He is, to this day, the hardest-hitting drummer that has ever sat behind a drum set. He is also one of, if not, the first open-handed players. His use of the China was legendary. The list goes on and on.
Once Jan Hammer touches a keyboard there is NO one that sounds like him. One of my all time favorites. Gosh it's too bad he and JM never teamed up again, even for a one-off.
The main book written about the Mahavishnu Orchestra tried to make the case a reunion could happen (before Rick died) but...I don't think John believed the claim that the anger against him from the others was gone.
@@roblastem2905 His stuff with Jeff Beck on Wired is Peak Jazz Fusion. I heard it first when I was 17 in about 92 and it was during a 2 week holiday in France from Scotland. I had a bunch of tapes on my personal stereo. I was reading the player of games by Iain M Banks at the same time and Wired was alien enough to work perfectly as a soundtrack for that crazy decadent alien culture. For me at that age it was truly alien music but I loved it. Same for Vai Flexable on the same trip and Not of this earth by Satch. I also had Van Halen 1984, NIght Ranger Dawn Patrol, and IIRC that 1st Jason Becker album with Altitudes on it. I think there was also another couple of albums. I was already mad into guitar but that list sealed the deal. 30+ years later still playing guitar and loving all these albums and players. Luv and Peace.
I was 15 in 1977 when I bought The Inner Mounting Flame. It blew my mind then and still gets me emotional every time I play it. Billy’s solo here is immense. 😊
According to Ruth Underwood when she saw Zappa's face as he watched their set she knew that a big change was coming in the Mother's. That change turned out to be Chester Thompson. "On Ruth!"
Its absurd man freakish stuff by both especially that last 2 and half minutes or so ending with Goodmans insane sounding haunting/western/jazz chordal solo stuff and then Cobhams pretty much maxed out all time cant get any better drumming solo outro.
I was 17, senior in high school, drove 60 miles on a school night (I have no idea what I told my parents that I was doing). Talked my way into a club (had to be 18 to get in legally) so I got to see this band in early 1973 in Ohio. I had their first two albums and I was obsessed with them. They blew my mind that night. I've never been the same! I never tire of listening to this band. There never was before and never was since them, anyone who played music like this. No. One.
I hear you man! One of the greatest tunes for me is from Belo Horizonte 'One Melody' where JM and the violin player (Augustin Dumay) play these unison lines that completely knock your head off!! As a matter of fact I', going to listen to this right now!
Me too-life changing music during teen years; super lucky to have been just old enough to go see them during the first tour they did in the US, debuting this amazing lineup! That and the Allan Holdsworth shows that I was lucky enough to see a number of times, were indescribably powerful!
Me too. Saw them in Manchester mid 70s - so blown away went down to Birmingham a few days later and saw them again. This was the later lineup though. Both lineups great.
Me also, this band was my gateway into Jazz Fushion....and never looked back. Also got to see them twice in Melbourne at the Palais and Billy once in the Basement in Sydney.
these guys were so far ahead of their time. All amazing musicians just doing what they love. Never conformed. Hate em, love em, dont understand their music? Sorry, gave it to you anyway.
Simply amazing - Rick Laird, Bill Cobham, McGlaughlin, Jerry Goodman, Jan Hammer. I brought home Inner Mounting Flame on vinyl, and thought I was hearing music from another solar system or galaxy! What t f !
El mejor grupo fusion sin duda, mi hermano mayor tenia el disco en binilo, yo tenia 9 años y lo escucho hasta ahora hace mas de 30 años. Gracias por compartirlo!!
Wow saw them 3 times with Cobham 1st time I was 13 I'm 62 now it will never be another group like this ever. Music from the Gods plain & simple I'm so glad I witness this live thank you.👊 yeah....
I have seen John McLaughlin playing this twice. Once with his jazz band at the Barbican in London and then last night in the opening concert of the Shakti 50th anniversary tour. Last night was one of the greatest concerts I have ever attended. If you can get tickets, go and see Shakti live. There is no group like them.
What a band I came across this BBC broadcast by accident I couldn't even pronounce the name Later I was overjoyed when I found out that John Macauglin was from Doncaster and Whitley Bay fantastic O remember an interview with B Cobham and he said he used to do spend the whole gig counting all night WOW
I was very fortunate to have seen the Mahavishnu Orchestra on their first two tours and they were an incredible band to see..incredible ! This is great footage..thank you for this post greatly appreciated!
Ce genre de groupe et de musique qui manque tant aujourd'hui ! Quant on voit toute la soupe qu'on nous sert aujourd'hui c'est vraiment désolant ! Le niveau intellectuel des humains est vraiment en baisse !
In what universe were they light years ahead ? Ahead of bands from the same era like Return to Forever, Weather Report, Tony William's Lifetime, Herbie Hancock’s Mwandishi and Miles Davis' Bitches Brew band ? Mahavishnu was unique, I'll give you that, bc their blend of Indian classical music, jazz and psychedelic rock.
