This was bassist Stanley Clarke's twelfth solo set, and one of his very few that would be recommended to jazz (as opposed to funk and R&B) listeners. On the instrumental set, Clarke's bass is featured in a wide variety of settings, including duets with tap dancer Gregory Hines and drummer John Robinson, a quartet with Wayne Shorter ("Goodbye Pork Pie Hat"), in a power trio with guitarist Allan Holdsworth and drummer Stewart Copeland, a piece with George Duke (on acoustic piano for a change) and soprano saxophonist George Howard, a quartet with the synthesizers of Steve Hunt, and "Funny How Time Flies," which has a colorful Freddie Hubbard trumpet solo. Throughout, Clarke's bass has plenty of solo space, and he shows how strong a player he can be when given decent material. ~ Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
If This Bass Could Only Talk
01/01/1988 | Sbme Special Mkts.
All Music Guide Review
Track Listing
Credits
- Byron Miller
- Arranger, Producer, Synthesizer Bass
- Csaba Petocz
- Engineer
- John "J.R." Robinson
- Drums
- Steve Sykes
- Engineer
- Vance Taylor
- Piano
- Tony Lane
- Art Direction
- Nancy Donald
- Art Direction
- Dan Humann
- Engineer
- Chris Cuffaro
- Photography
- Steve Hunt
- Synthesizer
- James Earl
- Bass
- Eddie Arkin
- Synthesizer, Arranger
- Gerry Brown
- Drums
- Stanley Clarke
- Synthesizer, Guitar, Percussion, Producer, Multi Instruments, Keyboards, Guitar (Electric), Guitar (Bass), Arranger, Guitar (Acoustic), Bass, Bass (Acoustic), Main Performer
- Paulinho Da Costa
- Percussion
- Joe Gastwirt
- Engineer
- Mitch Gibson
- Engineer
- Bernie Grundman
- Mastering
- Mick Guzauski
- Mixing
- Freddie Hubbard
- Trumpet
- Stewart Copeland
- Drums
- Gregory Hines
- Dancer
- George Duke
- Piano
- Allan Holdsworth
- Guitar
- George Howard
- Sax (Soprano)
- Wayne Shorter
- Sax (Soprano)












