John Watt
Member
Weather Report: live, Buffalo 75-77?
Weather Report! Thoughts of Weather Report profile like thoughts of weather reports and newspapers, always constant variables in our lives. Wayne Shorter, known through Miles Davis since the sixties, Beautiful! Composing with Joseph Zawinul on keys to start Weather Report created attention grabbing and aggressive top of the pop chart hits, instrumental "jazz-fusion".
Needing to hire another bassist, they found Jaco Pastorius, touring "Birdland".
My Press Pass from The Welland Evening Tribune usually worked. The only newspaper a in city of over 50,000. Closer to Niagara Falls than Buffalo. The crowd of people or my friends wanting to pay to get in really helped me and my date. I've been to Kleinmann's Music Hall a few times, and I hope I spelled his name properly. This time to see Weather Report. No press was being allowed backstage, there was no press area, bar or buffet. This turned out to be a good thing, as we went back with our friends and actually watched the whole show.
Surprise after surprise! Not saying a word, Joe and Wayne would appear top stage left with the keys, play the opening and walk off. They returned to play the ending. All night. Every song. No solos. Not one. But that was alright. Two drummers were spread out on a descending two steps stage, with Jaco Pastorius down a wall on the main floor stage with his amp in the middle. Why am I thinking Alex Acuna and Chester Thompson? There would be a long bass and double drums jam, a long bass solo, another bass and drums jam and the ending. Every song, all night. No deviation. But that was alright all night, watching long Jaco Pastorius bass solos.
He was tall and skinny, had scruffy torn jeans, a pale green Florida palm shirt and past the shoulders hair with sneakers. He used a Fender Jazz Bass with a 25 foot cord through an Acoustic amp about 4 1/2' feet tall, with maybe an eighteen and four tens or twelves. Sometimes he'd stop and talk about what he was playing. He'd be walking around his amp, go up to the back wall and face up to one of the drummers, or both, or stand across the front, leaning down forward, swooping around with his bass, and standing and leaning backwards like some slow motion Cirque de Soleil acrobat. He toned down for a bass and cello approach to four strings, sounding like a chamber quartet. He would turn the effects and volume drive up and walk around, holding the bass up flat manipulating the volume and tones, looking down the strings at you while getting a spacey feedback semi-Hendrix solo happening, echoing off the whole room. Sometimes it came down to just Jaco by himself, meditatively, both drummers towelling off. He towelled off frequently. You felt like towelling too in a facility having air conditioning problems.
Jaco's sonic volume, his agitating and insistent pulling and snapping of the strings, chiming harmonics out at you, letting them long echo with French horn and double bass voices, mike stand sliding clusters of passing trombone textures, hair-lashed noise and curly-cord whipped contraphasals, tired you out too. You knew you had just heard a great concert, and a great bass lesson. It might seem too glib now, but Jaco Pastorius lived a contrapuntal life. He sold a lot of fretless basses. Even I did a job filing one down. Some of my favorite musicians being from Buffalo, I wonder what Pat Methany, Lyle Mayes and Jaco Pastorius would have done.
Having heard Hendrix and owning a Strat and Marshall with effects back then, I know what Jimi and Jaco could sound like. They would be floating along, "Moon, Turn the Tides away, gently... gently..." now orchestrated with a Jaco bass heavy atmosphere while Jimi creates passing clusters of underwater phenomena, singing about "mermen and aquatic women" and "jellyfish"... hearing the surf again and the reintroduction of muted single notes without deep echo surfaces your consciousness. The quiet washes of what I think are Stevie Winwood out-takes from "Voodoo Chile" swell and ebb, adding a receding surf action. Jaco would still be there with some soft horn or cello octave finger tapping, phasing and flanging, and when the sound of a band going up the beach takes you ashore (like Miles Davis's stereo use of passing simutaneous riff clusters on Bitches Brew) they would click together, hitting a rhythm down low, grooving the song and... as only they could go... Jimi and Jaco...