I saw John McLaughlin perform this with the 4th Dimension last year at the Usher Hall, Edinburgh as the finale. Just amazing... McLaughlin, 80 years old (then) and so much energy (and hair!). TBH? Good as it was, this version is still better, esp. with Goodman on violin. And as much as the musicianship of the 4th Dimension is superb, there is something about the way the 1971 line up gel that makes this piece that wee bit better- special even. I have the original "Inner Mounting Flame" (and "Extrapolation" & "Birds of Fire") on vinyl & CD. I never tire of playing them. Thanks for the share on UA-cam!
Yes I graduated from high school that same year I wonder when you saw the band did you ever think they were too loud or that McLaughlin tone was kind edgy or were you like me overwhelmed by their sum total of all of the parts.
@@intuneorange Well 4 concerts stood out. 1st was at Symphony Hall in Boston (They opened for Jerry Garcia and Merle Saunders.) Acoustics there are great, so they did not need to play 2 loud. Cobham had the single bass drum kit on the first album. Hammer had less gear That was late 1971. I saw them again a little before at Holy Cross and Weather Report was the opener.. They were softer. Then in 1973 or 74 I saw them on the Boston Common opening for Loggins and Messina. Cobham had the clear Fibes set with double bass, 3 floor toms, huge Chinese gong behind him. That was super loud, but it was outside so it was cool. Then I saw them a little later that year at the Orpheum. I can't remember the opener, or if there was one. I saw Traffic there the same year. Even Traffic sounded 2 loud in that space. It had this weird balcony overhang half the floor seats which made for a low ceiling in that area, so sound got squished and muddy a lot. They were always great. People today forget how successful they were, Be safe.
It was almost 50 years ago and they were bot together that long. I saw them so often in such a short time it tends to run together. As a whole, it was unforgettable. Be safe.
I had the privilege and intense pleasure of seeing this lineup live twice in the UK. My only problem with The Inner Mounting Flame album was that I always had to save it until last during a listening session since nothing else seemed inspiring enough to follow it.
I was in a band in high school around 15/16 years old in 2007/2008 and we were very talented for our age. we played a lot of ,Zeppelin, Hendrix, Mars Volta, Santana, Cream, but it was always my favorite jamming to Mahavishnu songs.
Back in the 1970s I got to set about 10 feet from the stage in a small basement cafe watching the the George Duke Billy Cobham Group perform. Miss the fusion groups from that time so much.
Bill Bruford , from Yes and King Crimson ? He was a powerful drummer, saw him live in the 80s on stage with King Crimson reproducing exactly the sound of the Red album on stage with Robert Fripp ! What a multi percussionist !
says who, you? don't be such a weird fan. Top three... like you would even know the first thing about it. lol. Actually if you play that is even worse for you....
@@xaviercrepin2930 not even close. He had so pretty shaky time too. There is no best guys.. wake up. Until you have a stats chart anyway.... there are things you could base it on...
I grew up in a small town in Washington State……and everybody was talking about Billy Cobham at one time or another. Back in the 70s he was untouchable and playing with everyone.
Saw these guys in a small theatre in Bloomington, Indiana in 1970. Loud and totally entrancing...my attention focused right away on Billy Cobham. One of the very best of all time
i wouldn’t be so quick to judge that. we saw him in 2017 with an incredible band that included Gary Husband on keys...it was equal to this stunning posted clip from the 70’s.
@Tárlach Ó Maoláin You are correct! I actually had the exact same model Fender Rhodes ( suitcase model). Bought it in 1974! Wish I still had it...............
I went to college. In my dorm, a guy had a Fender piano in his room, and I hung out with him. One day he said, "Listen to this." and he put on Inner Mounting Flame. I couldn't get enough of it. My roommate wanted to listen to the Moody Blues and Neil Diamond. It was stressful for some reason ;-) I saw Mahavishnu live 3 times, with this same lineup. It was the most intense and energizing musical experience I have ever had. Maybe I will have this played at my funeral. Reanimation is a possibility.
I saw them 9 times. They played around Boston a lot. I saw them at Symphony Hall and Jerry Garcia and Merl Saunders were the opener. I saw them on Boston Common with Loggins and Messina. I saw them at Holy Cross with Weather Report. Great every time!
I was there at Symphony Hall (late 1971 or early 1972). But it was the other way around. Mahavishnu opened for The Jerry Garcia Band and Merl Saunders and half the audience walked out on Garcia. That was a continuing problem for Mahavishnu at the beginning. Promoters wanted to introduce them to the audiences of more well-known rock artists but no one could follow them. Not Garcia, not Zappa, not the Allman Brothers.
Back in 1972, I had the amazing opportunity as a freshman college student to attend a Mahavishnu Orchestra concert at the small-town high school in Newtown, PA, for all of THREE DOLLARS (that would be less than $25 in 2023 dollars). I had bought EVERY album (maybe 2, maybe 3 back then) that John McLaughlin had issued. At least 10 to 12 years later, I remember "trance music" had dominated dance clubs in the East Coast Philadelphia region. To me back then, it was just rewarmed and far less "tasty" versions of the human being performed Mahavishnu Orchestra. It must be said that EACH AND EVERY musician on that stage was mesmerizing in their individual talent. The musically muscular Billy Cobham was as impressively "into it" as this entire incredible ensemble of supremely talented musical artists. Now, a full 52 years later, I can still drift back in my mind to that evening in a goddamned high school auditorium and relive it, ever so thankfully, once again!
