Showing posts with label Wayne Shorter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wayne Shorter. Show all posts

Thursday, May 4, 2023

Carlos Santana & Wayne Shorter - Live at the Montreux Jazz Festival Disc, Disc 2

Album: Live at the Montreux Jazz Festival Disc 1
Styles: Guitar And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1988
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:11
Size: 129,4 MB
Art: Front

(1:55) 1. Spiritual
(9:06) 2. Peraza
(8:20) 3. Shhh...
(9:21) 4. Incident at Neshabur
(8:29) 5. Elegant People
(4:20) 6. Percussion Solo
(4:42) 7. Goodness and Mercy
(9:55) 8. Sanctuary

Album: Live at the Montreux Jazz Festival Disc 2
Time: 68:09
Size: 157,0 MB

(8:43) 1. For Those Who Chant
(5:23) 2. Blues for Salvador
(6:26) 3. Fireball 2000
(5:10) 4. Drum Solo
(8:28) 5. Ballroom in the Sky
(7:20) 6. Once it's Gotcha
(8:23) 7. Mandela
(8:44) 8. Deeper, Dig Deeper
(6:13) 9. Europa
(3:15) 10. Interviews With Carlos Santana, Wayne Shorter & Claude Nobs

It began almost as a lark when Carlos Santana encountered his longtime friend and hero Wayne Shorter on the concert trail in Atlanta, GA, in 1987. Carlos said, "Let's start a rumor that we're putting a band together."Wayne's eyes got bigger and brighter as he smiled and then responded: "Yeah, Carlos, let's start a rumor."

A few months later the Carlos Santana/Wayne Shorter Band performed its debut concert at The Fillmore in San Francisco, the beginning of a 26-concert tour throughout the U.S. and Europe. The performance of this magnificent band was recorded at Montreux, Switzerland, on July 14, 1988, and includes interviews with Carlos Santana, Wayne Shorter and festival creator Claude Nobs. By Editorial Reviews
https://www.amazon.com/Live-1988-Montreux-Jazz-Festival/dp/B000MRA6R8

Musicians: Carlos Santana - guitar / Wayne Shorter - saxophone / Chester Thompson - keyboards / Patrice Rushen - keyboards / Alphonso Johnson - bass / Armando Peraza - congas / Jose Chepito Areas - timbales / Leon "Ndugu" Chancler - drums

Live at the Montreux Jazz Festival

Monday, April 24, 2023

Wayne Shorter - The All Seeing Eye

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1965
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:33
Size: 102,5 MB
Art: Front

(10:34) 1. The All Seeing Eye
(11:48) 2. Genesis
( 6:57) 3. Chaos
( 5:32) 4. Face Of The Deep
( 9:40) 5. Mephistopheles

With such titles as "The All Seeing Eye," "Genesis," "Chaos," "Face of the Deep," and "Mephistopheles," it is clear from the start that the music on this LP is not basic bop and blues. Wayne Shorter (who composed four of the five originals) picked an all-star cast (trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, altoist James Spaulding, trombonist Grachan Moncur III, pianist Herbie Hancock, bassist Ron Carter, and drummer Joe Chambers, along with brother Alan Shorter on flügelhorn for the final song) to perform and interpret the dramatic selections, and their brand of controlled freedom has plenty of subtle surprises. This is stimulating music that still sounds fresh. By Scott Yanow
https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-all-seeing-eye-mw0000097755

Personnel: Wayne Shorter – tenor saxophone; Freddie Hubbard – trumpet, flugelhorn; Grachan Moncur III – trombone; James Spaulding – alto saxophone; Herbie Hancock – piano; Ron Carter – bass; Joe Chambers – drums; Alan Shorter – flugelhorn (track 5 only)

The All Seeing Eye

Wednesday, March 29, 2023

Wayne Shorter - Footprints - Live

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:31
Size: 146,4 MB
Art: Front

( 5:32) 1. Sanctuary
( 8:28) 2. Masquelero
( 7:59) 3. Valse Triste
( 5:01) 4. Go
( 9:29) 5. Aung San Suu Kyi
( 7:55) 6. Footprints
( 8:28) 7. Atlantis
(10:36) 8. Ju Ju

Could saxophonist Wayne Shorter have known that the songs he wrote and recorded back in the '60s would be fresher than ever over 30 years later? Of course not, but he cranks them out on his new disc Footprints Live! with confident, fresh, Scope-tinged breath. Perhaps the jazz icon didn't realize how timeless his tunes would be, but he knew he'd never lose his cool.

