| This is the album that made John McLaughlin a semi-household name, a 
        furious, high-energy, yet rigorously conceived meeting of virtuosos that, 
        for all intents and purposes, defined the fusion of jazz and rock a year 
        after Miles Davis' Bitches Brew breakthrough. It also inadvertently led 
        to the derogatory connotation of the word fusion, for it paved the way 
        for an army of imitators, many of whose excesses and commercial panderings 
        devalued the entire movement. Though much was made of the influence of 
        jazz-influenced improvisation in the Mahavishnu band, it is the rock element 
        that predominates, stemming directly from the electronic innovations of 
        Jimi Hendrix. The improvisations, particularly McLaughlin's post-Hendrix 
        machine-gun assaults on double-necked electric guitar and Jerry Goodman's 
        flights on electric violin, owe more to the freakouts that had been circulating 
        in progressive rock circles than to jazz, based as they often are on ostinatos 
        on one chord. These still sound genuinely thrilling today on CD, as McLaughlin 
        and Goodman battle Jan Hammer's keyboards, Rick Laird's bass, and especially 
        Billy Cobham's hard-charging drums, whose jazz-trained technique pushed 
        the envelope for all rock drummers. What doesn't date so well are the 
        composed medium- and high-velocity unison passages that are played in 
        such tight lockstep that they can't breathe. There is also time out for 
        quieter, reflective numbers that are drenched in studied spirituality 
        ("A Lotus on Irish Streams") or irony ("You Know You Know"); 
        McLaughlin was to do better in that department with less-driven colleagues 
        elsewhere in his career. Aimed with absolute precision at young rock fans, 
        this record was wildly popular in its day, and it may have been the cause 
        of more blown-out home amplifiers than any other record this side of Deep 
        Purple.  (by Richard S. Ginell, All 
        Music Guide) |