A great band in live performance. Unique for the time. The opening spirituality aspect of Mclaughlin's requesting silence while he meditated into opening the set created a mood not ever witnessed by our young ears. And not to forget Billy Cobham's tour de force drum solos.
Music of the highest level. I may have missed seeing Coltrane live by a few years but fortunately I'm up there is age and saw this band live a number of times. This still sounds fresh to my ears when compared to the current musical happenings.
Jan Hammer made some memorable appearances as a side man ~ Billy Cobham ~ Spectrum 1973 Stanley Clarke ~ Stanley Clarke 1974 Horacee Arnold ~ Tales Of The Exonerated Flea 1974 John Abercrombie ~ Timeless 1975 Elvin Jones ~ Elvin Jones Is On The Mountain With Jan Hammer And Gene Perla 1975
Jan Hammers playing just now... Brought me out of a depression... Never saw him but I love his playing... I'm just in awe. I've seen John maclaughlin lately, and years ago.... I saw Billy Cobham once with Bobby and midnights... Why just this music makes me happily uneasy ,and craving more and more and more? It would be hard for me to go on without this collaboration
I thank my buddy Bob went from Delmar near Albany NY for turning me onto this band and Frank zappa.he died just not long ago in california.luv ya bud.i was 15 or 16 him too in Albany NY 1976
No One Ever Mentioned The Name Billy Cobham to Me, was Only By Ear Listening to Mahavishnu I said That the Percussionist is an Amazing Vibrant Talent, His Work With just Hammer alone and Tommy Bolin Is Incredible...
In the 70's I had a record player that had 33 rpm, 45 rpm and 16 rpm... I listened to the "Spectrum" album at 16 rpm to slow everything down and that's how I learned how to play the drums. Billy Cobham was my #1 drummer, above all the rest. Of course, you had to listen to Harvey Mason, Steve Gadd, Lenny White, Alphonse Mouzon, Narada Michael Walden and even Ian Paice..etc... Billy Cobham was also the most exciting to see live....
Saw them at John's 25th anniversary at the Rainbow in 78.Met a guy who liked ice cream mixed with cucumber.He had a dog named Peter.Same as my uncle's.Amazing.And,he came from somewhere in India.Amazing.I caught the bus afterwards.It was on time.When I got back home,I had some toast.It was lovely.
Yeah, Jeff and John are big fans of each other; there's a great video on youtube of them bowing down before each other, then playing a killing version of "Django", which they recorded for John's album, "The Promise".
Wow just plain wow. Inner Mounting Flame is pure out of this world . So many brilliant tracks on it and then this live version . Man Billy Cobham is just killing it !
An incredible group of musicians’. I’ve had the fortune to see Messrs McLaughlin, Cobham and Hammer live. But Mahavishnu were there in my formative years. Deepest respect.🌞🙏🌞.
I don't have the words to describe what I just saw and heard. Billy Cobham and Jerry Goodma are total freaks of nature. The greatest band EVER. And only one person covered them...Jeff Beck, RIP
Saw Mahavishnu Orchestra -enraptured, twice, in Boston: during Inner Mounting Flame era, and then during Birds of Fire tour. A highschool friend had become ear over ear for them. Great to see them in roving closeup here. From the crowd, couldn't be that close. But Live... life changing.
I saw them at Symphony Hall opening for The Jerry Garcia Band. Were you there? Incredible performance. They came to blow away Garcia...and that's exactly what they did.
It was my pleasure to see this band in Woolsey Hall, at Yale University, front row balcony. They opened with "Birbs of Fire". I bought the tickets from Cutler's records for $1.50.
When I saw this band on TV for the first time in 1970, my life changed forever. As a later guitarist I was first fascinated by John McLaughlin, later I became a very big fan of Jan Hammer and his special way of playing synthesizers. (Of course also a fan of Billy Cobham and Jerry Goldsmith) You can recognize Hammer by his style and sound. Hammer’s solo in Al di Meola’s song „Elegant Gypsy Suite“ (1977 on the album with the same name) is one of e the most soulful, beautiful and ingenious synthesizer solos I ever heard. And I heard a lot of the best ones from then to now, like the one of Jordan Rudess (DREAM THEATER).
I saw them in Toronto in the early 70s along with Santana. Both bands on stage at the same time with John McLaughlin and Carlos Santana both dressed in white, both with double neck 12 string guitars, trading leads back and forth. Might have been the best concert that I have ever been to!
Come on this is Criminal, Musicians are Not allowed to be THIS Good. Blimey it is Incredible like the French Version elsewhere on UA-cam. I also was So lucky to witness this Awesome group live and still today You Know You Know remains my Absolute Favourite track of this band. ❤️♥️
why is the time so sloppy then. you can hear the slop in this show. They can't even hit the riff in time together. If you can't hear that then you're not listening.