Last year Shorter put together a group of fine musicians pianist Danilo Perez, bassist John Patitucci, and drummer Brian Blade a group that resulted in Shorter's first-ever live recording. Give Footprints Live!a spin and get a taste of the juicy, ripe fruit of this acoustic quartet. Fearless leaps toward the next sonic apex keep the players in unconflicting paths to a metaphysical freedom. Blade can feel it and he's not afraid to express it with frequent whoops and "whoas," and percussive outbursts.

But Footprints Live!isn't all jubilance and joy. Shorter gets real solemn sometimes, in that soft, beau-tiful way he lets the notes linger like incense smoke in the sweet air. And the way Perez shimmers around the sax sounds, on moments like the end of "Footprints," is forlorn gorgeousness redefined. The creativity and spontaneous spirit of the group recalls the Miles Davis Quintet that Shorter played with in the late '60s. Polyphonic confluence on songs like "Masquelero" and "JuJu" level into sultry, gaze-inducing rhythms.

These songs are sensual in ways that only the taste buds would know. Shorter and Perez’ interplay is like seltzer clear and effervescent. Patitucci's dynamite bass solos ascend into sheer exuberance. With a naked, flung into the wind way, these musicians express themselves completely, and their unrestrained nature creates constant inspiration. Each moment on Footprints Live! seems new, and the genre known as jazz rejuvenates itself once again. This review first appeared in the June 2002 issue of All About Jazz. By Celeste Sunderland https://www.allaboutjazz.com/footprints-live-wayne-shorter-verve-music-group-review-by-celeste-sunderland

Personnel: Wayne Shorter: tenor and soprano saxophones; Danilo Perez: piano; John Patitucci: bass; Brian Blade: drums

Footprints - Live

Sunday, March 5, 2023

Miles Davis Quintet - Live At The Oriental Theatre 1966 (CD1) And (CD2)

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:08 (CD 1)
Size: 97,3 MB (CD 1)
Time: 48:38 (CD 2)
Size: 112,3 MB (CD 2)
Art: Front

(CD 1)

( 0:40) 1. Announcement
( 9:49) 2. Autumn Leaves
( 9:22) 3. Agitation
(10:31) 4. Stella By Starlight
(11:44) 5. Gingerbread Boy

(CD 2)
( 9:30) 1. The Theme
( 9:32) 2. All Blues
( 8:51) 3. Who Can I Turn To?
( 9:06) 4. So What
(11:38) 5. My Funny Valentine

This release contains a complete previously unissued concert by the 1966 Miles Davis Quintet. Recorded at the impressing Oriental Theatre in Portland shortly before it was demolished, it presents the only existing testimony of bassist Richard Davis playing with Miles. Among its many highlights are many great trumpet solos by Miles, including his only existing version of "Who Can I Turn To ?" a free jazzoriented So What, and a beautiful reading of My Funny Valentine.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/The-Oriental-Theatre-1966-2CD/dp/B004M3NKBC

Personnel: Miles Davis - tp; Wayne Shorter - ts; Herbie Hancock - p; Richard Davis - b; Tony Williams - d

Live At The Oriental Theatre 1966 (CD1)(CD2)

Friday, March 3, 2023

Wayne Shorter - High Life

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:14
Size: 122,4 MB
Art: Front

(7:24)  1. Children Of The Night
(7:30)  2. At The Fair
(5:12)  3. Maya
(5:35)  4. On The Milky Way Express
(6:20)  5. Pandora Awakened
(6:46)  6. Virgo Rising
(6:28)  7. High Life
(5:54)  8. Midnight In Califoria
(2:02)  9. Black Swan ( In Memory Of Susan Portlynn Romeo)

