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In the Hand of the Inevitable

 
Album Review: In the Hand of the Inevitable

Review

Released in 1995, In the Hand of the Inevitable is the most curious of all of the James Taylor Quartet's recordings. After helping to usher in the acid jazz movement on recordings like 1987's Money Spyder, with its spy/noir-ish soundtrack feel equally influenced by Lalo Schifrin and the Ventures, and the masterpiece that is the band's 1989 effort, Get Organized (their first to employ vocals -- in a truly soulful jazz scat style), they moved to the center, becoming more a house music soundtrack act with diva-like vocals (sometimes male-centric as well with Noel McCoy watering down the earlier gains they'd made musically). In the Hand of the Inevitable, issued stateside by Hollywood's Acid Jazz imprint, is a transition album. In its native U.K., this set is regarded as a classic meld of the band's earlier style and the more soul and house approach of the immediately preceding albums, Supernatural Feeling (1993) and Do Your Own Thing (1991). Here, it's regarded as a bit more ho-hum, generic safe-stepping period album. It's neither. In the Hand of the Inevitable is another singular moment for the JTQ, where the integration of modern British soul and the big-beat intensity of being a jazz group began to form a new identity for the band, which was equally at home in a sweaty club or a concert hall. In fact, if this set owes to anything, it's a deep nod to Brian Auger's Oblivion Express. Check the funky, horn-driven riffing on "3 Mile Island," the upscale, jazzed-up soul in "Keep on Moving," and the burning organ acid boil on the closing title track for evidence of Auger's lineage firmly imprinted on these cuts' DNA. On the other hand, the mod, wild-style rave-up organ groove -- patented in the sound lab by one Georgie Fame -- is readily apparent in the band's killer reading of Led Zeppelin's "Whole Lotta Love." But then there is the house-soul model too, evidenced by the beautiful vocal interplay of "Love Will Keep Us Together" (no, not the Captain & Tennille hit) as well as Gary Crockett's euphoric, jazzed-up anthem "Sounds of Freedom." If In the Hand of the Inevitable sounds like anything, it sounds like a band whose members have so many possibilities at hand that they can't focus on any one for too long, making for a thoroughly exhilarating listen. ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Love Will Keep Us Together James Taylor, Alison Limerick James Taylor Quartet (6:07)
3 Mile Island James Taylor, James Taylor, John Wilmott James Taylor Quartet (5:38)
Free Your Mind James Taylor, James Taylor, John Wilmott James Taylor Quartet (4:54)
Haitian Breakdown James Taylor, James Taylor James Taylor Quartet (4:00)
Good Thing James Taylor, James Taylor, Plavka James Taylor Quartet (3:39)
Let's Get Together James Taylor, James Taylor, John Wilmott, David Taylor James Taylor Quartet (4:27)
Segue No. 1 James Taylor, James Taylor James Taylor Quartet (:57)
Stepping into My Life James Taylor, James Taylor, John Wilmott James Taylor Quartet (4:36)
Whole Lotta Love Willie Dixon, Jimmy Page, Robert Plant, John Paul Jones, John Bonham James Taylor Quartet (4:37)
Journey James Taylor, James Taylor, David Taylor James Taylor Quartet (5:54)
Sounds of Freedom James Taylor, James Taylor, Gary Crockett James Taylor Quartet (5:13)
Keep on Moving James Taylor, James Taylor, John Wilmott James Taylor Quartet (5:33)
In the Hand of the Inevitable James Taylor, James Taylor James Taylor Quartet (4:53)

Credits

Brian Jones (Vocals (Background)), James Taylor Quartet (Performer), Paul Taylor (Producer), Dennis Rollins (Horn), Mark Berrow (Strings), Barbara Snow (Horn), Alison Limerick (Vocals), Neil Costello (Engineer), J. Neil Sidwell (Horn), Snowboy (Strings), Snowboy (Percussion), John Bradbury (Strings), Paul Taylor (Horn), Lynieve Austin (Vocals (Background)), Lawrence Johnson (Vocals (Background))
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Mission Impossible/In the Hand of the Inevitable (1999 Album by James Taylor Quartet)
In the Hand of the Inevitable [Bonus Tracks] (2008 Album by James Taylor Quartet)
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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