Billy using the brains 🧠 in each limb whilst utilising the one in his head for quiet, satisfied reflection on just how dammed gifted he is…To be fair the collective is at the very pinnacle of musicianship, marvellous, just marvellous.
I'm obsessed with Billy Cobham. How does nobody talk about this guy? He's a top 3 drummer of all time for me.
It's crazy - he is still incredible today. He's a monster.
Very good point. You hardly ever hear him mentioned
He is, to this day, the hardest-hitting drummer that has ever sat behind a drum set. He is also one of, if not, the first open-handed players. His use of the China was legendary. The list goes on and on.
People know! Mahavishnu was kind of a big deal!
You are right, he’s a monster , a legend since, I don’t believe... 50 years and more
Seeing Mahavishnu Orchestra and Weather Report in the 70s changed my musical trajectory.
Me too. Fell in love with fusion.
RIP Rick Laird (bassist)
Billy Cobham was so fast you couldn't see the drum sticks ,genius, a dream band
Once Jan Hammer touches a keyboard there is NO one that sounds like him. One of my all time favorites. Gosh it's too bad he and JM never teamed up again, even for a one-off.
The main book written about the Mahavishnu Orchestra tried to make the case a reunion could happen (before Rick died) but...I don't think John believed the claim that the anger against him from the others was gone.
True. More specifically, in my opinion, no-one ever came close to Hammer performing with a Moog, absolutely cutting edge, way, way ahead of his time.
Jan Hammer IMO is the greatest keyboard player that ever lived
@@roblastem2905 His stuff with Jeff Beck on Wired is Peak Jazz Fusion. I heard it first when I was 17 in about 92 and it was during a 2 week holiday in France from Scotland. I had a bunch of tapes on my personal stereo. I was reading the player of games by Iain M Banks at the same time and Wired was alien enough to work perfectly as a soundtrack for that crazy decadent alien culture.
For me at that age it was truly alien music but I loved it.
Same for Vai Flexable on the same trip and Not of this earth by Satch.
I also had Van Halen 1984, NIght Ranger Dawn Patrol, and IIRC that 1st Jason Becker album with Altitudes on it. I think there was also another couple of albums.
I was already mad into guitar but that list sealed the deal.
30+ years later still playing guitar and loving all these albums and players.
Luv and Peace.
Gotta agree ! Jan has a style on Fender Rhodes and synth that as soon as you hear it, you know it’s Jan Hammer. IMO,
I was 15 in 1977 when I bought The Inner Mounting Flame. It blew my mind then and still gets me emotional every time I play it. Billy’s solo here is immense. 😊
I saw them at the Spectrum in 1972. They opened for Zappa. I drove up from Charlottesville and drove back slow to catch the sunrise.
According to Ruth Underwood when she saw Zappa's face as he watched their set she knew that a big change was coming in the Mother's. That change turned out to be Chester Thompson. "On Ruth!"
I saw them @ The Tower Theater in Upper Darby, Pa
Takes 8 hours to get to Rocky Mount NC from there. I know, I know
Same tour I saw them both in Toronto. My very first.
I was at that same show...it was epic!!!
How about a shout out for Jerry Goodman's electrifying violin 🎻 playing? Wow Cobham is controlled firepower!
Its absurd man freakish stuff by both especially that last 2 and half minutes or so ending with Goodmans insane sounding haunting/western/jazz chordal solo stuff and then Cobhams pretty much maxed out all time cant get any better drumming solo outro.
His playing is so graceful
The layering with the guitar & violin is so good!
Both of them were simply outstanding!
Formerly from the "Flock"...hey, I had a few of their albums. A great unheralded band@!
Nobody but nobody ever developed the voice of the Moog like Jan. Jan channeled and converted that instrument into the voice of angels.
I was 17, senior in high school, drove 60 miles on a school night (I have no idea what I told my parents that I was doing). Talked my way into a club (had to be 18 to get in legally) so I got to see this band in early 1973 in Ohio. I had their first two albums and I was obsessed with them. They blew my mind that night. I've never been the same! I never tire of listening to this band. There never was before and never was since them, anyone who played music like this. No. One.
Great story - are you secretly Mr Neary from Close Encounters? 😂
I hear you man! One of the greatest tunes for me is from Belo Horizonte 'One Melody' where JM and the violin player (Augustin Dumay) play these unison lines that completely knock your head off!! As a matter of fact I', going to listen to this right now!
Fantastic... how privileged we were living in those criative years.
unparalleled.
Those were the days of disco and glam-rock when we were looking back at the 60's as the good old days.
It's incredible what you can build on a 9-note simple melody given some imagination and five brilliant musicians!
3+3+2,3+3+2,3+3+2 = 24/8
This might be the best close-up camera work I've seen of Jan soloing on the Moog! Billy Cobham is a force of nature.
Thank you BBC. The BBC has done so much to make us aware of music, and comedy, and wildlife, and a hundred other things.
Was so lucky to see this incredible group live. That music lives within me. It was so powerful in person.
Me too-life changing music during teen years; super lucky to have been just old enough to go see them during the first tour they did in the US, debuting this amazing lineup!
