When
Lonnie Liston Smith made the transition from sideman to leader in 1973, it was the beginning of a fusion/crossover/post-bop band he dubbed
Lonnie Liston Smith & the Cosmic Echoes. The acoustic pianist/electric keyboardist, who was born in Richmond, VA, on December 28, 1940, should not be confused with soul-jazz/hard bop organist
Lonnie Smith. This
Smith would have had an impressive résumé even if he had never formed a band of his own. In the '60s or early '70s, he had been a sidemen for, among others,
Pharoah Sanders,
Rahsaan Roland Kirk,
Gato Barbieri, singer
Betty Carter, and trumpeter
Miles Davis. In fact,
Smith was still in
Davis' employ when he signed with producer
Bob Thiele's RCA-distributed Flying Dutchman label and recorded his first album as a leader,
Astral Traveling (which
Thiele produced). Nonetheless, the
Cosmic Echoes were a major step forward for
Smith -- the improviser had a lot more time to devote to his own compositions and he was free to concentrate on a very spiritual type of fusion that had a variety of influences. The post-bop of model explorers like
Coltrane,
Sanders,
Kirk,
Yusef Lateef,
McCoy Tyner, and
Charles Lloyd was a heavy influence on
Smith's composing since all of those artists shared the
Cosmic Echoes' spiritual concerns. But the
Cosmic Echoes were hardly jazz purists. Their instrumental fusion combined those post-bop influences with funk, pop, and rock, and some of their best-known vocal numbers (which include 1979's "Space Princess" and 1983's "Never Too Late") were outright R&B. It was on April 24, 1973, that
Smith recorded
Astral Traveling and led his first
Cosmic Echoes lineup, which included
George Barron (soprano and tenor sax),
Joe Beck (guitar),
Cecil McBee (bass),
David Lee, Jr. (drums),
James Mtume (percussion),
Sonny Morgan (percussion),
Badal Roy (tabla drums), and
Geeta Vashi (tamboura).
Astral Traveling was entirely instrumental, but it wasn't long before
Smith added a vocalist to the
Cosmic Echoes: his brother
Donald Smith. Although
Donald Smith had helped his brother put together the
Cosmic Echoes' first lineup, he isn't actually employed on
Astral Traveling -- 1974's
Thiele-produced
Cosmic Funk was the first
Cosmic Echoes album that featured him on vocals. From 1974 on, the
Cosmic Echoes' albums were typically about 80 percent instrumental, but included a few vocal offerings. Subsequent
Cosmic Echoes projects included 1975's
Expansions, 1975's
Visions of a New World, 1976's
Reflections of a Golden Dream, and 1977's
Renaissance, all of which were on either Flying Dutchman or RCA proper. Along the way, the
Cosmic Echoes had more than their share of personnel changes. When the group recorded a live album for RCA in 1977, the lineup included
Smith on piano and keyboards, his brother
Donald on vocals,
Dave Hubbard on tenor and soprano sax,
Al Anderson on electric bass, Ronald Miller on electric guitar, and
Hollywood Barker on drums -- a lineup that, except for
Lonnie Liston Smith himself, is totally different from the
Cosmic Echoes lineup heard on 1973's
Astral Traveling. It was in 1978 that
Smith and his
Cosmic Echoes left RCA and moved to Columbia to record
Loveland, which was a respectable seller (at least by jazz standards) and fared well among fusion, crossover, and quiet storm fans.
Smith's next Columbia album,
Exotic Mysteries, gave us the single, "Space Princess," which featured
Donald on lead vocals and became a minor hit. Although
Exotic Mysteries was primarily an instrumental fusion album, "Space Princess" wasn't jazz at all -- the tune is funk-disco but still has that mystic
Cosmic Echoes vibe. Some people felt that when
Smith and his
Cosmic Echoes were recording for Columbia in the late '70s and early '80s, they became too slick and commercial -- nonetheless, the group still had integrity and was still enjoyable and interesting during its Columbia period.
Donald Smith temporarily left the
Cosmic Echoes after
Exotic Mysteries and on 1979's
Song for the Children, he was replaced by singer James "Crab" Robinson (who is also employed on 1980s
Love Is the Answer). And Robinson wasn't the only person who passed through the
Cosmic Echoes in the late '70s or early '80s. Others who came on board during
Smith's Columbia period included guitarist
Abdul Wali, bassist
Pee Wee Ford, drummer
Lino Reyes, and percussionist
Lawrence Killian -- like
Art Blakey & the Jazz Messengers,
Lonnie Liston Smith & the Cosmic Echoes could be a revolving door.
Donald Smith ended up returning to the fold in the early '80s, which is also when the
Cosmic Echoes were reunited with
Thiele (who signed
Smith to his new Doctor Jazz label). One of songs that
Smith's
Cosmic Echoes recorded for Doctor Jazz was the urban/quiet storm vocal number "Never Too Late," which was released as a single and became a minor hit. In the mid-'80s, the
Cosmic Echoes unofficially called it quits and
Smith moved on to other things. But the pianist/keyboardist (who turned 60 in 2000) returned to a
Cosmic Echoes-minded approach in 1998, when he was reunited with his brother
Donald and featured him on the album
Transformation (which came out on
Smith's own label Loveland Records). In 2002, Sony's reissue-oriented Legacy Recordings looked back on the
Cosmic Echoes' late '70s and early '80s output with a two-CD retrospective titled
Explorations: The Columbia Years.
–
Alex Henderson, Rovi