Wayne Shorter's debut for Verve was his first release as a leader in quite a long time and his most rewarding recording since the prime years of Weather Report, 15 years before. Shorter and keyboardist Rachel Z spent a year working on developing and orchestrating his ideas and the results are these nine originals. Although use was made of orchestral horns and strings, most of the backing in these often-dense ensembles is by a standard rhythm section (which includes Marcus Miller on electric bass and bass clarinet) and Rachel Z's synthesizers. The pieces set moods rather than state singable melodies, are not afraid to utilize electronic rhythms now and then in an unpredictable fashion, and are both intelligent and largely danceable. However, Shorter's playing (not only on soprano and tenor but a bit of alto and baritone) is always distinctive and he sounds very much as if he is pushing himself. In fact, his emotional statements and the complexity of the ensembles push this music way above virtually all of the so-called "contemporary jazz" (which is often merely a synonym for jazzy pop) into the idiom of creative music. It helps for listeners to have a liking for the sound of Weather Report (even though this group is not a copy), but even Shorter's older fans will find his playing here to be quite stimulating. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/high-life-mw0000645761

Personnel: Wayne Shorter (arranger, soprano, alto, tenor & baritone saxophones); Marcus Miller (conductor, bass clarinet, bass, programming); Jon Lewis, Rob McGregor (trumpet); Steven Holtman, Robert Payne (trombone); Daniel Kelley, Joseph Meyer, Brad Warnaar (French horn); Linda Muggeridge, Leslie Reed (English horn); Kazue McGregor, Annarenee Grizell, Sarah Weisz (flute); Joyce Kelley-Clark (oboe); Emily Bernstein, Ralph Williams (clarinet); Julie Feves, Michele Grego (contrabassoon); Bruce Dukov, Armen Garabedian, Suzie Katayama, Edith Markman, Sid Page, Michele Richards (violin); Robert Becker, Denyse Buffum, Ralph Fielding, Harry Shirinian, Evan Wilson (viola); Larry Corbett (cello); Rachel Z (piano, synthesizer); David Gilmore (guitar); Will Calhoun, Terry Lyne Carrington (drums); Lenny Castro, Airto Moreira, Munyungo Jackson, Kevin Ricard (percussion).

R.I.P.

Born: August 25, 1933, Newark, New Jersey, United States

Died: March 2, 2023


High Life

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers - Kyoto

Styles: Jazz, Hard Bop
Year: 1991
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 32:24
Size: 74,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:57) 1. The High Priest
(5:49) 2. Never Never Land
(5:04) 3. Wellington's Blues
(8:30) 4. Nihon Bash
(7:04) 5. Kyoto

Reissued on Fantasy's OJC series, this album finds Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers paying tribute to Japan (where they had toured to great acclaim) on two selections, featuring Art Blakey's cousin as a vocalist on "Wellington's Blues" (a real rarity in The Jazz Messengers' discography) and debuting Curtis Fuller's "The High Priest." With trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, tenorman Wayne Shorter and trombonist Fuller in fine form, this is one of literally dozens of recommended Jazz Messengers recordings.~Scott Yanowhttps://www.allmusic.com/album/kyoto-mw0000315032

Personnel: Art Blakey - drums; Freddie Hubbard – trumpet; Curtis Fuller – trombone; Wayne Shorter - tenor saxophone; Cedar Walton - piano; Reggie Workman - bass; Wellington Blakey - vocals (track 3)

Kyoto

Monday, September 5, 2022

Wayne Shorter - Live At The Detroit Jazz Festival

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:38
Size: 127,6 MB
Art: Front

(14:20) 1. Someplace Called "Where"
(21:43) 2. Endangered Species
( 8:37) 3. Encontros e Despedidas
( 4:41) 4. Drummers Song
( 6:16) 5. Midnight in Carlotta's Hair

Wayne Shorter is arguably the greatest living jazz composer and a key participant in some of the most iconic jazz recordings of all time. Wayne Shorter is arguably the greatest living jazz composer and a key participant in some of the most iconic jazz recordings of all time. Here he is joined on stage by an all star band each of the musicians leaders and jazz icons in their own right. The record also pays tribute to the late Geri Allen, who composed some of the material.https://www.prestomusic.com/jazz/products/9366902--live-at-the-detroit-jazz-festival

Personnel: Wayne Shorter: tenor and soprano saxophone; Leo Genovese: piano and keyboards; Esperanza Spalding: bass and vocal; Terri Lyne Carrington: drums

