First Course Explained

First Course
Type:studio
Artist:Lee Ritenour
Cover:First Course (Lee Ritenour album - cover art).jpg
Released:1976
Recorded:October 3 – 15, 1975
Studio:The Sound Labs, Hollywood, California
Genre:Crossover jazz, smooth jazz
Label:Epic (1976), Columbia (1990)
Producer:Skip Drinkwater
Next Title:Gentle Thoughts
Next Year:1977

First Course is the debut album by jazz guitarist Lee Ritenour. The album was released on LP by Epic Records in 1976 and on CD by Columbia Records in 1990.

Reception

First Course was made when Ritenour was considered the best session musician in Los Angeles next to guitarist Larry Carlton.[1] He recorded the album with peers from Dante's and the Baked Potato club in Studio City, California. AllMusic called the album an "artifact of the early L.A. jazz/funk sound".[2]

Ritenour worried about the album. "I was still thinking as a studio musician, and I was very worried about having my own identity on the guitar, because up until that time my job as a studio musician had been to be a 'chameleon'...it wasn't until several years later that I felt more comfortable with who I was stylistically."[1]

Financial problems plagued the album because the "sound perplexed studio executives," who were looking for the next Bitches Brew or Return to Forever.[3] This was melodic rhythm and blues-based jazz that fell just outside the boundaries of "Fusion" and didn't find a home until newly formatted radio stations began to popularize two emerging genres in the mid to late 80's - The genre broadly known as Smooth Jazz, and also "New Age" music, between which there was considerable overlap.

Personnel

Production

1990 Reissue/Remastered credits

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: …Rit on the Right . Moseley . Willie G. . 2007-06-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20061231003928/http://www.vintageguitar.com/artists/details.asp?ID=82 . 2006-12-31 . dead .
  2. Web site: Ginell. Richard. First Course – Lee Ritenour . AllMusic. 9 May 2017.
  3. Web site: Review of The Best of Lee Ritenour. October 23, 2003. 2007-06-05.