-Katamaran - Café Florian - 1978 (pläne Jazz)-Жанр: Fusion, Jazz-Rock Носитель: LP Страна-производитель диска (релиза): Germany Год издания: 1978 Издатель (лейбл): pläne Jazz Номер по каталогу: G 0043 Страна исполнителя (группы): Germany Дата / место записи: 17.-19.05.1978, Hermes-Music-Studios, Kamen, Germany Аудио кодек: FLAC (*.flac) Тип рипа: (tracks) Битрейт аудио: lossless Формат: VINYL Rip 16bit 44.1khz Источник оцифровки: Unknown Наличие сканов в содержимом раздачи: Front & Back Продолжительность: 44:21 Источник (релизер):REDacted Трэклист:
A1 – Café Florian (11:03)
A2 – Plaza De La Trinidad (03:34)
A3 – Das Stück Mit Der Quarte (07:40)
B1 – Chromadur (14:05)
B2 – Kurt (07:50)-
Katamaran's second album was named after the famous ''Cafe Florian'' in Venice (1978, Pläne) and featured a slightly different line-up to the debut album. Former Kollektiv Waldo Karpenkiel joined them on percussion, Roland Schmitt grabed the saxes and Rudi Marhold was the new drummer.The album was an abstract mix of Jazz, Return to Forever-styled Lounge Fusion and Passport's discreet spacey aesthetics on Jazz Fusion, containinig also a nice amount of funky grooves. Rather poor in true dynamics, but very rich in changing moods, solos and atmospheres. Extremely professional plays, which sometimes get on the very loose side of Jazz, still having this atmospheric German vibe all the way through. Great jazzy drumming, pretty heavy on the flute work, with some very good synth and electric piano lines and touches of Latin Fusion in specific pieces. These guys apparently could perform every Jazz-generated style with comfort. This work just falls on the more improvised style of Fusion, but contains more than enough interesting instrumental parts.
Bass, Percussion – Dago Dombrowski
Drums, Percussion – Rudi Marhold
Engineer – "Charly" Schade
Guitar – Franz Holtmann
Percussion – Waldemar Karpenkiel
Producer – Katamaran
Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Roland Schmitt
Written-By, Piano, Electric Piano, Synthesizer [2 Arp Axxe, Polymoog], Flute – Wolf Burbat