An instrumental jazz-pop album from
Rick Derringer? That isn't the sort of project that one ordinarily expects from the singer/guitarist who is best known for his hard-rocking 1974 smash, "Rock & Roll, Hoochie Koo," but in fact,
Free Ride is primarily an album of instrumental jazz-pop.
Derringer doesn't get into any crunching hard rock guitar on this 2002 release; instead, his guitar playing brings to mind
George Benson's more commercial work. Blending jazz, funk, and pop,
Derringer takes dead aim at the smooth jazz market. But for the most part, he maintains his integrity and avoids outright elevator music -- someone who appreciates
Benson's
Breezin' but finds
Kenny G and
Dave Koz boring will likely find
Free Ride to be generally pleasant, if slightly uneven. Most of the songs are
Derringer originals, although he puts an instrumental spin on three '70s classics: "Rock & Roll, Hoochie Koo,"
Edgar Winter's "Frankenstein," and the title song (which
Dan Hartman wrote when he was with
Winter). The latter is the most disappointing of the three; "Free Ride" ends up being turned into elevator music, while
Derringer's remakes of "Rock & Roll, Hoochie Koo" and "Frankenstein" have more bite. The only tracks that find
Derringer singing are "Hold" and the melancholy "Big City Loneliness," both of which are likable adult contemporary items à la
Gino Vannelli.
Free Ride isn't the masterpiece that it could have been;
Derringer has killer chops, and from a creative standpoint, he would have been better off providing an album that has more blowing, more improvisation, and less production -- not necessarily hard bop, but perhaps something along the lines of the jazz-funk that
Grant Green gave listeners in the early '70s. Nonetheless,
Free Ride is generally decent, and it is superior to most of the stuff that smooth jazz stations are quick to play. ~ Alex Henderson