intet_at_tabe
Rear Admiral Appassionata (Ret.)
Wayne Shorter Quartet & Imani Winds on July 6 at 8 PM, at the Opera:
Wayne Shorter, now at 72 years of age, with more than 45 years of exersizing the tenor and the soprano saxophone. First with the famous Miles Davis Quintet from the middle of the 1960´s, counting names like Ron Carter, Herbie Hancock and Tony Williams, and later with the electric jazz band Weather Report in the 1970´s, founded by his friend on the piano and keyboards Joe Zawinul also from one of Miles Davis´ groups in the late 1960´s. Since Weather Report ended Wayne Shorter went solo and did one remarkable album called "Native Dancer" with the Brazilian musicians and composer Milton Nascimento, since then continuing in his own groups which for instance gave the international breakthrough for the female American drummer Terri Lyne Carrington and the pianist Danilo Perez, late in the 1980´s.
But in Denmark at the Opera Wayne Shorter Quartet was a thrill, not to mention his co-musicians, each of them picked carefully by Shorter.
The concert howeever misplaced began with Shorter introducing the classical horn quintet Imani Winds, something we all easely could have been without. Shorter´s song "Terra Incognita" built over the Astor Piazzola song "Lieber Tango", did not make much noice or interest among the audience, though three of the female horn players looked quite good, they should have chosen another concert hall to exercise their missing skills. It was, in plain english, 30 minutes of wasted time and not at all proper for the Copenhagen Jazz Festival 2008.
But then his own new hardcore jazz quartet appeared, and we were all lifted way back in the day to some of the best songs by Miles Davis, for instance "So What" and "All Blues", which made the audience to get up from each their chair to applaude Shorter and his musicians, and from then on we were all focused and in the heavens of eloquant jazz. Shorter´s own composition "Footprints" on the night almost 12 minutes was the best suggestion next to the old standards and songs by Miles Davis.
The musicians:
Wayne Shorter - tenor and soprano saxophone
Danilo Perez - piano
John Patitucci - double bass
Brian Blade - drums
A very homogeneous jazz quartet, obviously to the audience like had they´d done nothing else all their lives than playing in this quartet. It was AWESOME and this exquisite jazz quartet of Wayne Shorter´s should have been given the whole time on the stage - without the Imani Winds.
John Patitucci probably among the top 5 double bass players in the world for the past 20 years, and Brian Blade inflamatory exploding at times on the drums, at times in particular dueling with Patitucci almost DeJohnette alike, so refreshing in this quartet.
The final solo from Wayne Shorter on the soprano saxophone only with the piano "whispering", made me wonder if Shorter should have chosen classical music in stead, since he introduced the last song as originally composed by good ole´Johan Sebastian Bach.
The Wayne Shorter Quartet on a scale from 1 to 5. A convinsingly 3+.
Wayne Shorter, now at 72 years of age, with more than 45 years of exersizing the tenor and the soprano saxophone. First with the famous Miles Davis Quintet from the middle of the 1960´s, counting names like Ron Carter, Herbie Hancock and Tony Williams, and later with the electric jazz band Weather Report in the 1970´s, founded by his friend on the piano and keyboards Joe Zawinul also from one of Miles Davis´ groups in the late 1960´s. Since Weather Report ended Wayne Shorter went solo and did one remarkable album called "Native Dancer" with the Brazilian musicians and composer Milton Nascimento, since then continuing in his own groups which for instance gave the international breakthrough for the female American drummer Terri Lyne Carrington and the pianist Danilo Perez, late in the 1980´s.
But in Denmark at the Opera Wayne Shorter Quartet was a thrill, not to mention his co-musicians, each of them picked carefully by Shorter.
The concert howeever misplaced began with Shorter introducing the classical horn quintet Imani Winds, something we all easely could have been without. Shorter´s song "Terra Incognita" built over the Astor Piazzola song "Lieber Tango", did not make much noice or interest among the audience, though three of the female horn players looked quite good, they should have chosen another concert hall to exercise their missing skills. It was, in plain english, 30 minutes of wasted time and not at all proper for the Copenhagen Jazz Festival 2008.
But then his own new hardcore jazz quartet appeared, and we were all lifted way back in the day to some of the best songs by Miles Davis, for instance "So What" and "All Blues", which made the audience to get up from each their chair to applaude Shorter and his musicians, and from then on we were all focused and in the heavens of eloquant jazz. Shorter´s own composition "Footprints" on the night almost 12 minutes was the best suggestion next to the old standards and songs by Miles Davis.
The musicians:
Wayne Shorter - tenor and soprano saxophone
Danilo Perez - piano
John Patitucci - double bass
Brian Blade - drums
A very homogeneous jazz quartet, obviously to the audience like had they´d done nothing else all their lives than playing in this quartet. It was AWESOME and this exquisite jazz quartet of Wayne Shorter´s should have been given the whole time on the stage - without the Imani Winds.
John Patitucci probably among the top 5 double bass players in the world for the past 20 years, and Brian Blade inflamatory exploding at times on the drums, at times in particular dueling with Patitucci almost DeJohnette alike, so refreshing in this quartet.
The final solo from Wayne Shorter on the soprano saxophone only with the piano "whispering", made me wonder if Shorter should have chosen classical music in stead, since he introduced the last song as originally composed by good ole´Johan Sebastian Bach.
The Wayne Shorter Quartet on a scale from 1 to 5. A convinsingly 3+.
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