Issue Six : Spins, Streams & Downloads

Bass Magazine digs into the latest releases of albums, books, and videos involving all things bass.

Bass Magazine digs into the latest releases of albums, books, and videos involving all things bass.

Tower Of Power

Step Up [Mack Avenue]

TOPโ€™s potent latest effort is both a reminder that the inimitable Bay Area horn band is unstoppable, as it enters its 51st year of touring and recording, and a heartfelt tribute to Rocco Prestia. Prestia, who appears on all 14 tracks, co-writing five, is honored in the liner notes as a bass innovator and โ€œthe most adored member of the band,โ€ who has retired from the road. A shout-out to current bassist Marc Van Wangeningen is also included. Rocco gets right down to rhythm-and-business with lifelong drumming partner David Garibaldi to provide the bubbling underpinning for the โ€œOakland Strokeโ€-like opener and closer, โ€œEast Bay All the Wayโ€ and the riffy title track. โ€œLook in My Eyes,โ€ the first of two straight tracks Prestia co-wrote with Spyro Gyra keyboardist Tom Schuman, sports a slick, syncopated start before Rocco settles into his trademark galloping groove. The second collab, โ€œYou Da One,โ€ rides Prestiaโ€™s percolating, broken-16ths line as only he can phrase it. The Rock is at his most creative on โ€œSleeping With Ya Babyโ€ and โ€œBeyond My Wildest Dreams.โ€ Both tunes give bass all the space to drive the engine both rhythmically and melodically, and Prestia takes advantage, using chord tones, drop downs, upper-register fills, and counter-rhythms through each compositionโ€™s cycle-rich chord changes. The legend lives on. โ€”Chris Jisi

Stone Temple Pilots

Perdida [Play Pen Music]

Reenergized and inspired with the recent addition of frontman Jeff Guff, Stone Temple Pilots have notched a new first in their already illustrious careers by releasing an album of all acoustic songs. Robert DeLeoโ€™s rich, warm acoustic tone and sturdy rhythmic playing fills out the album of ten originals, giving listeners insight on exactly how big of a hand DeLeo has in STPโ€™s writing process. But beyond foundational support, DeLeo shows off his superb melodicism, delivering winding, soulful, beautiful moments throughout the record. โ€œI Didnโ€™t Know the Time,โ€ โ€œYears,โ€ and โ€œSunburstโ€ show exactly how important and central DeLeo is to the music of STP, while also giving a masterclass in how to melodically support a vocalist with the bass. โ€”Jon Dโ€™Auria

Ben Kenney

Must Be Nice [Ghetto Crush]

For his sixth solo release, Ben Kenney flexes his muscles as a multi-instrumentalist and once again lets fans inside the musical headspace of his personal stylings. A mastermind of tones and themes who gives acute, meticulous attention to detail in his songwriting, the Incubus bassist tees off on his newest creation, oscillating from aggressive, dirty, and heavy to melodic, vulnerable, and decisively self-aware. His crushing tones on โ€œOver Meโ€ and โ€œRed Hotโ€ lay a vast contrast to the soulful pop sensibilities of โ€œNo Lives,โ€ Blue Tint,โ€ and โ€œSidereal.โ€ More than being in awe of his mastery of bass, guitar, drums, vocal range, and production, the biggest takeaway from this album is that Kenney is an extreme fan of vastly different musical genres and knows how to authentically summon them at his will. โ€”Jon Dโ€™Auria

Teymur Phell

Master Volume [teymurphell.com]

New York (by way of Azerbaijan and Israel) 6-string bass guitarist Teymur Phell, best known for his head-turning role in Mike Sternโ€™s trio, swings for the fences on his much-anticipated debut. The ten-song disc launches with its aptly named epicenter track, โ€œZero to Sixty.โ€ Phell first nods to his Pastorian influence with a burning โ€œPunk Jazzโ€-reminiscent bass melody (complete with a โ€œContinuumโ€ quote) before settling into a halftime feel to sing his gorgeous wordless melody and take a soulful, arching solo. Sternโ€™s influence and presence can be heard on โ€œPapano Kimonoโ€ and โ€œUnfinished Business,โ€ both sporting angular, bluesy heads and 55 Bar-style, funky-two-feels โ€” the former with a wicked Dennis Chambers drum stepout, the latter with a severe solo by Phell. Elsewhere, Phellโ€™s writing and melody rendering are extra-heartfelt on the memorable ballad โ€œChances Are,โ€ and โ€œWorth the Waitโ€ is a joyous, horn-laden mix of influences riding an odd-time Jaco-esque boogie. Perhaps most defining are the Azerbaijan and Turkish sounds of Phellโ€™s youth, present in everything from his left-hand hammer approach throughout to his fretless work on โ€œOld Windowโ€ to the B section of โ€œSweet Sweep.โ€ โ€”Chris Jisi

Kaveh Rastegar

Haunted This Way [Ropeadope]

On his second solo album in just over a year, Kaveh Rastegar steps out of the sideman role with John Legend and sheds the many hats he wears as a musical director, studio ace, and reliable low-ender to reveal his expressiveness as singerโ€“songwriter. Featuring ten songs that were written over an eight-year span, Rastegar focuses on his voice as a lyricist and singer, while holding down many of the albumโ€™s instruments. He does all of this without letting his bass playing take a back seat, as his lines shine through with tightly plucked riffs and a diversity of vintage tones. His driving picking on โ€œThe Half That Holds My Heartโ€ and โ€œEasy to Pleaseโ€ are great examples of his thoughtful playing on this immensely enjoyable album. โ€”Jon Dโ€™Auria

Red56

Eminence Funk [Bandcamp]

Best known for his hard-rockinโ€™ stints with Quiet Riot and Dee Snider (and as one of Bass Magazineโ€™s esteemed editors), Freddy Villano turns up the funk and soul on his latest project, inspired by James Brown, Tower Of Power, Brand New Heavies, and an early role in a disco cover band where he realized bass could be the dominant instrument. Partnered with his better half, vocalist Danielle Gorre, and a talented crew of upstate New York musicians, Villano indeed places his basses front, forward, and center โ€” starting with the horn-accented stomp โ€œItโ€™s All Right,โ€ which rides his relentless, galloping 16th-note groove. Switching to a pick, he keeps the wave of pocketed, steady 16ths coming on โ€œFunky Attitude.โ€ Other highpoints include the trippy โ€œSalvation,โ€ which sports a double-time slap B section, the taut, Sly Stone edge of the title track, and the Janis Joplin/jam-band haze of โ€œJust a Little Secret.โ€ โ€”Chris Jisi

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