Spaces (Larry Coryell album) explained

Spaces
Type:studio
Artist:Larry Coryell
Cover:Larry Coryell Spaces.jpg
Released:1970
Recorded:March 1969
Studio:Vanguard's 23rd Street Studios, New York City (NY)
Genre:Jazz, Jazz fusion
Label:Vanguard
Producer:Daniel Weiss
Prev Title:Coryell
Prev Year:1969
Next Title:Larry Coryell at the Village Gate
Next Year:1971

Spaces is an album by jazz guitarist Larry Coryell that was released in 1970 by Vanguard Records. Coryell is accompanied by John McLaughlin on guitar, Chick Corea on electric piano, Miroslav Vitouš on bass, and Billy Cobham on drums. The album was produced by Daniel Weiss and engineered by David Baker and Paul Berkowitz.

The album is sometimes considered to have started the jazz fusion genre.[1]

The Sessions

The first day was strange’, said Larry, of the sessions. “because Chick and Billy and John had just come from…sessions with Miles. They had definitely been taking some different approaches to the music at that session, because when I threw down the first piece, “Tyrone” by Larry Young, the cats did not play it straight. They were all going into outer space…Almost nothing we played that first day made the cut: it seems as if we got most of the music that went on the record on the second day. It just took a while to get comfortable with each other and the material…Spaces did not do that great upon initial release, but when Vanguard reissued it a few years later, it sold 250,000 copies. Not bad for a record that sounded very little like traditional jazz and nothing like rock.’

Two discarded tracks from the two-day Spaces sessions, ‘Tyrone’ and ‘Planet End’ were released on Planet End in 1975, along with contemporary material by Coryell's then-current band The Eleventh House. (From the book Bathed In Lightning by Colin Harper _ Jawbone Press 2014)

Personnel

Production

Notes and References

  1. News: Norman . Michael . February 21, 2017 . Larry Coryell, noted jazz fusion guitarist, dead at 73 . Cleveland Plain Dealer . February 21, 2017.