Live At The Detroit Jazz Festival

Sunday, April 10, 2022

Wayne Shorter - Adam's Apple

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:55
Size: 109.7 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz, Bop
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[6:46] 1. Adam's Apple
[6:35] 2. 502 Blues (Drinkin' And Drivin')
[6:28] 3. El Gaucho
[7:26] 4. Footprints
[6:13] 5. Teru
[7:32] 6. Chief Crazy Horse
[6:52] 7. The Collector

Bass – Reginald Workman; Drums – Joe Chambers; Piano – Herbie Hancock; Tenor Saxophone – Wayne Shorter.

By the beginning of '66, Wayne Shorter had already made jazz history twice: forging gospel-drenched hard bop with Art Blakey from '59 to '64 and helping to create the metaphysical artistry of the Miles Davis quintet during the mid-'60s. So it should come as no suprise that Adam's Apple , which was recorded in February of '66, has Shorter compositions in standard AABA blues form and introspective ballads that sound like his work with Davis.

Recorded at the infamous Van Gelder studio for Blue Note Records, Adam's Apple features Shorter leading an all-star rhythm section consisting of pianist Herbie Hancock, bassist Reggie Workman, and drummer Joe Chambers. As in the second "classic" Miles Davis quintet, Hancock and Shorter find solace in each other on Adam's Apple. Shorter's solos throughout the album are encouraged by Hancock's stride-like comping.

Adam's Apple features underrated drummer Joe Chambers, who appeared on four of Wayne Shorter's Blue Note albums during the '60s. Not a well-known Blue Note favorite like Tony Williams or Art Blakey, Chambers still manages to produce outstanding aesthetics of sound on his drums, frequently using the tom-toms in his solos to produce a tympanic effect. Chamber's playing is so controlled throughout Adam's Apple that he manages to keep a swinging tempo during his extremely polyrhythmic solos. ~Aaron Rogers

Adam's Apple

Wednesday, March 30, 2022

Wayne Shorter - Sony Jazz Portrait

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:58
Size: 122,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:45)  1. Endangered Species
(7:20)  2. Lusitanos
(5:14)  3. Ponte De Areia
(5:07)  4. Port Of Entry - Live
(5:48)  5. The Three Marias
(5:43)  6. Eurydice
(4:45)  7. When It Was Now
(5:02)  8. Beauty and the Beast
(6:10)  9. Mahogany Bird
(3:01) 10. Diana

Though some will argue about whether ten-time Grammy winner Wayne Shorter's primary impact on jazz has been as a composer or as a saxophonist, few will dispute his importance as one of jazz's leading figures of the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Though indebted to John Coltrane, with whom he practiced in the mid-'50s, Shorter eventually developed his own more succinct manner on the tenor horn, retaining the tough tone quality and intensity and, in later years, adding elements of funk. On soprano, Shorter is almost another player entirely, his lovely tone shining like a light beam, his sensibilities attuned more to lyrical thoughts, his choice of notes becoming more spare as his career unfolded. As a composer, he is best known for carefully conceived, complex, long-limbed, endlessly winding tunes, many of which have become jazz standards. Of his mid-'60s albums for Blue Note, most notably Juju and Night Dreamer, the composer and the saxophone stylist meet, showcasing provocative compositions and arrangements performed with both subtlety and force. During his two decades with the six-time Grammy-winning Weather Report from the late '60s through the mid-'80s, and on his solo jazz-funk recordings for Columbia and Verve in the late '80s and early '90s, Shorter showcased both poles of his writing persona the inimitable lyricist and the emboldened tonal seeker who utilized what he'd learned from jazz and applied it to open creative possibilities for funk, even as he sought inspiration from international musical traditions. As a horn player, Shorter's membership in V.S.O.P. revealed he'd continued to grow and experiment. With 2002's Footprints Live!, continued on 2003's Alegria, Shorter showcased a new acoustic quartet dedicated to performing his compositions. In the new century's second decade, Shorter re-signed to Blue Note. Shorter started playing the clarinet at 16 but switched to tenor sax before entering New York University in 1952. After graduating with a BME in 1956, he played with Horace Silver for a short time until he was drafted into the Army for two years. Once out of the service, he joined Maynard Ferguson's band, meeting Ferguson's pianist Joe Zawinul in the process. The following year (1959), Shorter joined Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers, where he remained until 1963, eventually becoming the band's music director. During the Blakey period, Shorter also made his debut on record as a leader, cutting several albums for Chicago's Vee-Jay label. After a few prior attempts to hire him away from Blakey, Miles Davis finally convinced Shorter to join his quintet in September 1964, thus completing the lineup of a group whose biggest impact would leapfrog a generation into the '80s.

