Showing posts with label Joe ZAWINUL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joe ZAWINUL. Show all posts

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Joe ZAWINUL & Trilok GURTU - Duo,Glasgow International Jazz Festival 1994

Joe ZAWINUL & Trilok GURTU - Duo,Glasgow International Jazz Festival 1994
Old Fruitmarket
Bootleg

Jazz

There is a bit of saturation on a couple of tracks but it's not too bad. Track 3 Goose Bumps is split in two because of a tape flip. There was real technical problems with Zawinul's keys at the beginning of the show, that's why one can hear them dropping in and out and the audience applauding when it's fixed. I've left the recording in its original form. The editing was done at the gig by the original taper.
Any help with the setlist and exact date would be appreciated.
The original DAT tape was stolen (and probably destroyed) along with a collection of fusion bootlegs from around this time. Some copies I made on cassete in 1994 are all that remain. Eternal thanks to Ricky, the original taper, this one goes out for him wherever he might be.
May I be as bold as to say that this was definitely one of the greatest gigs I ever had the privelige to attend!
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Joe Zawinul- KeysVocals
Trilok Gurtu- Perc.
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01. The other Tune
02. !
03. Goose Bumps
04. Goose Bumps (Continued)
05. Morning Dance
06. (Tabla talk solo)
07. !
08. (Encore)
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Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Joe ZAWINUL Syndicate - Ronnie Scott`s October 1998

Joe ZAWINUL Syndicate - Ronnie Scott`s October 1998
London, England
BBC Recording

Jazz

Joe Zawinul- Keyboards
Victor Bailey- Bass
Gary Poulson- Guitar
Manolo Badrena- Percussion
Kirk Covington- Drums
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01. IntroPatriots
02. Lost Tribes
03. IndiscretionsBlack Market
04. Gipsy
05. Waraya
06. As’ TrabajamosBimoya
07. Two Lines
**
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Friday, November 27, 2009

Joe ZAWINUL - The Rise & Fall Of The Third Stream 1968


Joe ZAWINUL - The Rise & Fall Of The Third Stream 1968

Jazz

This transitional recording sees Joe Zawinul moving from the role of jazz pianist to that of a synthesist in the broad sense of the word. The recording, made up of advanced hard bop and post bop themes, includes -- with varying degrees of cohesion -- passages for cello and violas. The strings never completely meld with the jazz instrumentation, but they also don't get in the way. The title suggests Zawinul sees little value in partitioning music under such headings as "third stream" (a rubric for the fusion of jazz and classical music). This view would be famously exemplified in the influential projects with which Zawinul would soon be involved.
Zawinul sticks with acoustic piano except for "Soul of a Village", where he improvises in a soul jazz vein on Fender Rhodes over the tamboura-like droning of a prepared piano. On other tracks, his playing is similar to the sweeping grandeur of McCoy Tyner. Elsewhere, he is in more of a Keith Jarrett or Bill Evans space. There's good work from Jimmy Owens on trumpet and William Fischer on tenor sax, along with a top-flight rhythm section: bassist Richard Davis and either Freddie Waits or Roy McCurdy on drums.
What's interesting about this music is the insight it provides on directions Zawinul would soon take with Miles Davis on the ethereal In a Silent Way, on the impressionistic 1971 eponymous release Zawinul, and then with the borderless fusioneering of Weather Report. These later projects are the realization of ideas that Zawinul was beginning to form on this 1967 session. ~ Jim Todd
Long before he set the jazz world on its ear with the legendary fusion band Weather Report, Joe Zawinul was featured as pianist and composer for Cannonball Adderley and Miles Davis. In 1968, Zawinul recorded THE RISE & FALL OF THE THIRD STREAM for Atlantic. The album was re-released on CD in 1999, and it's great to have it back. The album's title refers to one of the first conscious fusion movements of jazz in the early '60s, a union of jazz and classical music.
With THE RISE & FALL OF THE THIRD STREAM, Zawinul draws equally from European classical music and from the gospel and blues roots of jazz, achieving a virtually perfect balance of the cerebral and the earthy. The instrumentation is unique, as the keyboard/horns/bass/drums band is joined by a string quartet oddly capable of conveying a strong blues feeling. Jimmy Owens contributes sterling trumpet work, and William Fischer (better known as a "classical" composer) plays stark, probing tenor saxophone. If you appreciate both classical music and the blues, the excellent RISE & FALL is for you.
Long before he set the jazz world on its ear with the legendary fusion band Weather Report, Joe Zawinul was featured as pianist and composer for Cannonball Adderley and Miles Davis. In 1968, Zawinul recorded THE RISE & FALL OF THE THIRD STREAM for Atlantic. The album was re-released on CD in 1999, and it's great to have it back. The album's title refers to one of the first conscious fusion movements of jazz in the early '60s, a union of jazz and classical music.
With THE RISE & FALL OF THE THIRD STREAM, Zawinul draws equally from European classical music and from the gospel and blues roots of jazz, achieving a virtually perfect balance of the cerebral and the earthy. The instrumentation is unique, as the keyboard/horns/bass/drums band is joined by a string quartet oddly capable of conveying a strong blues feeling. Jimmy Owens contributes sterling trumpet work, and William Fischer (better known as a "classical" composer).
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William Fisher- Tenor Sax
Richard Davis- Bass 
Kermit Moore- Cello - 
Freddie Waits, Roy McCurdy- Drums
Warren Smith- Percussion 
Joe Zawinul-Piano, Electric Piano
Jimmy Owens- Trumpet  
Alfred Brown, Selwart Clarke, Theodore Israel- Viola 
**
A1   Baptismal 7:37  
A2a  The Soul Of A Village (Part I) 2:13   
A2b  The Soul Of A Village (Part II) 4:12   
A3   The Fifth Canto 6:55 
B1   From Vienna, With Love 4:27   
B2   Lord, Lord, Lord 3:55  
B3   A Concerto, Retitled 5:30  
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Thursday, October 15, 2009

Joe ZAWINUL Trio - To You With Love 1959


Joe ZAWINUL Trio - To You With Love 1959
Label: FRESH SOUND
Recorded in New York City, September 1959

Jazz

Music journalism defines him a "Legend". It may be a word overused but there isn't truly a more appropriate way to describe keyboardist/composer Joe Zawinul. Austrian born, Joe Zawinul emigrated to the US in 1959 where he played with Maynard Ferguson and the great Dinah Washington before joining alto saxophonist great Cannonball Adderley in 1961 for nine years. Zawinul then moved on to a brief but fateful encounter and collaboration with Miles Davis, just at the time Miles was moving into the electric arena. In 1970, Zawinul and saxophonist Wayne Shorter put together what was to become the most important jazz group of the 70s and beyond, Weather Report. Band members came and went, including Miroslav Vitous, Alphonso Johnson, Jaco Pastorius, Victor Bailey, Peter Erskine and Omar Hakim. A few months after his arrival in NYC in 1959, Zawinul got the chance to record the present album, the first time since arriving in United States as a leader of his own trio.
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Joe Zawinul- Piano
George Tucker- Bass
Frankie Dunlop- Drums
Ray Barretto- Congas
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01.I Should Care
02.Easy Living
03.Please Send Me Someone To Love
04.It Might As Well Be Spring
05.Love For Sale
06.Squeeze Me
07.Greensleeves
08.My One And Only Love
09.Masquerade Is Over
10.Sweet And Lovely
**
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