Albums came less frequently from Stanley Clarke in the 1990s as film
scores took up more and more of his time. Not only that, the ideas and
functions of film music play a large role in East River Drive, where
selections come as often as not in the form of cue-like vamps, as well
as two actual themes from Clarke's scores for the films
Poetic Justice and
Boyz N the Hood.
Oddly enough, Clarke's music benefits from his film immersion, for his
compositional ideas are sharper and more sophisticated here, and he
applies them to a range of electric music idioms. "Zabadoobeebe,"
"Illegal," and "I'm Home Africa" bear mild African influences, the
elegant "Christmas in Rio" has a slight whiff of Brazil, and "Lords of
the Low Frequencies" is an extraordinary slap-happy duel between Clarke
and fellow virtuoso
Armand Sabal-Lecco. As before, Clarke gets help from some of his famous friends -- among them are
Gerald Albright,
George Howard,
Hubert Laws,
Jean-Luc Ponty,
Poncho Sanchez, and the inevitable
George Duke
-- and he most ably splits the string arranging tasks with George
DelBarrio. This is a mature statement from a most accomplished musician,
who was still young at 42.
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