Here’s my demo of the Tokai TJB-55 FL fretless bass. The demo is based on Pino Palladino’s classic bass part, as heard on Paul Young’s 1983 hit ”Wherever I Lay My Hat”. Listen to the original HERE. Find more information on the Tokai TJB-55 FL HERE. I recorded the bass straight into my Universal Audio Volt2 interface. The light chorus was added in the DAW.
Here’s a short demo song featuring the Tokai TJB-55 regular model, as well as the lined fretless counterpart TJB-55 FL. This track is based on the Steely Dan classic ”Peg”. The fretted Tokai TJB-55 takes the first verse, and the fretless TJB-55 FL plays in the second verse. The bass tracks have been recorded using a Cranborne Audio Camden EC2 preamp and a Universal Audio Volt2 interface.
Here’s a short demo song featuring the Tokai TJB-55 regular model, as well as the lined fretless counterpart TJB-55 FL. This track is based on the Steely Dan classic ”Peg”. The fretted Tokai TJB-55 takes the first verse, and the fretless TJB-55 FL plays in the second verse. The bass tracks have been recorded using a Cranborne Audio Camden EC2 preamp and a Universal Audio Volt2 interface.
Every now and again along comes an album that really makes you listen up and take notice.
Finnish bassist Jukka Haavisto’s first solo album ”Reflections” is one such record. If you’re into classic Seventies Fusion Jazz, then you should definitely give this album a listen!
Jukka Haavisto – the name’s pronounced a bit like ”Yucca Harvester” – recorded ”Reflections” with his band comprising himself as leader and bassist (obviously), Johannes Granroth on guitar, Vili Itäpelto on keyboards, and Severi Sorjonen on drums.
Haavisto and his band must have had a large sign in the studio reading ”Put the music first, stupid!”, because that’s exactly what they did. Where some Fusion records try to blind you with overtly technical playing and deliberately complicated arrangements, ”Reflections” draws the listener in with its warm, almost ”retro” soundscapes and it’s wonderfully musical approach to the genre.
This isn’t to say that ”Reflections” is a pastiche or a rehash – far from it! Jukka Haavisto and his band have managed to come up with an album of compositions that feed the soul and the mind in equal proportions, taking on board the best of classic Fusion Jazz, but transporting it to our times. The playing is top notch and the album’s sound warm and welcoming.
Jukka Haavisto’s”Reflections” is too good an album to let it pass unnoticed. It is available both digitally and as a physical record. You should give it a spin – now!