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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › MusicmagicMusicmagic - Wikipedia

    Musicmagic is a studio album by fusion band Return to Forever, their final work until 2008. This album contains the final line-up of the band from the 1970s, with only founders Chick Corea and Stanley Clarke returning from the previous album.

  2. Return To Forever - The endless night. 9:44. Explore the tracklist, credits, statistics, and more for Musicmagic by Return To Forever. Compare versions and buy on Discogs.

    • (592)
    • 526
  3. Return To Forever – Santa Monica 1977 Mike Millard Master Tapes Live At Civic Auditorium Santa Monica CA USA 8th April 1977. Review: Gig in Japan (https://ww...

    • 23 min
    • Maurício Castro
  4. Musicmagic by Return to Forever released in 1977. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and more at AllMusic.

    • (106)
    • First Lineup: Formation and Backgrounds
    • Return to Forever and Light as A Feather
    • Second Lineup: Hymn of The Seventh Galaxy
    • Hymn of The Seventh Galaxy
    • Where Have I Known You Before
    • No Mystery
    • Romantic Warrior
    • Third Lineup
    • Musicmagic
    • Breakup

    In February 1972, jazz-keyboardist Chick Corea recorded what would be his fourth release on ECM, Return to Forever. Assembled for these sessions was bassist Stanley Clarke, reedist Joe Farrell, and the Brazilian husband/wife team of percussionist Airto Moreira and vocalist Flora Purim. Corea and Moreira had both backed Miles Davis on the June 1970 ...

    Return to Foreverwas released in September 1972 on ECM. Side one features two Corea instrumentals, “Return to Forever” (12:06) and “Crystal Silence.” The side concludes with the samba jazz-pop number “What Game Shall We Play Today” with lyrics by Neville Potter. Side two consists of the 23-minute Corea/Clarke/Farrell composition “Sometime Ago – La ...

    In early 1973, Farrell, Purim, and Moreira left Return to Forever. Farrell cut five albums between 1972 and 1975 on CTI, including the 1974 jazz-rock disc Upon This Rock. Purim and Moreira resumed their solo careers — Flora with the 1973–74 Milestone titles Butterfly Dreams and Stories to Tell; Airto with the 1973 CTI release Fingers. Corea assembl...

    Return to Forever released their third album, Hymn of the Seventh Galaxy, in October 1973 on Polydor. It features five compositions by Corea and one (“After the Cosmic Rain”) by Clarke. Corea plays harpsichord, gongs, and Yamaha electric organ, gongs on this album on top of acoustic piano and Fender Rhodes electric piano. Clarke, in addition to bas...

    Return to Forever released their fourth album, Where Have I Known You Before, in September 1974 on Polydor. It features compositions by Clarke (“Vulcan Worlds”), White (“The Shadow of Lo”) and Corea, who closes side one with an ode to the prior album (“Beyond the Seventh Galaxy”). His epic “Song to the Pharaoh Kings” (14:21) consumes the bulk of si...

    Return to Forever released their fifth album, No Mystery, in February 1975 on Polydor. Side one contains a track apiece by Clarke (“Dayride”), Di Meola (“Flight of the Newborn”), and White (“Sofistifunk”), plus the Clarke–Corea co-write “Jungle Waterfall” and the group-written “Excerpt from the First Movement of Heavy Metal.” Side two consists of e...

    Return to Forever released their sixth album, Romantic Warrior, in March 1976 on Columbia. It contains six tracks with a medium-length composition by each member: Corea (“Medieval Overture”), White (“Sorceress”), Di Meola (“Majestic Dance”), Clarke (“The Magician”). Each side climaxes with a Corea epic: “The Romantic Warrior” (10:52) and “Duel of t...

    Romantic Warrior appeared between Corea’s two 1976 solo albums: The Leprechaun (featuring Farrell and Chick’s wife, Gayle Moran) and My Spanish Heart, a Latin-infused double-album with backing by Clarke and three-fifths of the 1974–75 Mahavishnu lineup: Moran, Michael Walden, and violinist Jean-Luc Ponty. Corea, who dismissed Di Meola and White, re...

    Return to Forever released their seventh album, Musicmagic, in March 1977 on Columbia. Corea wrote the opener (“The Musician”) and co-wrote the two epic side-closers (“Musicmagic,” “The Endless Night”) with Moran, who contributed “Do You Ever.” Clarke composed the remaining two numbers, “Hello Again” and “So Long Mickey Mouse.” Farrell handles the ...

    Musicmagic was the third lineup’s only album. Corea disbanded Return to Forever after the accompanying tour and resumed his solo career with three 1978 albums: Friends, Secret Agent, and The Mad Hatter. Moran cut one solo album, I Loved You Then … I Love You Now, in 1979 on Warner Bros. She appears on her husbands post-RTF output through his 1982 r...

  5. Music Magic is a music studio album recording by RETURN TO FOREVER (Jazz Rock/Fusion/Progressive Rock) released in 1977 on cd, lp / vinyl and/or cassette. This page includes Music Magic's : cover picture, songs / tracks list, members/musicians and line-up, different releases details, free MP3 download (stream), buy online links: amazon, ratings ...

  6. Musicmagic, an Album by Return to Forever. Released in March 1977 on Columbia (catalog no. PC 34682; Vinyl LP). Genres: Jazz Fusion. Rated #648 in the best albums of 1977.

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