Weather Report! Thoughts of Weather Report profile like thoughts of weather reports and newspapers, always constant variables in our lives. Wayne Shorter, known through Miles Davis since the sixties, Beautiful! Composing with Joseph Zawinul on keys to start Weather Report created attention grabbing and aggressive top of the pop chart hits, instrumental "jazz-fusion".
Needing to hire another bassist, they found Jaco Pastorius, touring "Birdland".
My Press Pass from The Welland Evening Tribune usually worked. The only newspaper a in city of over 50,000. Closer to Niagara Falls than Buffalo. The crowd of people or my friends wanting to pay to get in really helped me and my date. I've been to Kleinmann's Music Hall a few times, and I hope I spelled his name properly. This time to see Weather Report. No press was being allowed backstage, there was no press area, bar or buffet. This turned out to be a good thing, as we went back with our friends and actually watched the whole show.
Surprise after surprise! Not saying a word, Joe and Wayne would appear top stage left with the keys, play the opening and walk off. They returned to play the ending. All night. Every song. No solos. Not one. But that was alright. Two drummers were spread out on a descending two steps stage, with Jaco Pastorius down a wall on the main floor stage with his amp in the middle. Why am I thinking Alex Acuna and Chester Thompson? There would be a long bass and double drums jam, a long bass solo, another bass and drums jam and the ending. Every song, all night. No deviation. But that was alright all night, watching long Jaco Pastorius bass solos.
He was tall and skinny, had scruffy torn jeans, a pale green Florida palm shirt and past the shoulders hair with sneakers. He used a Fender Jazz Bass with a 25 foot cord through an Acoustic amp about 4 1/2' feet tall, with maybe an eighteen and four tens or twelves. Sometimes he'd stop and talk about what he was playing. He'd be walking around his amp, go up to the back wall and face up to one of the drummers, or both, or stand across the front, leaning down forward, swooping around with his bass, and standing and leaning backwards like some slow motion Cirque de Soleil acrobat. He toned down for a bass and cello approach to four strings, sounding like a chamber quartet. He would turn the effects and volume drive up and walk around, holding the bass up flat manipulating the volume and tones, looking down the strings at you while getting a spacey feedback semi-Hendrix solo happening, echoing off the whole room. Sometimes it came down to just Jaco by himself, meditatively, both drummers towelling off. He towelled off frequently. You felt like towelling too in a facility having air conditioning problems.
Jaco's sonic volume, his agitating and insistent pulling and snapping of the strings, chiming harmonics out at you, letting them long echo with French horn and double bass voices, mike stand sliding clusters of passing trombone textures, hair-lashed noise and curly-cord whipped contraphasals, tired you out too. You knew you had just heard a great concert, and a great bass lesson. It might seem too glib now, but Jaco Pastorius lived a contrapuntal life. He sold a lot of fretless basses. Even I did a job filing one down. Some of my favorite musicians being from Buffalo, I wonder what Pat Methany, Lyle Mayes and Jaco Pastorius would have done.
Having heard Hendrix and owning a Strat and Marshall with effects back then, I know what Jimi and Jaco could sound like. They would be floating along, "Moon, Turn the Tides away, gently... gently..." now orchestrated with a Jaco bass heavy atmosphere while Jimi creates passing clusters of underwater phenomena, singing about "mermen and aquatic women" and "jellyfish"... hearing the surf again and the reintroduction of muted single notes without deep echo surfaces your consciousness. The quiet washes of what I think are Stevie Winwood out-takes from "Voodoo Chile" swell and ebb, adding a receding surf action. Jaco would still be there with some soft horn or cello octave finger tapping, phasing and flanging, and when the sound of a band going up the beach takes you ashore (like Miles Davis's stereo use of passing simutaneous riff clusters on Bitches Brew) they would click together, hitting a rhythm down low, grooving the song and... as only they could go... Jimi and Jaco...
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