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  1. Highest Rated Jazz Fusion Albums of the 1970s. 1. Bennie Maupin - The Jewel in the Lotus. 2. Herbie Hancock - Mwandishi. 3. Jaco Pastorius - Jaco Pastorius. 4. Grover Washington, Jr. - Mister Magic.

  2. Pat metheny. Jazz collectives like AACM are. Organizations created to support jazz musicians. Which of the following statements is not true of. John Coltrane. He experimented with jazz fusion styles. The term "third stream" was introduced by. Gunther schuller. Which of the following combines rock rhythms with.

  3. Terms in this set (16) JAZZ ROCK/FUSION. - Jazz Rock / Fusion is a stream of styles that emerged during the late 1960s. - By the late 1960s jazz musicians were becoming interested in rock. - They experimented with electronic instruments and rock grooves with elements of improvisation. - By the early 1970s rock musicians were experimenting with ...

  4. Feb 3, 2019 · Blood, Sweat & Tears. Michael Putland / Getty Images. There are some who would say that Blood, Sweat & Tears began and ended with the participation of Al Kooper, who was on-board for the band's first effort, "Child Is the Father to Man." But even the most narrow-minded of listeners must agree that the band's eponymous second album, "Blood ...

  5. Sep 6, 2011 · In the jazz fusion era of the 1970s, a new breed of jazz superstar was born: the electric bassist. Although electric bass wasn't unheard-of in jazz before jazz-rock fusion, it quickly became an ...

  6. Barnaby_Fuckin_Jones. • 9 yr. ago. Gordian Knot - Brainchild of Sean Malone (Cynic) and featuring members of Cynic, Steve Hackett (Genesis) and Bill Bruford (King Crimson, Yes) - jazz fusion/metal. instrumental. Cynic - progressive death metal/jazz fusion. Their 1993 album Focus is a must have progressive metal album and is a classic of the ...

  7. Aug 19, 2020 · Jazz Fusion. Jazz fusion is surely one of the most nebulous genre names ever concocted, being, by definition, an attempt to describe music which incorporates multiple outside influences. The term appears to have been coined in a review of David Axelrod's 1968 debut album Songs of Innocence, which combined rock, jazz, R'n'B and orchestral ...