need not go into the extended history of how the original tapes were misplaced, forgotten, and
now unearthed for this long overdue CD release. What seemed to happen was simply a busy band
with internal struggles made a session tape and opted to release a live version instead. Some songs
never made it to that live release. Now we have more songs, better sound quality, and a glimpse
into a band's past -- nearly 26 years after the fact.
I must forewarn readers that I am a devoted jazz rock fusion fan and an avid proponent
for a rebirth and revitalization of the genre. The Mahavishnu Orchestra's music is 98%
responsible for my adoration of such a maligned and misunderstood sub-genre of music. Hearing
John McLaughlin's guitar volcanics and his leading others in his band to heights of unparalleled
improvisation forever changed how I approached my own guitar playing and just plain rewired my
neural net beyond recovery. Herein follows some bias.
Between Nothingness & Eternity had its many wondeful moments but I always felt
the live recording left much to be desired in many places throughout the concert. Quiet moments
were lost in noise and crowd buzz. Loud attacks and dynamic changeups in the band's supersonic
delivery seemed oversaturated and of course instrument separation was deplorably nigh unto
music mush. Only at certain times when the sound/recording engineer(s) seemed to know what
was going on and get the dials and knobs right did things seem acceptable. Only one magical
moment is superior on BN&E's live recording. And that is John McLaughlin's super-nova,
lead break on Hammer's "Sister Andrea". Lost Trident Sessions' version of this song has a
much, much better synth solo by Hammer even though McLaughlin's LTS lead is less
appealing. Overall, I find LTS far superior to BN&E.
As a bonus on this release is bassist Rick Laird's eerie "Stepping Tones" progression and
violinist Jerry Goodman's mournful "I Wonder". McLaughlin seems to obligingly riff, patiently
pentatonic on "I Wonder", and does almost invisble backing guitar structures on "Stepping
Tones" whereas when these two songs made it to the Nemperor label's Like Children
release featuring Jan Hammer and Jerry Goodman, Goodman subsequently handled all guitars too
and pulled off nearly an exact copy of all McLaughlin's lackluster LTS guitar efforts. It is
seems evident his heart wasn't into Laird or Goodman's pieces or perhaps he had been "written
out" of the songs' limelight moments. I can't say for sure.
Lastly we gain a listen to the never-heard-before, 5:53 "John's Song". It is a sombre,
ominously mutating, fusion excursion. Wandering initially in a free form fusion intro, it builds into
a jazz rockin explosion of Billy Cobham's drums, Hammer's synth textures and manic unison
leads with McLaughlin blasting the outskirts of infinity. To top off the climax of this song Jerry
Goodman erupts in some of the finer fusion fiddling I have ever heard. It reminded of a mini-version
of "One Word" from Birds of Fire. Great cut!
If this song and the rest of The Lost Trident Sessions indicates where The
Mahavishnu Orchestra was possibly heading in their long-past future musical growth -- then
indeed it is a tragic thing that the individual band members could no longer function together as
friends or associates. Who can say what other majesties they held in store? All such things now
passed -- we can but all the more deeply cherish this rare glimpse into the final days of The
Mahavishnu Orchestra. Cool liner notes and pictures included, this release is strongly
recommended. Throw out that "bootleg" tape!