Staying with Miles until 1970, Shorter became the band's most prolific composer at times, contributing tunes like "E.S.P.," "Pinocchio," "Nefertiti," "Sanctuary," "Footprints," "Fall," and the signature description of Miles, "Prince of Darkness." While playing through Miles' transition from loose post-bop acoustic jazz into electronic jazz-rock, Shorter also took up the soprano in late 1968, an instrument that turned out to be more suited to riding above the new electronic timbres than the tenor. As a prolific solo artist for Blue Note during this period, Shorter expanded his palette from hard bop almost into the atonal avant-garde, with fascinating excursions into jazz-rock territory toward the turn of the decade. In November 1970, Shorter teamed up with old cohort Joe Zawinul and Miroslav Vitous to form Weather Report, where after a fierce start, Shorter's playing grew mellower, pithier, more consciously melodic, and gradually more subservient to Zawinul's concepts. By now he was playing mostly on soprano, though the tenor would re-emerge toward the end of WR's run. Shorter's solo ambitions were mostly on hold during the WR days, resulting in but one atypical solo album, Native Dancer, an attractive side trip into Brazilian-American tropicalismo in tandem with Milton Nascimento. Shorter also revisited the past in the late '70s by touring with Freddie Hubbard and ex-Miles sidemen Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter, and Tony Williams as V.S.O.P. Shorter finally left Weather Report in 1985. Still committed to electronics and fusion, his recorded compositions from the period feature welcoming rhythms and harmonically complex arrangements. 

After three Columbia albums during 1986-1988 Atlantis, Phantom Navigator and Joy Ryder and a tour with Santana (represented by the 2005 album Montreux 1988), he lapsed into silence, emerging again in 1992 with Wallace Roney and the V.S.O.P. rhythm section in the "A Tribute to Miles" band. In 1994, now on Verve, Shorter released High Life, an engaging electric collaboration with keyboardist Rachel Z. In concert, he has fielded an erratic series of bands, which could be incoherent one year (1995) and lean and fit the next (1996). He guested on the Rolling Stones' Bridges to Babylon in 1997, and on Herbie Hancock's Gershwin's World in 1998. In 2001, he was back with Hancock for Future 2 Future and on Marcus Miller's M². Footprints Live! was released in 2002 under his own name with a new band that included pianist Danilo Pérez, bassist John Patitucci, and drummer Brian Blade, followed by Alegria in 2003 and Beyond the Sound Barrier in 2005. Given his long track record, Shorter's every record and appearance are still eagerly awaited by fans in the hope that he will thrill them again. Blue Note released Blue Note's Great Sessions: Wayne Shorter in 2006. Though absent from recording, Shorter continued to tour regularly with the same quartet after 2005. They re-emerged to record again in February of 2013 with a live outing from their 2011 tour. Without a Net, his first recording for Blue Note in 43 years, was released in February of 2013, as a precursor to his 80th birthday. Just after that release, the Wayne Shorter Quartet performed four of the leader's compositions with the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra at Carnegie Hall in New York City. Shorter immediately brought the quartet and orchestra into the studio to record those same four pieces: "Pegasus," "Prometheus Unbound," "Lotus," and "The Three Marias," as a unified suite. The title of this four-composition orchestral suite is also Shorter’s title character for the graphic novel: Emanon, or "no name" spelled backward. Each of the four movements has a corresponding theme in a graphic novel penned by Shorter and Monica Sly, illustrated by Randy DeBurke. It draws inspiration from the concept of a multiverse (where numerous universes co-exist simultaneously) and features a character named Emanon, an action-hero proxy of Shorter, a comic book aficionado since he was a boy. The story alludes to dystopian oppression and was clearly informed by the saxophonist's Buddhist studies. All told, the music  performed by the quartet with and without the chamber orchestra was recorded live in London as well as in the studio; compiled, it created a triple album accompanied by the 84-page graphic novel. Emanon was issued in September of 2018, just after Shorter's 85th birthday. ~ Richard S.Ginell https://www.allmusic.com/artist/wayne-shorter-mn0000250435/biography

