The first time I heard the bass line from this song was on a loop called “Savage Intelligence,” by Bay Area MC’s named Konceptual Dominance (Koncepts and Kirby) where they incorporated it into their song beautifully. Imagine my amazement when I found the tape at my mom’s house and pressed play. That bass is part of a musical landscape arranged by Lonnie Liston Smith and its called “A Chance for Peace,” the first cut off the 1975 “Visions of a New World.” It features Cecil McBee (bass), George Barron (sax), Joe Beck (guitar), David Lee Jr. (drums), James Mtume and Sonny Morgan (percussion), Badal Roy (table), Geeta Vashi (tamboura), and Liston Smith (Piano/Keys).
Born in 1940, this Richmond Virginia native was brought up in a musical family. He studied music in high school and at Morgan State University. Starting his career in Baltimore and later moved to New York City where so many musicians make the pilgrimage to in order to gig, collaborate, learn, and elevate their skill. After studying with family, school, the clubs, and many greats, he grew into an extremely accomplished musician and band leader, who has played with Art Blakey, Betty Carter, Gato Barbieri, Miles Davis, Guru from Gangstarr, and Pharoah Sanders. As a band leader of The Cosmic Echoes,” the Visions of a New World was the second LP he released with famed producer Bob Thiele.
The bass is deceiving, first screaming full of funk, then providing a trance-inducing floor for the guitar, trumpets, vocals, synthesizers, and violins to walk on. One of the reasons I gravitated to Liston Smith, despite the fact that he’s been so widely sampled in hip hop, is his incredible ability to fuse sounds and genres together. Jazz, traditional, funky, electronic, psychedelic, or even rock elements. This song and this LP have so much to offer the ear. Check it out below.
“A Chance for Peace” by Lonnie Liston Smith
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