That and the Allan Holdsworth shows that I was lucky enough to see a number of times, were indescribably powerful!
Me too. Saw them in Manchester mid 70s - so blown away went down to Birmingham a few days later and saw them again. This was the later lineup though. Both lineups great.
Me too
Opened for Frank Zappa
Tower Theater Upper Darby, Pa.
I saw them 3 times 72-75 RTF's first concert. and Jean Luc Ponty in 77 ..... I never have been the same since.
Me also, this band was my gateway into Jazz Fushion....and never looked back. Also got to see them twice in Melbourne at the Palais and Billy once in the Basement in Sydney.
Cobham is like an extension of Art Blakey and Elvin Jones but in the fusion era. He is a Colossus!
@Michael Zoom Yeah, the whole band was amazing!
A great critic in Boston named James Isaacs called Cobham a combination of Tony Williams and Bernard Purdie. Both yours and his are great!
I believe that Jon Hiseman could have played for them.
Powerhouse. He can emulate a train barreling through your house.
@Kenneth Liburd Jon Hiseman.
He was British Played for Colosseum
Listen to Boston Tea Party 1969 (The Machine Demands A Sacrifice) here on You Tube
This is one of the greatest videos on UA-cam.
2:50
these guys were so far ahead of their time. All amazing musicians just doing what they love. Never conformed. Hate em, love em, dont understand their music? Sorry, gave it to you anyway.
Simply amazing - Rick Laird, Bill Cobham, McGlaughlin, Jerry Goodman, Jan Hammer.
I brought home Inner Mounting Flame on vinyl, and thought I was hearing music from another solar system or galaxy! What t f !
Yes! It is wonderful! I love it.
I had the mirror experience.
El mejor grupo fusion sin duda, mi hermano mayor tenia el disco en binilo, yo tenia 9 años y lo escucho hasta ahora hace mas de 30 años. Gracias por compartirlo!!
Tim Koss Music- Hymn of the Seventh Galaxy…different but the same Spaceship
The great Keith Emerson was a Jan Hammer fan😊
Musicians know how good Billy Cobham is. His solo recording are amazing. Crosswinds,,,,,,etc.
Jan's mini Moog solo is so breathtaking, at times "slinky", and always in control, I loved him on John Ambecrombe's "Timeless"
Timeless is a masterpiece...Jan Hammer is absolutely fabulous there, extremely refined, pure poetry.
he is really on fire here
@@andradas9688
Wow saw them 3 times with Cobham 1st time I was 13 I'm 62 now it will never be another group like this ever. Music from the Gods plain & simple I'm so glad I witness this live thank you.👊 yeah....
Don Kirshner's Rock Concert.... 1973 I think, I was like 13 or 14...
Lucky you!!
I think UK is quite like this.
I have seen John McLaughlin playing this twice. Once with his jazz band at the Barbican in London and then last night in the opening concert of the Shakti 50th anniversary tour. Last night was one of the greatest concerts I have ever attended. If you can get tickets, go and see Shakti live. There is no group like them.
Dude playing the moog like its a damn guitar 😮❤️🔥🔥🔥
When you know you know, you don't really care if anyone knows you know, but you always kind of wonder who it is that knows you know.
There are unknown knowns, but also unknown unknowns...
What a band I came across this BBC broadcast by accident I couldn't even pronounce the name Later I was overjoyed when I found out that John Macauglin was from Doncaster and Whitley Bay fantastic O remember an interview with B Cobham and he said he used to do spend the whole gig counting all night WOW
I was very fortunate to have seen the Mahavishnu Orchestra on their first two tours and they were an incredible band to see..incredible ! This is great footage..thank you for this post greatly appreciated!
Saw them at the Mississippi River Festival, SIU-E Edwardsville, Ill. Incredible !!
Maybe if I was a drummer, the things that Billy Cobham does wouldn't so boggle and confound me. How the hells he do dat?
Ce genre de groupe et de musique qui manque tant aujourd'hui ! Quant on voit toute la soupe qu'on nous sert aujourd'hui c'est vraiment désolant ! Le niveau intellectuel des humains est vraiment en baisse !
For musicians on top of the world and are Rick Laird to keep them honest. Probably the best super super group ever.
Hammer getting feedback from the Fender Rhodes so, cleverly swaps tp the Moog but has to adjust volume levels - genius!
Incredible band, light years ahead of anyone else at the time, even today. I miss that shit.
In what universe were they light years ahead ? Ahead of bands from the same era like Return to Forever, Weather Report, Tony William's Lifetime, Herbie Hancock’s Mwandishi and Miles Davis' Bitches Brew band ?
Mahavishnu was unique, I'll give you that, bc their blend of Indian classical music, jazz and psychedelic rock.
@@yellfire I see you come to UA-cam to troll. Good for you. Your mother says hello, simp.
Jan realizes the Rhodes is buzzing...and turns to the Mini!