Sony Jazz Portrait

Saturday, March 26, 2022

Wayne Shorter - Introducing

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1959
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:00
Size: 151,6 MB
Art: Front

( 5:35)  1. Blues A La Carte
( 4:40)  2. Harry's Last Stand
( 9:41)  3. Down In The Depths
( 6:49)  4. Pug Nose
( 6:00)  5. Black Diamond
( 4:27)  6. Mack The Knife
( 5:43)  7. Blues A La Carte (alternate take)
( 4:59)  8. Harry's Last Stand (alternate take)
(10:18)  9. Down In The Depths (alternate take)
( 7:43) 10. Black Diamond (alternate take)

Also known as Blues A La Carte, this Vee Jay disc has tenor-saxophonist Wayne Shorter's first session as a leader and it shows that, even at this early stage, Shorter was far along toward developing his own sound. Teamed up with trumpeter Lee Morgan, pianist Wynton Kelly, bassist Paul Chambers and drummer Jimmy Cobb, the six selections (five of which are Shorter originals) capture the young tenor shortly after he joined Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers. The music is essentially hard bop and, although none of these Shorter tunes caught on, the music is quite enjoyable. A special treat is the one standard of the date, a swinging version of "Mack The Knife." ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/introducing-wayne-shorter-mw0000036851 

Personnel: Wayne Shorter: Tenor Saxophone; Lee Morgan: Trumpet; Wynton Kelly: Piano; Paul Chambers: Bass; Jimmy Cobb: Drums.

Thursday, March 3, 2022

Herbie Hancock - Gershwin's World

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:39
Size: 155,2 MB
Art: Front

( 0:56)  1. Overture (Fascinating Rhythm)
( 4:48)  2. It Ain't Necessarily So
( 5:58)  3. The Man I Love
( 4:00)  4. Here Come De Honey Man
( 5:51)  5. St. Louis Blues
(11:05)  6. Lullaby
( 3:31)  7. Blueberry Rhyme
( 1:26)  8. It Ain't Necessarily So (Interlude)
( 4:45)  9. Cotton Tail
( 4:43) 10. Summertime
( 1:56) 11. My Man's Gone Now
( 4:44) 12. Prelude in C# Minor
( 9:13) 13. Concerto for Piano and Orchestra in G, 2nd Mvt
( 4:38) 14. Embraceable You

Gershwin's World is a tour de force for Herbie Hancock, transcending genre and label, and ranking among the finest recordings of his lengthy career. Released to coincide with the 100th anniversary of George Gershwin's birth, this disc features jazzman Hancock with a classy collection of special guests. The most surprising of Hancock's guest stars is Joni Mitchell, who delivers a gorgeously sensual vocal on "The Man I Love," then provides an airy, worldly take on "Summertime." On these two tracks, she shows she has come a long way from her folksinger beginnings to become a first-class jazz singer in her own right. Stevie Wonder's unmistakable harmonica complements Mitchell's singing on "Summertime" and shares lead instrument space with his own voice on the W.C. Handy classic "St. Louis Blues." Jazzman extraordinaire Wayne Shorter smokes a solo spot on Duke Ellington's "Cotton Tail" and carves out some space for his soprano saxophone in the midst of "Summertime." 

