When Eastern classical musicians and Western jazz or pop musicians get together to jam, the result are always heartwarming; two wildly disparate traditions coming together to make music is such an irresistible gesture of human unity and cross-cultural cooperation. What's not to love? Frankly, what's not to love is often the music itself, which all too frequently is long on multicultural good intentions and short on things like coherence, interest, and hooks. The intermittently mystical jazz guitarist
John McLaughlin, who has been nursing an India jones for decades now, is hardly innocent of such offenses. But on
The Believer, a live set featuring
McLaughlin, electric mandolinist
U. Shrinivas, kanjira and ghatam player V. Slevaganesh, and legendary tabla player
Zakir Hussain, he delivers a gloriously tight, rhythmically thrilling program of original compositions (as well as one contribution each from
Shrinivas and
Hussain). The group is called
Remember Shakti in reference to
Shakti, the similarly configured band that
McLaughlin co-led in the mid-'70s. If anything, his playing has grown more exciting than it was then; listening to him negotiate the thorny rhythmic changes of this music in unison with
Shrinivas and to both of them bouncing off the complexly woven rhythmic patterns laid out by
Hussain and Slevaganesh is not only impressive, but uplifting as well. Highlights include the downright funky "Anna" and
Shrinivas' composition "Maya." Very highly recommended. ~ Rick Anderson