I saw John McLaughlin perform this with the 4th Dimension last year at the Usher Hall, Edinburgh as the finale. Just amazing... McLaughlin, 80 years old (then) and so much energy (and hair!). TBH? Good as it was, this version is still better, esp. with Goodman on violin. And as much as the musicianship of the 4th Dimension is superb, there is something about the way the 1971 line up gel that makes this piece that wee bit better- special even. I have the original "Inner Mounting Flame" (and "Extrapolation" & "Birds of Fire") on vinyl & CD. I never tire of playing them. Thanks for the share on UA-cam!
All still alive. The World 🌎 could really use this fellowship & energy right now. Actually needs it.
Unfortunately Rick Laird passed away this month at age 80.
Jan Hammer !!! The Best !!!
@Barry Manilowa Don't call Czech Republic East Europe!! It's central Europe. Home of Jan Hammer. I visited Prague. They love Jazz.
There was a polish jazz musician Mike Urbanek. I'm talking 70' 80'. He played saxophone if I remember correctly.
I had the fever for quite a few years after discovering Birds of fire and then Spectrum.
Absolutely brilliant...all the guys.. masters of their craft...when I first heard Inner Mounted Flame in 1971..it just blew me away.
Forever with the MO ,for more of 40 years listening and enjoy
I saw them 9 times! I graduated from high school in 1971 when their first album came out. I was lucky. They played Boston a lot. I played drums.
Lucky chap
Yes I graduated from high school that same year I wonder when you saw the band did you ever think they were too loud or that McLaughlin tone was kind edgy or were you like me overwhelmed by their sum total of all of the parts.
@@intuneorange Well 4 concerts stood out. 1st was at Symphony Hall in Boston (They opened for Jerry Garcia and Merle Saunders.) Acoustics there are great, so they did not need to play 2 loud. Cobham had the single bass drum kit on the first album. Hammer had less gear That was late 1971. I saw them again a little before at Holy Cross and Weather Report was the opener.. They were softer. Then in 1973 or 74 I saw them on the Boston Common opening for Loggins and Messina. Cobham had the clear Fibes set with double bass, 3 floor toms, huge Chinese gong behind him. That was super loud, but it was outside so it was cool. Then I saw them a little later that year at the Orpheum. I can't remember the opener, or if there was one. I saw Traffic there the same year. Even Traffic sounded 2 loud in that space. It had this weird balcony overhang half the floor seats which made for a low ceiling in that area, so sound got squished and muddy a lot. They were always great. People today forget how successful they were, Be safe.
It was almost 50 years ago and they were bot together that long. I saw them so often in such a short time it tends to run together. As a whole, it was unforgettable. Be safe.
What Zeus Apollo said!
JAN HAMMER the best!!!!!.....cheers from Chile!!!
I had the privilege and intense pleasure of seeing this lineup live twice in the UK.
My only problem with The Inner Mounting Flame album was that I always had to save it until last during a listening session since nothing else seemed inspiring enough to follow it.
mid-70s Oregon is at least this good
I was in a band in high school around 15/16 years old in 2007/2008 and we were very talented for our age. we played a lot of ,Zeppelin, Hendrix, Mars Volta, Santana, Cream, but it was always my favorite jamming to Mahavishnu songs.
Back in the 1970s I got to set about 10 feet from the stage in a small basement cafe watching the the George Duke Billy Cobham Group perform. Miss the fusion groups from that time so much.
With a nod to the other talent on stage, Billy Cobham has been one of the top three drummers in the world for decades, imo!
Jon Hiseman was just as good.
Just curious Chuck..Billy, Vinnie and who would the third drummer be?
Bill Bruford , from Yes and King Crimson ? He was a powerful drummer, saw him live in the 80s on stage with King Crimson reproducing exactly the sound of the Red album on stage with Robert Fripp ! What a multi percussionist !
says who, you? don't be such a weird fan. Top three... like you would even know the first thing about it. lol. Actually if you play that is even worse for you....
@@xaviercrepin2930 not even close. He had so pretty shaky time too. There is no best guys.. wake up. Until you have a stats chart anyway.... there are things you could base it on...
Jerry Goodman & Billy Cobham, like out of the world 🖤🖤
I grew up in a small town in Washington State……and everybody was talking about Billy Cobham at one time or another. Back in the 70s he was untouchable and playing with everyone.
Saw these guys in a small theatre in Bloomington, Indiana in 1970. Loud and totally entrancing...my attention focused right away on Billy Cobham. One of the very best of all time
Hmm. Mahavishnu wasn’t founded then (in 1970)
One of the coolest songs every written.
I will never forget the first time I heard The Inner Mounting Flame. It exploded, imploded, rearranged and reassembled my mind.
I wore this album out back in the day. What a treat to see it performed live!
The Mahavishnu Orchestra Days were the best John ever had in my opinion. What a band!
i wouldn’t be so quick to judge that. we saw him in 2017 with an incredible band that included Gary Husband on keys...it was equal to this stunning posted clip from the 70’s.
0:50 "I'm tired of being brilliant on the Rhodes, maybe I'll just turn to the MiniMoog and be brilliant"
Jan Hammer!!!!!