A number of the young lions of jazz are featured on various cuts, and Herbie's old pal Chick Corea joins the leader for a piano duet of James P. Johnson's "Blueberry Rhyme." Gershwin's wonderful, extended "Lullaby" finds Hancock teamed with the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, as does an attractive arrangement of a "Concerto for Piano and Orchestra" by Maurice Ravel, whose jazz influence can be heard on the piece. In addition, one of the most beautiful tracks on the album places star soprano Kathleen Battle's voice at the forefront of Gershwin's own "Prelude in C# Minor." Yet with all the fine performances by his guests, Gershwin's World remains Hancock's show, and he plays magnificently throughout. From beautiful to funky, percussive to melodic, improvisational to tightly arranged, Hancock and cohorts take a wondrous journey through the music and world of Gershwin. ~ Jim Newsom  http://www.allmusic.com/album/gershwins-world-mw0000038316

Personnel: Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea: Piano; Madou Dembelle: Djembe; Massamba Diop: Talking Drum; Cryo Baptista, Bireyma Guiye, Cheik Mbaye: Percussion; Eddie Henderson: Trumpet; Kenny Garrett: Alto Saxophone; James Carter: Tenor and Soprano Saxophones, Wayne Shorter: Tenor Saxophone; Bakithi Kumalo: Bass and Guitar; Ira Coleman: Bass; Terri-Lynn Carrington: Drums, Marlon Graves: Guitar, Robert Sadin: Percussion Programming; Stevie Wonder: Harmonica and Vocals; Charles Curtis: Cello, The Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, Kathleen Battle: Vocals, Joni Mitchell: Vocals.

Thursday, February 24, 2022

Miles Davis - The Lost Quintet

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:11
Size: 133,7 MB
Art: Front

( 7:18) 1. Directions
(10:27) 2. Bitches Brew
(25:26) 3. Sanctuary
(14:59) 4. Masqualero

Miles Davis (tpt), Wayne Shorter (ten, sop), Chick Corea (fender rhodes), Dave Holland (bs), Jack De Johnette (drs)

This is the long awaited release of Miles "Lost Quintet" recordings of 1969 on the occasion of its fiftieth anniversary. The recording date and venue was November 9th 1969 in Rotterdam just three months after the "Bitches Brew" original studio takes with the full band that were not released until March 1970. That incredible two disc recording followed the earlier game changer"In A Silent Way"in the same year and changed the career outcome of every single one of the players involved and as some would say "The whole face of jazz forever". The performance on this album was the last of a ten gig European tour which included two nights in London on the first and second of the month. The gathering of this core group from the earlier albums was the last ever time Miles would record with a small conventional group of instruments during the rest of his career.

The fifty eight minutes of live music here is just what you might expect from these five incredibly talented and creative musicians with the performance of Chick Corea perhaps the one that stands out slightly above the others. Things kick off with "Directions", a piece that Miles often opened up with during this period including the Copenhagen concert of the same year and released on the fortieth anniversary triple album edition of Bitches Brew and of course the subtitle of the original album. Here the rhythm instruments set the mode for the leaders fiery extended excursion into the far reaches of the trumpets capability. Wayne answers Miles, as he often did, within his self titled style of "egg scrambling" leaving no possible corner of the much hidden theme unexplored. All this rides above the increasingly violent but logical assault by Jack De Johnette on his heavy duty drum kit. Emerging from the hectic maelstrom of all that follows a re-visit to "Bitches Brew". At just over ten minutes long this seems a more considered version than the original studio recording which took up a full side on the vinyl edition. Miles opening solo, when did he ever not go first?, is almost from the fifties style, but soon drops into the more fragmented grove of the times over rolling drums along with probing inlays from Chick's keyboard plus a wonderful interlude from Wayne, again on tenor. Rampant applause ensues from the ecstatic Belgian masses.

Wayne Shorter, by common consent is a wonderful jazz composer as well as a master saxophonist. He has created some real masterpieces over the years, none greater than the wonderful "Sanctuary". This appears on a number of albums including B.B. plus a particularly fine take on Circle In The Round by the second great quintet with George Benson guesting. However none of them get such a thorough investigation as the twenty five minute plus version here. Miles is in his "Picasso like" sketching mode early on with Dave Holland in support, soon you realise that this is nothing at all like other versions of the piece as the leader upgrades both the tempo and tension over increasingly frantic drumming which continues under Wayne's soprano solo until things fall away with bass and drums having the final say. Perhaps this take is not the easiest listen of the piece, Miles always had the ability to shock and surprise and we must thank him for that. The closing cut of the album "Mastuero" is the standout track and seems to draw on many of the finest traits from earlier performances during 69. Miles un-muted solo is profound and purposeful over the rarely subdued rhythm team. Chick's contribution is hypnotic, everyone seems to be listening to each other here and although the overall style is entirely different there are times when the listener is reminded of Miles second great quintet with Coltrane. This disk is a heady reminder of the time back in the late sixties when Miles changed the shape of jazz once again, and is a valuable addition to any collection of the great man's music.~Jim Burlonghttps://www.jazzviews.net/miles-davis---the-lost-quintet.html

