Focal Point (album) explained

Focal Point
Type:Album
Artist:McCoy Tyner
Cover:Focal Point (album).jpg
Released:1976
Recorded:August 4–7, 1976
Studio:Fantasy Studios, Berkeley, CA
Genre:Jazz, post-bop, modal jazz
Label:Milestone M 9072
Producer:Orrin Keepnews
Prev Title:Fly with the Wind
Prev Year:1976
Next Title:Supertrios
Next Year:1977

Focal Point is a 1976 album by jazz pianist McCoy Tyner, his tenth to be released on the Milestone label. It was recorded during four days in August 1976 and features a septet fronted by three reed players (Gary Bartz, Joe Ford and Ron Bridgewater) who were in part multiplied through overdubs. On one track Tyner is heard picking a dulcimer backed by tablas, evoking the sound of an Indian sitar. "Parody" is a duo with Eric Gravatt on drums. The album was digitally remastered at Fantasy Studios in 1999 and re-released on Original Jazz Classics.

Reception

Cook and Morton in their Penguin Guide to Jazz write that "Focal Point looks to secure the firepower in the studio which the band generated in concert", but they suggest that the overdubbing of the horns "sometimes leads to stiffness in the ensemble sound". Nevertheless they "were a little surprised to find how well it's aged". The Allmusic review by Scott Yanow states "Because virtually all of McCoy Tyner's records are superior examples of modal-oriented jazz, this gem is merely an above-average effort".[1]

Track listing

  1. "Mes trois fils" - 7:56
  2. "Parody" - 6:55
  3. "Indo-Serenade" - 5:35
  4. "Mode for Dulcimer" - 8:59
  5. "Departure" - 5:58
  6. "Theme for Nana" - 5:14

All compositions by McCoy Tyner

Personnel

piano, dulcimer (“Mode for Dulcimer” only)

alto saxophone, soprano saxophone, flute (except “Parody”)

alto saxophone, soprano saxophone, sopranino saxophone, clarinet (except “Parody”)

bass (except “Parody”)

drums

conga and percussion (except “Parody”), tabla (“Mode for Dulcimer” only)

Notes and References

  1. Yanow, S. [{{AllMusic|class=album|id=r149213|pure_url=yes}} Allmusic Review] accessed February 24, 2009.