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Chas Jankel [Bonus Track]

 
Album Review: Chas Jankel [Bonus Track]

  • Artist: Chas Jankel
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: 1980
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Ian Dury & the Blockheads were at their height when songwriting keyboardist Chas Jankel inked a deal for a solo album with A&M. With a winner on their hands, the label gave the artist total control, and all on the strength of two demos -- "Ai No Corrida" and "Am I Honest with Myself Really?" The former was to become a huge hit on both sides of the Atlantic, just not for Jankel; instead his song stormed into the chart via a cover by Quincy Jones. That bares little resemblance to Jankel's own version, an extended get-in-the-groove club extravaganza that bounces gaily along, signposting the way to Frankie Goes to Hollywood's "Relax," early Wham!, the Pet Shop Boys, and every subsequent Euro-trash hit you can name. Yeah, it really is that good. "Honest" is the flip of the same coin, a 15-minute-plus excursion down a jazzier groove that flares up with intense flashes of funk and flips into dramatic guitar solos and white-hot brass passages while Jankel's shimmering keyboard work subtly shifts the moods and styles around and while the supple rhythm keeps you dancing on and on and on. A quarter of a century on, you'd be forgiven for confusing it with any of the latest club hit remixes currently taking the Europe by storm. Beyond those two blistering numbers comes a clutch of softer, moodier pieces, all understated in intend, each supple in composition, style, and atmosphere, every one lovely and limpid in its own unique way, but all quite overwhelmed by the smoldering power and rousing originality of "Corrida" and "Honest." In that respect, the album was sure to disappoint, although better sequencing would have helped. As that pair take up almost half the album (throw in "Fuse" as well, since it's merely a short intro to "Honest"), it would have worked better to place them on the A-side, and the rest on the flip. That flaw aside, this is an intriguing set to say the least, with the CD reissue adding the Dury/Jankel-composed "Little Eva," which is given a fine funk workout in a new wave context, the only track within that overtly hints at the keyboardist's Blockhead background. ~ Jo-Ann Greene, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Ai No Corrida Chas Jankel Chas Jankel (9:07)
Peace at Last Chas Jankel Chas Jankel (2:49)
Just a Thought Chas Jankel Chas Jankel (5:16)
Lenta Latina Chas Jankel Chas Jankel (3:53)
Fuse Mark Isham Chas Jankel (:35)
Am I Honest with Myself Really? Chas Jankel Chas Jankel (14:45)
Reverie Chas Jankel Chas Jankel (3:50)
Little Eva [*] Chas Jankel Chas Jankel (4:58)

Credits

Philip Bagenal (Audio Engineer), Peter Van Hooke (Drums), Chas Jankel (Concept), Mark Isham (Trumpet), Chas Jankel (Liner Notes), Chas Jankel (Guitar), Chaz Jankel (Audio Production), Paul Westwood (Bass), Stephen Foster (Liner Notes), Chas Jankel (Keyboards), Chaz Jankel (Various), Chas Jankel (Vocals), Mark Isham (Saxophone), Chris Hunter (Sax (Alto)), Simon Ryan (Design), Chris Warwick (Percussion), Chris Warwick (Programming), Peter Van Hooke (Producer), Mark Isham (Producer), Mark Isham (Sax (Soprano)), Chris Hunter (Sax (Tenor)), Chris Warwick (Producer), Chris Warwick (Synthesizer Programming), Chaz Jankel (Vocals), Chas Jankel (Percussion), Philip Bagenal (Engineer), Chas Jankel (Producer), Mark Isham (Synthesizer), Chas Jankel (Synthesizer), Peter Van Hooke (Percussion), Kuma Harada (Bass), Peter Van Hooke (Photography)
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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more