By TUREKA TURK Mlchlp.n CltlBn You are now entering a world of time and space, of live jazz and phat rhymes. Your ho tithe might Guru, the wordster of the highly respected Gang Starr. Guru will take you on a journey, a fusion of two African-Ameri­ can origins of the soul, jazz and hip-hop. Both are valid expressions of Black culture and reality. You are entering Jazzmatazz. '. "J azzmatazz" is n ' tat rip through turntables spinning through Bob James, James _ Brown, Donald Byrd, Roy Ayers, John Davis & the Monster Or­ chestra. Grandmaster flash did that back in the day. J azzmatazz "It'sjeep ready, " Guru • promises. " I te ted 'it in the jeep and the beats are there. " is a step up from Cool J' "Goin' Back to Cali" with the Dixieland trumpet. Perhaps Stetsasonic was clo est when "Talkin All That Jazz" landed on the cene in 19 . Then came Gang Starr in 19 . The world shook when the du landed hard on the hip-hop planet with "Words I Manife t", which contained ampl from the , highly acclaimed trip through the land of horns and ba ,"Night In Tunisia", o IT' 0 surprise that the master of ceremonies, the Rod Sterling of''} azzmatazz", is Guru, Proving that jazz is n t on its deathbed, Gang Starr did have th only hip-hop tune on Spike Lee' "Mo' Better Blue" oundtrack. And now that jazz is healthy and alive, not dependent upon life upport, it ha also found its way into the stream of hip-hop. So comes "J azzmatazz", a journey down the fusion of the two art forms. Branford Marsali couldn't be related to the brother Delfeayo who tomped on rap for its "vula- --.--------------- garity", saying that "every ele­ ment in rap is derived from jazz", unfavorabl y. Obviously, hip-hop isn't thicker than than blood. Bran­ ford Marsalis jams melodiously in "Transit Ride". If only the sub­ way could be as mellow with Branford in the background and Guru's subway observations go­ ing through your mind. You ain't heard this Branford on the "To­ night Show". Shaft is back, wen, at least the spirit of Curtis Mayfield flows through "When You're Near", , with Simon Laws on keyboards and Brand New Heavies' diva, N'Dea Davenport. The fusion explodes around Guru aka mod­ em-day Black Romeo. "Near" is so funky a seduction that you can actually hear Don Cornelius and the sway 0 bell bottoms from your favori episode of Soul Train from the 70s. KICK HAC AND CHILL on "Loungin'" with Donald Byrd on the trum pet. The most chill d track on the CD, Byrd is flowing as light as the smell of incense in the air. Roy Ayers gives a new mean­ ing to the word "vibe" on "Take A Look (At Yourself)" with Guru lashing out the lesson of respect. For the real jeepsters, there's Guru's cocky, self-confident track "Slicker Than Most" with' Gary Barnacle masterminding the sax and the flute, and "Le Bien, Le Mal" ("The Good, The Bad" for those of you unhip to the French lingo) with French rapper, C Solaar. "Slicker Than Most" cages in a phat beat, greasy with jazz lyrics and sax bars, a is all of "Jaz­ zmatazz". "It's jeep ready," Guru prom­ ises. "I tested it in the jeep and the beats are there." "LE BIEN, LE MAL" is defi­ nitely jeep ready. MC Solaar, born in Senegal and residing in Paris, ain't no stranger to the true meaning of hi p-hop and carries the legacy of hip-hop ryhmes with a Leaders of the New. School-funk. For all of the hard­ core followers, French ain't just a language of love. GURU Light" is the spiritual guide for "Sights In The City" with saxo­ phonist/flutist Courtney Pine (He's been compared, to music's own genius, John Coltrane), vo­ calist Carleen Anderson and Si­ mon Laws on keyboards. musical twilight zone, a zone per­ haps Coltrane himself was 100 - ing for. It's a plateau that can only go higher and, only blend stronger. , It's a legacy that Gang Starr, with DJ Premiers' needle of pure steel paying homage to the broth­ ers of a time ago and Guru's 1 yric that pay homage to a time of now, began and the Guru continues. Visions of str ,t lights, drug fotlowers, and the city's night life flow through the pcakers with Guru as your tour guide. DONALD BYRD GURU "Jazzmatazz" i a' spiritual journey for Guru, who explain in the intro that he waited a long time for this fusion. H wanted it done right. It's tracks of time and space, of greasy jams and cool jazz' breezes. And it could only hap­ pen in "Jazzmatazz." Dig. Jazzmstazz journey. "I want to make the mu ic more intellectual, not ju 1 boom boom ba and hardcore rap," So­ laar said. "I have the attitude cool." Randy Crawford's "Street "jAZZMATAZZ" ucce- fully takes a journey through a BRANFORD MARSALIS , GURU