About: The Inner Mounting Flame (album)   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/Wc01kosy418ODy3h8ZVPQw==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

The Inner Mounting Flame is Mahavishnu Orchestra's first studio album, released in 1971 and consisting solely of original compositions by John McLaughlin. The track "You Know, You Know" was sampled in Massive Attack's "One Love", Mos Def's "Kalifornia", Black Sheep's single "Similak Child", David Sylvian's "I Surrender", Cecil Otter's "Rebel Yellow" and Blahzay Blahzay's "Intro" from Blah Blah Blah album.

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rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • The Inner Mounting Flame (album)
rdfs:comment
  • The Inner Mounting Flame is Mahavishnu Orchestra's first studio album, released in 1971 and consisting solely of original compositions by John McLaughlin. The track "You Know, You Know" was sampled in Massive Attack's "One Love", Mos Def's "Kalifornia", Black Sheep's single "Similak Child", David Sylvian's "I Surrender", Cecil Otter's "Rebel Yellow" and Blahzay Blahzay's "Intro" from Blah Blah Blah album.
Length
  • 2730.0
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dbkwik:jaz/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
noprose
  • yes
Label
Producer
Name
  • The Inner Mounting Flame
Genre
Type
  • studio
Last album
rev
This Album
  • The Inner Mounting Flame
Cover
  • MahavishnuOrchestraInnerMountingFlamealbumcover.jpg
Next album
  • Birds of Fire
Released
  • 1971-08-14(xsd:date)
Artist
Recorded
  • 1971(xsd:integer)
abstract
  • The Inner Mounting Flame is Mahavishnu Orchestra's first studio album, released in 1971 and consisting solely of original compositions by John McLaughlin. The track "You Know, You Know" was sampled in Massive Attack's "One Love", Mos Def's "Kalifornia", Black Sheep's single "Similak Child", David Sylvian's "I Surrender", Cecil Otter's "Rebel Yellow" and Blahzay Blahzay's "Intro" from Blah Blah Blah album. The intro for "Noonward Race" was written for the full band and not just as a guitar-and-drums duet as heard on the album. During the recording of the piece, a long-standing tension between Rick Laird and Jerry Goodman boiled over into a full brawl, with the two of them knocking Jan Hammer and his keyboards over during the struggle. McLaughlin and Cobham continued to play at full volume during the entire altercation, and McLaughlin liked the effect so much he instructed Laird, Goodman, and Hammer to sit out while he comped behind Cobham's solo later in the song.[citation needed] A remastered version of the album, on CD, was released in 1998 by Sony Music Entertainment. It features a facsimile of the LP front cover, a new set of liner notes by Bob Belden, as well as many photographs of the band.
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