While not one of the classics of the jazz fusion movement of the early '70s, The Guerilla Band does attempt to say something substantial and avoids the genre's commercial pitfalls.
Leader Hal Galper, who went on to become an acoustic pianist of note, is heard here exclusively on electric piano. His highly electronically processed sound is unlike the playing of the Fender Rhodes' more representative players from this era, such as Joe Zawinul or George Duke.
Galper's band includes brothers Mike (saxophone) and Randy Brecker (trumpet), who at this time were gaining critical acclaim with their band Dreams.Dreams' guitarist Bob Mann is also on board. Session player and Cannonball Adderley alumnus Victor Gaskin is on electric bass. Steve Haas and Charles Alias team up for a double dose of drums.
Galper writes long, impressionistic lines that are played over busy, skittering, rhythms – imagine Miles Davis's In a Silent Way merged with a funky, Isley Brothers' track. This approach could work, but the drums generally create more clutter than groove, while Mann's scratchy playing often gets in the way of the music (it would have been interesting to hear this same band with a John Abercrombie or a John Scofield wailing over the top of these tracks).
Misgivings aside, this band produces a distinctive brand of jazz fusion that deserves a place in any thorough documentation of the genre's short-lived, peak creative years.
Tracks
1. Call (Hal Galper)
2. Figure Eight (Hal Galper)
3. Black Night (Hal Galper)
4. Welcome to My Dreams (Johnny Burke/James Van Heusen)
5. Rise and Fall (Hal Galper)
6. Point of View (Hal Galper)
VICTOR GASKIN bass
CHARLES ALIAS drums
STEVE HAAS drums
HAL GALPER e-piano
BOB MANN guitar
MICHAEL BRECKER tenor saxophone
RANDY BRECKER trumpet, flugelhorn, electric trumpet
Mainstream Records - MRL 337 / Solid Records CDSOL-45222