David Axelrod, producer The Fox.etc, RIP.

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  • BLUESNIK'S REVOX
    Full Member
    • Dec 2010
    • 4353

    David Axelrod, producer The Fox.etc, RIP.

    "Born in Los Angeles in 1933, Axelrod produced his first album in 1959 and went on to become a pioneer in combining jazz, rock and R&B in recorded music. He spent several years working for Capitol Records in production and A&R in the 1960s and went on to release more than a dozen of his own albums.

    While a contemporary of, and somewhat analogous to, idiosyncratic composer/arrangers like Van Dyke Parks, Axelrod was much more influenced by jazz, as reflected in his orchestrations and his own compositions. He produced David McCallum's Music: A Bit More of Me, the 1967 release featuring "The Edge," a song that famously turned into the predominant sample in Dr. Dre's 2000 hit "The Next Episode." He also collaborated with the Electric Prunes on their bizarre 1968 album Mass in F# Minor, and when the group splintered in the middle of recording, he finished it with session musicians."

    Of more interest here is that he produced Harold Land's The Fox date, the equally great Elmo Hope trio date with Frank Butler, and Jimmy Witherspoon's Sings the Blues session with Hampton Hawes and Teddy Edwards etc. He later produced a lot of Cannonball's Capitol material.

    BN.
  • Tenor Freak
    Full Member
    • Dec 2010
    • 1075

    #2
    Today Gilles Peterson paid tribute to David Axelrod with 30+ minutes of his productions including "The Edge", "Holy Thursday" and a couple of other bits & pieces including "Up and At It" by Cannonball Adderley.



    Last half hour or so.
    all words are trains for moving past what really has no name

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