Way, Bitches Brew, A Tribute to Jack Johnson, and most of McLaughlin's other work with Davis are mentioned only in passing. He likewise avoids the abundant archival and bootleg live recordings of McLaughlin performances available through YouTube and other sources. Apart from Bitches Brew, which has been thoroughly analyzed in George Grella's 33 1/3 book (2015), Victor Svorinich's Listen to This: Miles Davis and Bitches Brew (2016), and numerous other books on Davis, the rest of this music awaits more extensive further study.
Tags
Book Review
Jeff Schwartz
Rowman & Littlefield
john mclaughlin
Shakti
Miles Davis
Tony Williams
Mahavishnu Orchestra
John Coltrane
Jan Hammer
Billy Cobham
Narada Michael Walden
Jean-Luc Ponty
Zakir Hussein
Trilok Gurtu
Gary Husband
Jimmy Page
Jimi Hendrix
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