Joe Zawinul e WRD Big Band - Brown Street (2 CD Live) (2007) Label: Heads Up HUCD3121-25 Personnel Joe Zawinul - Keyboards Alex Acuna - Percussions Victor Bailey - Bass Nathaniel Townsley - Drums Vince Mendoza -arranger, conductor WDR Big Band Colonia Recorded live at "Joe Zawinul's Birdlan" Vienna in October 2005 CD 1: 1. Brown Street 2. In A Silent Way 3. Fast City 4. Badia/Boogie Woogie Waltz 5. Black Market CD 2: 1. March of The Lost Children 2. A Remark You Made 3. Night Passage 4. Procession 5. Carnavalito Personnel Joe Zawinul - Keyboards Alex Acuna - Percussions Victor Bailey - Bass Nathaniel Townsley - Drums Vince Mendoza -arranger, conductor WDR Big Band Colonia Listen http://www.amazon.com/gp/recsradio/radio/B000002MKA/ref=pd_krex_listen_dp_img?ie=UTF8&refTagSuffix=dp_img http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZT-a1IsmtQo http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G4DjwDyfaQU http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zPx1wMAvDQk http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v8d340AMGCI http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=10XjKNgh-jo&feature=related When Joe Zawinul solos on his new live album, Brown Street, he takes whatever song he and his band (including the German big band WDR) are playing to a very odd place. With a keyboard sound that reminds me of a 1980s ARP synthesizer and liberal use of a vocoder, Zawinul sounds like hes on a different planet than the other players. The albums first track, Brown Street, an old Weather Report song, has an African feel to it, with a chord progression that sounds like an African folk song. Zawinuls playing is lively, with an almost zydeco energy to it. The WDR big band brings pomp to the songs chorus, playing beautiful, magisterial horn lines underneath it. Victor Baileys bass playing maintains a quick, jumpy rhythm, keeping the song bouncing. The song sounds like something off Paul Simons Graceland album minus the vocals. Fast City feels like a bop song, albeit one adorned with keyboard, electric guitar (courtesy of Paul Shigihara) and electric bass. Paul Heller, of the WDR big band, plays a fiery tenor sax solo as Baileys bass scurries underneath. Zawinuls keyboard sounds like Herbie Hancocks did on Headhunters: spacey and bassy. At around 6:51 in the track, Zawinul plays a Middle Eastern-sounding keyboard melody while a sample of a man chanting in Arabic is heard. Badia/ Boogie Woogie Waltz (another Weather Report classic) begins like an ambient piece from musician and Brian Eno collaborator Harold Budd Eall airy atmosphere and Zawinuls haunting trills. But soon Baileys bass comes in, laying down low, heavy notes as the groove pops its head up. Zawinul somehow gets his vocoder to sound like a sample of a chanting Indian woman before the full group bursts into a horn heavy groove that could be the theme to a 70s cop show. Olivier Peters wails away on his soprano sax as Shigihara plays a comping machine-gun guitar riff. Sampled sounds of a train begin Night Passage, an easygoing and funky song that features the beautiful flugelhorn playing of Kenny Rampton. About a minute and half into the song, a very swing-era chorus appears with doubled horn lines and an instantly familiar chord progression. Zawinuls transmissions from planet Fusion intercede every once and awhile, but you barely notice his keyboard most of the time. Procession begins with a fuzzy, subterranean-sounding keyboard tone that reminds me of the kind of synthesizer sounds found on Brian Enos Another Green World (fun fact: that album features a track called Zawinul/LavaE. The song then moves into a funkier section that features a horn line straight out of Isaac HayesEbag of tricks. This section moves into a jazzier one, with horn lines from WDR ascending and descending quite conventionally. As much as I want to rave about Brown Street, I have a few reservations. The songs have a way of constantly changing gears, moving from spacey weirdness to funky world music to the kind of conventional swing progressions you dont expect from a fusion legend. This is frustrating for a listener like me who likes a particular tone to infuse the whole of a song. However, Im sure this very shifting of styles might appeal to many fusion fans. Another issue I have is that Zawinul is too much of a team player. He has amazing melodic gifts, but too often relegates himself to the position of sideman. Unlike a lot of jazz purists, Im not allergic to synthesizers, and I wanted to hear more of Zawinuls weirdness. That being said, Brown Street has an energy and eclecticism that is sure to excite fusion and jazz fans alike.