Reviews for the Album “Oh Yeah?”
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DOWNBEAT 10/21/76 JAN HAMMER Personnel: Hammer, electric piano, synthesizers, * * * * Oh, Yeah?, Hammer's third effort for Nemperor and his first with a group, is his most mature and compelling statement to date, ceaselessly propulsive and uncommonly colorful. The pliant rhythm section proves to be the ideal instrument for Hammer's unflagging energy and diversity, and in violinist Stephen Kindler, Jan has found a compatible, adroit foil, sparking the joyful spontaneity missing from his post-Mahavishnu Orchestra recorded work Indeed, with Oh, Yeah? Hammer comes closer to capturing the verve of the original Mahavishnu Orchestra than any of his former colleagues recent product, which underscores how indispensable he was to their collective, innovative sound. From the alternating bombastic and serene imagery of “Magical Dog” to the arcane, sinewy introduction to “Bambu Forest” Hammer effectively manages to vary the fabric of the arrangements and texture of the instrumental voicings, often in the minute span of a wink. He never crowds nor obscures the sound, even when double-tracking violins over a compound of corpulent keyboards. With the sole exception of the perfunctory vocal tracks (“One To One” and “Let The Children Grow”), Oh,Yeah? Is a resounding confirmation of Hammer's enduring relevancy. And yet, as good as it gets, it is a cautious sketchbook compared to the band's live show. If Nemperor and/or Epic fail to release a live Beck/Hammer album, it will be one of the years more serious omissions. - gilmore |
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September/October 1976
Volume 2 Number 5 Contemporary JAN HAMMER GROUP, “OH YEAH?” The most distinguishing feature of Jan Hammer’s lead synthesizer and electric piano work on this LP may the way he uses melodic contours as rhythmic entities. The combination of sixteenth-note syncopations in the lead instruments with the irregular background pulses (4-3-3-4, for example) lends the tunes an unpredictable air which heightens the urgency of the persistently driving percussion. Hammer’s synthesizer work is notable for the expressivity with which he bends notes and introduces vibrato to the tone, and the pervasive use of electric piano riffs and chording leads one to believe that most of the music was written on this instrument. Nemperor (dist. By Atlantic), NE 43 |