@Tárlach Ó Maoláin
You are correct! I actually had the exact same model Fender Rhodes ( suitcase model). Bought it in 1974!
Wish I still had it...............
I went to college. In my dorm, a guy had a Fender piano in his room, and I hung out with him. One day he said, "Listen to this." and he put on Inner Mounting Flame. I couldn't get enough of it. My roommate wanted to listen to the Moody Blues and Neil Diamond. It was stressful for some reason ;-) I saw Mahavishnu live 3 times, with this same lineup. It was the most intense and energizing musical experience I have ever had. Maybe I will have this played at my funeral. Reanimation is a possibility.
Thank you! Jan doesn't get the credit he deserves. He was a king long before 'Miami Vice'.
@@jerryvivanco4898 We are in his channel!! Thanks Mr Hammer!!
This is an absolute mastery of performance
totally out of tune and often sloppy and out of time.
Thank you Mr. Hammer!!
Billy Cobham is smooth. Beautiful. He comes from a great line of jazz drummers.
I love his “Spectrum” album
I saw them 9 times. They played around Boston a lot. I saw them at Symphony Hall and Jerry Garcia and Merl Saunders were the opener. I saw them on Boston Common with Loggins and Messina. I saw them at Holy Cross with Weather Report. Great every time!
Damn you were a lucky fellow!
I was there at Symphony Hall (late 1971 or early 1972). But it was the other way around. Mahavishnu opened for The Jerry Garcia Band and Merl Saunders and half the audience walked out on Garcia. That was a continuing problem for Mahavishnu at the beginning. Promoters wanted to introduce them to the audiences of more well-known rock artists but no one could follow them. Not Garcia, not Zappa, not the Allman Brothers.
I saw them at Symphony Hall too! I saw them another time when they opened for (wait for it)… J. Geils Band.
What a fkng capacity ?? To memorize all this. And sound so tight with the boys ?? Unreal. Never understood
I saw Cobham twice and he is fantastic.
Wow That's THE Mahavishnu Orchestra..
From Other Spaces
If you know, you know.This is a form of magic.The real kind.
Back in 1972, I had the amazing opportunity as a freshman college student to attend a Mahavishnu Orchestra concert at the small-town high school in Newtown, PA, for all of THREE DOLLARS (that would be less than $25 in 2023 dollars). I had bought EVERY album (maybe 2, maybe 3 back then) that John McLaughlin had issued. At least 10 to 12 years later, I remember "trance music" had dominated dance clubs in the East Coast Philadelphia region. To me back then, it was just rewarmed and far less "tasty" versions of the human being performed Mahavishnu Orchestra. It must be said that EACH AND EVERY musician on that stage was mesmerizing in their individual talent. The musically muscular Billy Cobham was as impressively "into it" as this entire incredible ensemble of supremely talented musical artists. Now, a full 52 years later, I can still drift back in my mind to that evening in a goddamned high school auditorium and relive it, ever so thankfully, once again!
A great band in live performance. Unique for the time. The opening spirituality aspect of Mclaughlin's requesting silence while he meditated into opening the set created a mood not ever witnessed by our young ears. And not to forget Billy Cobham's tour de force drum solos.
Music of the highest level. I may have missed seeing Coltrane live by a few years but fortunately I'm up there is age and saw this band live a number of times. This still sounds fresh to my ears when compared to the current musical happenings.
sad for you.
私はFBでも ファンにはいってますが あなたが日本に来た時のライヴを本当に若い頃見ました 今でもあなたのグループは 凄すぎて 感動しました 本当に最高のメンバー集まってやったからでしょうね ありがとう
Jan Hammer made some memorable appearances as a side man ~
Billy Cobham ~ Spectrum 1973
Stanley Clarke ~ Stanley Clarke 1974
Horacee Arnold ~ Tales Of The Exonerated Flea 1974
John Abercrombie ~ Timeless 1975
Elvin Jones ~ Elvin Jones Is On The Mountain With Jan Hammer And Gene Perla 1975
Jam Hammer also did the soundtrack for the tv series "Miami Vice".
How can you not mention the Jeff Beck - Hammer collab ?
Also played with Al DiMeola
You forgot Jeff Beck.
I love this piece, it's intense and the theme can be explored in so many way. I've listened to it I don't know how many time , you know !
You know?
You know!
Jan Hammers playing just now... Brought me out of a depression... Never saw him but I love his playing... I'm just in awe. I've seen John maclaughlin lately, and years ago.... I saw Billy Cobham once with Bobby and midnights... Why just this music makes me happily uneasy ,and craving more and more and more? It would be hard for me to go on without this collaboration
Hope u r well. Have u viewed the Syracuse U. Live video?
Wait:
Jan Hammer!?!
2020 still listening....
Me
I got the LP Inner mounting flame as a gift. I am thankful for that gift. this is one of the tracks that i love. And A lotus on irish streams.
I thank my buddy Bob went from Delmar near Albany NY for turning me onto this band and Frank zappa.he died just not long ago in california.luv ya bud.i was 15 or 16 him too in Albany NY 1976
Contemporary music 1971. My lord what happened.
