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George Benson - The Other Side of Abbey Road 24bit/96kHz Vinyl Rip

Posted By: karfaks
George Benson - The Other Side of Abbey Road 24bit/96kHz Vinyl Rip

George Benson - The Other Side of Abbey Road
Vinyl rip in 24bit/96kHz | APE | image + cue | scans | 681 Mb
FileSonic + Wupload | 1969

The Other Side of Abbey Road is a 1969 studio album by American guitarist George Benson of songs from The Beatles' 1969 album Abbey Road.
I first heard The Other Side Of Abbey Road at a cozy coffee shop in Hollywood, California, early in my jazz discovery days. At the time, I was just recovering from a heavy overdose on the Beatles, having listened to all their post-LSD records almost exclusively for several months. I was ready for something new, and an album of Beatles covers was not exactly what I had in mind. Nevertheless, my curiosity was aroused once George Benson's velvety voice rang out across the cafe singing "Golden Slumbers" against Don Sebesky's schmaltzy backdrop of strings.

"Hmmm…" I thought somewhat dismissively, as the song transitioned into a borderline musak version of "You Never Give Me Your Money." The lush baroque string arrangement on "Because" had me reaching for my magazine when Idris Muhammad and Ron Carter intervened, knocking me out of my chair with their swampy, indestructible groove on "Come Together." As George Benson tore into his fluid and funky solo, I was lifted. I wandered over to the counter and asked who they were playing. "George Benson?!?" I responded in disbelief. My mental scheme was thrown into disarray…I had already pegged George Benson as the King of Slick, so what was THIS I was hearing?

My prejudices shattered, I went to the record store for a copy of this quirky jazz-pop album of Abbey Road covers. "Out of Print!?!" I asked, again in disbelief, not realizing that I had just acquired my very first hard-to-find CD obsession. I spent the next 5 years scouring the "B" section of every used record store for this elusive gem. Then one day my luck hit. My girlfriend and I were at Moby Disc in Santa Monica (check it out!) when I finally found myself staring at a picture of Benson in parody of the Beatles, guitar in hand, crossing an urban American street. I had finally found The Other Side Of Abbey Road.

My girlfriend smiled indulgently as I skipped to the register, commenting that the album cover looked cool. (This concept would be more fully realized a year later, when Booker T. & The MGs posed for the front photo of their own classic Abbey Road cover album, McLemore Avenue.)

When we brought the prized disc home and put it on, it was my girlfriend who now looked on with disbelief. "THIS is what you've been obsessing over for so long!?!" she exclaimed. She still doesn't get it…but that's okay. While the record did sound a little more cheesy than I had remembered (in fact, it started sounding better in my head each year I didn't have it), I was still completely blown away as soon as I heard Benson's jazz-funk treatment of "Come Together" and "I Want You (She's So Heavy)." His soulful singing on "Oh! Darling" put the glide back in my stride. I really wanted to call up Paul McCartney and ask him if he liked it too. Recorded just three weeks after the Beatles released Abbey Road, George Benson's set of Beatles covers are the best ever recorded by a jazz artist. And Benson had lots of competition, as many talented jazz improvisors and composers resorted to pillaging the Beatles songbook, hoping to make a living in those trying rock and roll times of the late 60s and early 70s.

While commercial success eventually did come to Benson, it came mostly at the expense of his brilliant guitar playing. The Other Side Of Abbey Road predates Benson's notorious 70s sellout. This is an incredibly tight and cohesive album, filled with great solos by Benson, Herbie Hancock, Freddie Hubbard, and Sonny Fortune. Creed Taylor really hit his stride with this record, laying the blueprint for his classic CTI-label formula: top-ten pop covers, top-flight musicians, tight arrangements, atmospheric Don Sebesky strings, and superb Rudy Van Gelder sound quality. All these winning elements come together here, making this the most moody, melodic, complex, and funky of the "good" George Benson records worth owning.
~By JOHN BALLON~, All About Jazz

Tracklisting:

Golden Slumbers
You Never Give Me Your Money
Because/Come Together
Oh, Darling

Here Comes The Sun
I Want You (She So Heavy)
Something/Octopus`s Garden
The End

George Benson - Guitar, Vocals
Phil Bodner - Flute, Oboe, Reeds (Multiple)
Ray Barretto - Percussion, Drums
Ron Carter - Bass
Sonny Fortune - Saxophone, Sax (Alto)
Herbie Hancock - Organ, Piano, Harpsichord
Bob James - Organ, Piano, Harpsichord
Hubert Laws - Flute, Reeds (Multiple)
Jerome Richardson - Flute, Saxophone, Sax (Tenor)
Ed Shaughnessy - Drums
Marvin Stamm - Trumpet, Flugelhorn
Mel Davis - Trumpet, Flugelhorn
Wayne Andre - Trombone, Euphonium
Don Ashworth - Sax (Baritone), Reeds (Multiple)
Melvin Davis - Trumpet
Don Sebesky - Arranger
Rudy Van Gelder - Engineer
Bernie Glow - Trumpet, Flugelhorn
Andy Gonzalez - Percussion
Guildhall String Ensemble - Strings
Ernie Hayes - Organ, Piano, Harpsichord
Freddie Hubbard - Trumpet
Idris Muhammad - Drums
Gerald Jemmott - Bass
Max Pollikoff - Violin
George Ricci - Cello
Creed Taylor - Producer
Jerry Jemmott - Bass
Emanuel Vardi - Cello


Turntable: Michel Engineering Gyro SE + Rega RB250
Cartridge: Sumiko Blue Point II (MC)
Analog to Digital Converter: M-Audio Delta 66
Capture software: WaveLab 5


Ripped by severin_OK.