The Tony Williams Lifetime
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The Tony Williams Lifetime was a jazz-rock fusion group led by jazz drummer Tony Williams.
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[edit] Career
The Tony Williams Lifetime was founded in 1969 as a power trio with John McLaughlin on electric guitar and Larry Young on organ. Emergency! (1969), its debut double album for Polydor Records, was largely rejected by jazz listeners at the time of its release, but eventually became looked upon as a classic of the fusion genre. (Williams' debut album as a bandleader, released on Blue Note in 1964, was coincidentally titled Life Time but has no relation to the fusion group.) Jack Bruce joined the group to provide electric bass and vocals on its next album, Turn It Over (1970). McLaughlin then left the group and was replaced on guitar by Ted Dunbar for their third album, Ego (1970). (Jimmy Smith's guitarist Nathan Page turned down a job with the group at this juncture after only one rehearsal.) The fourth and last Lifetime album for Polydor, The Old Bum's Rush (1972), featured an entirely new personnel (aside from Williams himself) and a keyboard-heavy sound. It received poor reviews, and the group was effectively dissolved for several years.
In 1975, Williams put together a quartet he called The New Tony Williams Lifetime featuring bassist Tony Newton, pianist Alan Pasqua, and English guitarist Allan Holdsworth, which recorded two albums for Columbia Records, Believe It (1975) and Million Dollar Legs (1976). These albums were released together on a single CD in 1992 under the title Lifetime: The Collection.
[edit] Musicians
Founding members:
- John McLaughlin - (guitar)
- Larry Young - (organ)
- Tony Williams - (drums)
Other members:
- Jack Bruce - (bass, vocals)
- Ted Dunbar - (guitar)
"The New Tony Williams Lifetime":
- Allan Holdsworth - (guitar)
- Tony Newton - (bass)
- Alan Pasqua - (keyboards)
- Tony Williams - (drums)
[edit] Influence
At the time of its release The Tony Williams Lifetime's debut album Emergency! was notably influential on the then-emerging genre of jazz fusion.[1] It was also one of several albums that the members of The Allman Brothers Band listened to regularly early in their career.[2]
John Zorn named The Tony Williams Lifetime as a specific musical inspiration in the liner notes of the Naked City album Radio.
[edit] Tributes
Since the death of Williams in 1997, Jack DeJohnette and John Scofield formed Trio Beyond with Larry Goldings in honour of The Tony Williams Lifetime. They have released one album, Saudades (2006), on the German label ECM.
In 2006, former Lifetime members Allan Holdsworth and Alan Pasqua toured with drummer Chad Wackerman and bassist Jimmy Haslip performing a set comprising original as well as Lifetime material. They recorded a live DVD scheduled for release in early 2007, and future live dates are planned.