Rating:
Genre:
Jazz
Release Date: 10/30/2007
Target is one of those
Tom Scott records that gets forgotten about a lot. Certainly it comes from the middle of the 1980s just before the
GRP era, when
Scott was still leading the
Saturday Night Live Band on occasion and looking around for a new sound. It's the sound of a restless musician who gets the
pop game, or at least has gotten it and is not sure of where to shift his focus next. The band is big and full of killer players:
Harvey Mason,
Ernie Watts,
Ian Underwood,
Victor Feldman,
Paul Jackson,
Neil Stubenhaus,
Jim Horn,
Trevor Feldman,
Pete Christlieb, and
Michael Boddicker, among others. The sound is a tad warmer than what
Atlantic was releasing at the time, too. But the material, as good as some of it is -- like the funky title track -- also contains half-hearted
pop ballads like
"Come Back to Me" with
Kenny James on vocals.
"He's Too Young," with a fine vocal performance by
Maria Muldaur, is marred by a terribly dated -- and it was for the time -- synth drum sound. There is also a truly bizarre moment when
Lee Ving, former lead singer of Los Angeles
hardcore band
Fear raps and plays
blues harmonica on
"Gotta Get out of New York." Then there's
"Lollipoppin'" which, while it contains the same dumb synth drum sound, also has some killer Rhodes by
Feldman, synth work by
Underwood, and a happening keyboard bassline. The grooving muted horn section on this reading of
Dan Peck's
"The Biggest Part of Me," has a wonderfully soulful feel with great kit work by
Mason. The horn arrangements are in the pocket but restrained, allowing that lithe melody to shine through and, along with the title cut, it's a contender for best tune on the set. The set closes with the stone-gone funky groover
"Burundi Bump" by
Scott and
Feldman with excellent basslines, pulsing Rhodes work, a boatload of percussion, and
Mason running the ensemble from his kit; the entire tune is rhythm based. So
Target is, ultimately, a mixed bag, a hold-over record that was throwing everything at the wall to see what worked. Interestingly, what did was the basis for
Scott's sound at
GRP.
~Thom Jurek, All Music Guide