Anthology: The Early Years

Anthology: The Early Years

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Robben Ford has always been a very eclectic musician; therefore, the people who get the most out of his recordings tend to have eclectic tastes themselves. If you're the sort of broad-minded listener who holds blues, rock, and jazz in equally high regard, Anthology: The Early Years is a musical feast. This two-CD set, which Avenue Jazz provided in 2001, looks back on recordings that the singer\u002Fguitarist\u002Fsaxman made from 1972-1976 (when he was in his early to mid-20s). Even then, Ford was difficult to categorize -- those who insist on pigeonholing musicians wondered if he was really a blues-rock singer or a jazz instrumentalist at heart. And, truth be told, he wore both hats equally well. Anyone who loves down-and-dirty blues-rock cannot help but applaud his gutsy versions of Willie Dixon's Little Red Rooster and B.B. King's Sweet Sixteen. But Ford is equally convincing as a jazz instrumentalist on Softly Rolling, Miss Miss, and Miles Davis' Eighty One. Many of the instrumentals are shining examples of 1970s fusion, but Ford favors more of a post-bop approach on the standard You Don't Know What Love Is (which is one of the tunes that finds him on tenor sax and is very John Coltrane-minded). Anthology: The Early Years isn't the last word on Ford in the 1970s, but Avenue Jazz' picks are generally excellent -- and it is certainly among the places to go if you're exploring his early output for the first time.