OFF: Mushroom Review

DRider Hawkwind at ATTBI.COM
Mon Feb 3 13:37:56 EST 2003


Analog Hi-Fi Surprise - Mushroom
Mike Greenhaus mcgreeny1 at aol.com
2003-01-23

For a band called Mushroom, this San Francisco sextet isn't too trippy.
Sure,
their jazz-funk-fusion embodies much of what the modern term "jamband" has
come to mean. But, their music is tight and up-tempo, focused in its
exploration.

Recorded and originally released in 1999, Analog Hi-Fi Surprise does live up
to its title. Remasterd, repackaged, and reissued with four new tracks,
Analog Hi-Fi takes the group's raw, underground energy and buffs its sound
with clean production and high-quality recordings. Shifting between funk,
jazz, trance, and the violin on "October 1970", Analog Hi-Fi is a fast paced
and easily danceable disc; in many ways a jamband variety pack.

Opening with the funky "Jamming with Erik", a new track for the reissue,
Mushroom unleashes their two-keyboard attack from the get-go. Part
space-rock, part Herbie Hancock dance party, Mushroom's sound is keyboard
driven, even as the disc gives its best solos to the group's two guitarists.
Band newcomer Michael Holt plays a Rhodes electric piano, while original
space pioneer Graham Connah pumps away on a heavy organ. And the duo duel,
each adding electric sounds and trance-rhythms. Laying down a drumbeat as
precise as a clock, drummer and occasional bongo player Patrick O'Hearn
holds
things together while the group'ss keyboardists and lead guitarist Erik
Pearson stretch the songs out in every direction.

With each track written and arranged by the full band, Analog Hi-Fi is
highly
collaborative, with O'Hearn during double duty as the disc's producer.
"Rackets" sounds like an updated version of Herbie Hancock's Headhunters-era
jams, with subtle synthesizers and electric piano licks break the group's
deep funk. Starting off with a short solo by Olmstead, "The Theme from the
Movie ORock Bottom'" has the raw energy of a rock song, packed into a tight,
fusion nugget. The drums pound and the keyboards loop, as Olmstead's
pronounced guitar takes center stage, at times recalling Phish's funnier
moments. "Abbie Hoffman" opens with some guitar duels between Olmstead and
"snake guitarist" Erik Pearson before flowing gently into a free-form jam
session. "Mother's, Birmingham 3:00 AM", another new cut, leans towards the
group's jazzier side, evoking the spacey sounds the group's fungi title
suggests.

So, is Mushroom¹s sound completely groundbreaking? No. Yet, the group puts
an
exciting spin on several sounds overused within the burgeoning jamband
community. While many jazz-funk combos get caught in their groove, loosing
their sense of exploration and drowning their own energy, Mushroom use their
trance tendencies to hold their sound-together. When "Mother's" begins to
sound repetitive four minutes in, Mushroom's excellent keyboardists tickle
their plastic ivory and make the song once again exciting and fresh
sounding.
Instead of filling the group's large sound with horns and auxiliary
percussionists, like so many jazz-funk based units, Mushrooms
two-guitar/two-keyboard lineup is refreshing, adding the competitive edge
that keeps any instrumental collective sounding new. In many ways, Analog
Hi-fi Surprise, foreshadows the evolution of improvisational music, in which
even college-funk can dance trance.



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