Pierre Moerlen's Gong  

From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Revision as of 09:52, 24 June 2012
Jahsonic (Talk | contribs)

← Previous diff
Current revision
Jahsonic (Talk | contribs)

Line 1: Line 1:
{{Template}} {{Template}}
-'''''Jin-Go-Lo-Ba (Drums Of Passion)''''', often shortened to '''Jingo''' (1959) is a song by [[Babatunde Olatunji]], appropriated by [[Santana (band)|Santana]] and later covered by [[Candido]].+'''Pierre Moerlen's Gong''' is a [[jazz fusion]] outfit which is very different from the first incarnation of [[Gong (band)|Gong]], the [[psychedelic]] [[space-rock]] act led by [[Daevid Allen]]. It is notable for the prominent use of [[mallet percussion]], such as [[marimba]], [[xylophone]], and [[vibraphone]] featured in a rock/jazz context, making for a very distinctive and unusual sound that could have been classified as warmer and more melodic than most typical [[fusion (music)|fusion]] could be, and is comparable to the sort of fusion-influenced output many bands on the [[Canterbury scene]] were producing at around this time.
-==Covers==+
-The song "Jin-Go-Lo-Ba" (or "Jingo") has been covered by [[Serge Gainsbourg]], under the title "[[Marabout]]" on his ''[[Percussions]]'' LP (1964); by [[Santana (band)|Santana]] on their [[Santana (1969 album)|first album]], ''Santana'', (1969); by [[James Last]] on his album ''[[Voodoo-Party]]'' (1971); by [[Pierre Moerlen's Gong]] on the album ''[[Downwind (album)|Downwind]]'' (1979); and by [[Fatboy Slim]] on his album ''[[Palookaville (album)|Palookaville]]'' (2004).+
 +Amid a flurry of lineup changes in the mid-1970s, including the departure of founding members Daevid Allen and [[Gilli Smyth]], Gong drummer [[Pierre Moerlen]] found himself in charge of the band and with two albums remaining on their Virgin recording contract.
 +
 +Moerlen formed a new Gong lineup featuring his brother Benoit on mallet percussion, US-born bassist [[Hansford Rowe (musician)|Hansford Rowe]] and a rotating cast of session guitarists, notably [[Allan Holdsworth]], [[Mike Oldfield]], ex-Rolling Stone [[Mick Taylor]], and Bon Lozaga.
 +
 +They released two albums under the Gong moniker, ''[[Gazeuse!]]'' (called ''Expresso'' in North America) in 1976 and then ''[[Expresso II]]'' in 1978. Following the completion of the Virgin contract, Moerlen changed the name of the group to Pierre Moerlen's Gong, presumably to distance itself from its very different previous incarnation. In early 1979, the group released ''[[Downwind (album)|Downwind]]'', which was a more rock/pop flavoured album that featured occasional lead vocals by Moerlen himself and a cameo by [[Steve Winwood]]. Later in 1979 they released another album, ''[[Time is the Key]]'', that took the band further into pop/rock territory. The live album "Pierre Moerlen's Gong Live" was released in 1980, followed later that year by another studio album ''[[Leave It Open (album)|Leave It Open]]''. By this point, Pierre Moerlen's incarnation of Gong scaled back its activity greatly, not releasing another record until 1986's [[Scientology]]-inspired ''Breakthrough'', featuring members of the Swedish band Tribute. The group quietly disbanded soon after.
 +
 +Lozaga, Rowe, and Benoit Moerlen went on to form [[Gongzilla]] in the early 1990s, releasing four albums to date which are very much an extension of the percussive fusion that the original group brought to the fold, and they perform a mix of new and old live material going back to the ''Gazeuse''/''Expresso II'' period. Moerlen joined them for their 2002 European tour.
 +
 +Pierre Moerlen died unexpectedly on May 3, 2005 of natural causes, while rehearsals for yet another line-up of Pierre Moerlen's Gong were underway.
 +
 +==Discography==
 +* 1976: ''[[Gazeuse!]]'' (''Expresso'' in North America)
 +* 1978: ''[[Expresso II]]''
 +* 1979: ''[[Downwind (album)|Downwind]]''
 +* 1979: ''[[Time is the Key]]''
 +* 1980: ''Pierre Moerlen's Gong Live''
 +* 1980: ''[[Leave It Open (album)|Leave It Open]]''
 +* 1986: ''Breakthrough''
 +* 1988: ''Second Wind''
 +* 1998: ''Full Circle Live '88''
 +* 2004: ''[[Pentanine]]''
{{GFDL}} {{GFDL}}
-[[Category:WMC]] 

Current revision

Related e

Google
Wikipedia
Wiktionary
Wiki Commons
Wikisource
Wordpress
YouTube
Shop


Featured:

Pierre Moerlen's Gong is a jazz fusion outfit which is very different from the first incarnation of Gong, the psychedelic space-rock act led by Daevid Allen. It is notable for the prominent use of mallet percussion, such as marimba, xylophone, and vibraphone featured in a rock/jazz context, making for a very distinctive and unusual sound that could have been classified as warmer and more melodic than most typical fusion could be, and is comparable to the sort of fusion-influenced output many bands on the Canterbury scene were producing at around this time.

Amid a flurry of lineup changes in the mid-1970s, including the departure of founding members Daevid Allen and Gilli Smyth, Gong drummer Pierre Moerlen found himself in charge of the band and with two albums remaining on their Virgin recording contract.

Moerlen formed a new Gong lineup featuring his brother Benoit on mallet percussion, US-born bassist Hansford Rowe and a rotating cast of session guitarists, notably Allan Holdsworth, Mike Oldfield, ex-Rolling Stone Mick Taylor, and Bon Lozaga.

They released two albums under the Gong moniker, Gazeuse! (called Expresso in North America) in 1976 and then Expresso II in 1978. Following the completion of the Virgin contract, Moerlen changed the name of the group to Pierre Moerlen's Gong, presumably to distance itself from its very different previous incarnation. In early 1979, the group released Downwind, which was a more rock/pop flavoured album that featured occasional lead vocals by Moerlen himself and a cameo by Steve Winwood. Later in 1979 they released another album, Time is the Key, that took the band further into pop/rock territory. The live album "Pierre Moerlen's Gong Live" was released in 1980, followed later that year by another studio album Leave It Open. By this point, Pierre Moerlen's incarnation of Gong scaled back its activity greatly, not releasing another record until 1986's Scientology-inspired Breakthrough, featuring members of the Swedish band Tribute. The group quietly disbanded soon after.

Lozaga, Rowe, and Benoit Moerlen went on to form Gongzilla in the early 1990s, releasing four albums to date which are very much an extension of the percussive fusion that the original group brought to the fold, and they perform a mix of new and old live material going back to the Gazeuse/Expresso II period. Moerlen joined them for their 2002 European tour.

Pierre Moerlen died unexpectedly on May 3, 2005 of natural causes, while rehearsals for yet another line-up of Pierre Moerlen's Gong were underway.

Discography




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Pierre Moerlen's Gong" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on original research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

Personal tools