Jan Hammer was pioneering speed, sound and groove ... ...great days
No One Ever Mentioned The Name Billy Cobham to Me, was Only By Ear Listening to Mahavishnu I said That the Percussionist is an Amazing Vibrant Talent, His Work With just Hammer alone and Tommy Bolin Is Incredible...
The Mahavishnu Orchestra was so great! Perfect!
Every time I hear Billy Cobham I realize if it wasn't for him this band wouldn't have been realized.
It started off with John and BIlly jamming.
In the 70's I had a record player that had 33 rpm, 45 rpm and 16 rpm... I listened to the "Spectrum" album at 16 rpm to slow everything down and that's how I learned how to play the drums. Billy Cobham was my #1 drummer, above all the rest. Of course, you had to listen to Harvey Mason, Steve Gadd, Lenny White, Alphonse Mouzon, Narada Michael Walden and even Ian Paice..etc... Billy Cobham was also the most exciting to see live....
Saw them at John's 25th anniversary at the Rainbow in 78.Met a guy who liked ice cream mixed with cucumber.He had a dog named Peter.Same as my uncle's.Amazing.And,he came from somewhere in India.Amazing.I caught the bus afterwards.It was on time.When I got back home,I had some toast.It was lovely.
Just seen Jeff Beck & band do a cover of this at Royal Hospital, Chelsea grounds.
Yeah, Jeff and John are big fans of each other; there's a great video on youtube of them bowing down before each other, then playing a killing version of "Django", which they recorded for John's album, "The Promise".
billys solo at the end wowwwwwwwwwwww!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Saw them in a concert in the round. Took a date - she sat there with her mouth open the entire time. Friggin' awesome show. 👍
Jan Hammer is also a cool drummer. Using the Original Mini Moog and Electric Piano. Utter Bliss: London August 1972
Wow just plain wow. Inner Mounting Flame is pure out of this world . So many brilliant tracks on it and then this live version . Man Billy Cobham is just killing it !
Jan the MiniMoog Hammer. Incredible band .
Billy Cobham is fantastic("Crosswinds" one of my all time fav
This music make me fell so calm because is incredibly rich . Thanks Mahavishnu Orchestra for many years of being part of your music .
An incredible group of musicians’. I’ve had the fortune to see Messrs McLaughlin, Cobham and Hammer live. But Mahavishnu were there in my formative years. Deepest respect.🌞🙏🌞.
I can't stop myself to come here " de temps en temps" .. SUPERB musicians and feeling !!!
I don't have the words to describe what I just saw and heard. Billy Cobham and Jerry Goodma are total freaks of nature. The greatest band EVER. And only one person covered them...Jeff Beck, RIP
Every note clean clear and purposeful.
Sound is amazing for such an old recording.
Saw Mahavishnu Orchestra -enraptured, twice, in Boston: during Inner Mounting Flame era, and then during Birds of Fire tour. A highschool friend had become ear over ear for them. Great to see them in roving closeup here. From the crowd, couldn't be that close. But Live... life changing.
I saw them at Symphony Hall opening for The Jerry Garcia Band. Were you there? Incredible performance. They came to blow away Garcia...and that's exactly what they did.
Thanks Jan hammer for your contribution to Miami vice series 👍 it made it stick and turned it out!
It was my pleasure to see this band in Woolsey Hall, at Yale University, front row balcony. They opened with "Birbs of Fire". I bought the tickets from Cutler's records for $1.50.
When I saw this band on TV for the first time in 1970, my life changed forever. As a later guitarist I was first fascinated by John McLaughlin, later I became a very big fan of Jan Hammer and his special way of playing synthesizers. (Of course also a fan of Billy Cobham and Jerry Goldsmith) You can recognize Hammer by his style and sound. Hammer’s solo in Al di Meola’s song „Elegant Gypsy Suite“ (1977 on the album with the same name) is one of e the most soulful, beautiful and ingenious synthesizer solos I ever heard. And I heard a lot of the best ones from then to now, like the one of Jordan Rudess (DREAM THEATER).
I saw them in Toronto in the early 70s along with Santana. Both bands on stage at the same time with John McLaughlin and Carlos Santana both dressed in white, both with double neck 12 string guitars, trading leads back and forth. Might have been the best concert that I have ever been to!
Love devotion surrender style? My favourite moment
No1 drummer....! The whole performance, musicians in their prime. Hey hey, we're the Vishnus...
Fantastic! I saw this lineup in Toledo, Ohio...Unbelievable! Thank you for posting!
Come on this is Criminal, Musicians are Not allowed to be THIS Good.
Blimey it is Incredible like the French Version elsewhere on UA-cam.
I also was So lucky to witness this Awesome group live and still today
You Know You Know remains my Absolute Favourite track of this band. ❤️♥️
why is the time so sloppy then. you can hear the slop in this show. They can't even hit the riff in time together. If you can't hear that then you're not listening.
Billy using the brains 🧠 in each limb whilst utilising the one in his head for quiet, satisfied reflection on just how dammed gifted he is…To be fair the collective is at the very pinnacle of musicianship, marvellous, just marvellous.