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Flashback CD Review #45 - Jack Foster III with Trent Gardner & Robert Berry - Raptorgnosis

This review was originally written for the Rock Is Life.com website in 2005.

 

Jack Foster III with Trent Gardner and Robert Berry

Raptorgnosis

Muse-Wrapped Records - 2005

http://www.muse-wrapped.com

 

What's The 4-1-1?

The follow up to the 2004 debut CD Evolution of a Jazzraptor finds the guitarist/vocalist exploring spiritual themse in music reflecting a wide-ranging set of musical influences.

 

Genre

Melodic Rock / Progressive Rock / Hard Rock

 

The Good

I think it would be safe to say that the guitar playing on this album is fantastic. Jack Foster III can really wail on the guitar. The opening track "Ebb and Flow" starts the album off with a wonderful guitar line and the rest of the music shreds as well. There is a real knack here for knowing just where to place what instrument. "Worst Enemy" and "Sense of Static" have a section where the trumpet is featured quite adeptly.

You can find samples of progressive rock, jazz and the blues throughout the album. I like that the music swings from each one of those genres of music, it give a good vibe to the ears. "Koan" has some of the best shred guitar work, while "Tremble" reflects a softer side with its slower tempo. The other song I enjoyed was "Love Goes 'Round". Foster has a pretty good singing voice. He doesn't sound forced, rather he lets the voice do it's job naturally.

 

The Bad

The lyrics were pretty good for the most part but in cases like "Love Loss" the main verses were good, but suffered from weak choruses. The one song that I really didn't like at all was "Gnosis". The lyrics were delivered in a spoken word fashion, and it just didn't work for me. I found it weird that one onf the best songs on the album "Love Goes 'Round" was written by someone else. Foster is hailed as a "singer-songwriter" in the press materials, but one of the best sets of lyrics is provided by songwriter Melanie Myers. It's not necessarily a negative because the song turned out so well, but it struck me as odd.

 

The Verdict

I missed out on the debut album, but Raptorgnosis also serves as a pretty good introduction to Jack Foster III's music. The spiritual quest theme in the lyrics wasn't as heavy-handed as I was worried it might be. I found this album to be well worth listening to and I look forward to seeing what the future will bring.

 

Did You Know?

Mic Gillette (trumpet) and Skip Mequite (saxophone), who are both featured players on this album both formerly played with the reknowned group Tower of Power.

 

RATING: 3 out of 5

 

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Norma Jean Fox
(11/30/1945-9/7/2010)

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