The Lost Quintet

Sunday, January 2, 2022

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers - The Big Beat

Styles: Jazz, Hard Bop
Year: 1960
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:13
Size: 115,2 MB
Art: Front

(9:39) 1. The Chess Players
(6:09) 2. Sakeena's Vision
(6:07) 3. Politely
(8:50) 4. Dat Dere
(6:29) 5. Lester Left Town
(6:41) 6. It's Only A Paper Moon
(6:15) 7. It's Only A Paper Moon (Alternate Take)

Perhaps the best known and most loved of Art Blakey's works, The Big Beat is a testament to the creative progress of one of the best jazz drummers of all time. Now over 40 years old, The Big Beat is as thunderous as ever. Here, Blakey combines his rhythm with tenor saxophonist Wayne Shorter's brilliant composing to make what could only be termed a "structurally raw" album. Each track rips through bebop as quickly as Blakey ripped through drum heads. "Dat Dere" and "Lester Left Town" stand out as part of the true canons for hot jazz. Two alternate versions of "It's Only a Paper Moon" round out the album, both brimming with the fluid integrity of the song and the drive only Blakey could provide. As one of the few drummers to step out and lead, not just play backup, Blakey created a true jazz treasure in The Big Beat.~ Christopher Fielderhttps://www.allmusic.com/album/the-big-beat-mw0000191549

Personnel: Art Blakey — drums; Lee Morgan — trumpet, flugelhorn; Wayne Shorter — tenor saxophone; Bobby Timmons — piano; Jymie Merritt — bass

The Big Beat

Wednesday, July 3, 2019

Weather Report - 8:30

Styles: Jazz Fusion
Year: 1979
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:35
Size: 166,5 MB
Art: Front

(9:47)  1. Black Market
(6:04)  2. Teen Town
(8:01)  3. A Remark You Made
(4:45)  4. Slang
(2:52)  5. In A Silent Way
(6:58)  6. Birdland
(3:33)  7. Thanks For The Memory
(9:28)  8. Badia/Boogie Woogie Waltz
(2:36)  9. 8:30
(8:34) 10. Brown Street
(3:16) 11. The Orphan
(5:35) 12. Sightseeing

Weather Report is generally regarded as the greatest jazz fusion band of all time, with the biggest jazz hit ("Birdland") from the best jazz fusion album (1977's Heavy Weather). But the group's studio mastery sometimes overshadows the fact that it was also a live juggernaut so don't overlook the outstanding live and studio album from 1979, 8:30. This was a rare quartet version of Weather Report, with co-leaders in keyboardist Joe Zawinul and saxophonist Wayne Shorter. The bassist was the inimitable Jaco Pastorius, the drummer a young Peter Erskine. Pastorius is otherworldly on early gems like "Black Market," the breakneck "Teen Town," and his solo showcase, "Slang" (in which he quotes Jimi Hendrix's "Third Stone from the Sun"). Shorter is most involved on the CD's slower pieces like "A Remark You Made," "In a Silent Way," and his own solo piece, "Thanks for the Memory"; Zawinul and Erskine shine on the swinging version of "Birdland" and roller coaster ride of the "Badia/Boogie Woogie Waltz" medley. 

Four studio tracks (composing what was side four of the original album version) close 8:30 with a flourish and some surprises. Pastorius duets on drums with Zawinul on the brief title track, then plays double drums with Erskine (as Erich Zawinul plays percussion) on the playful "Brown Street." Zawinul then throws a curve with "The Orphan," dueting with Shorter as ten members of the West Los Angeles Christian Academy Children's Choir chant harmonies. The saxophonist gets in the last word, though, with his burning composition "Sightseeing" on which he plays unison lines with Zawinul over Pastorius' rare walking bassline and Erskine's most aggressive drumming. A future jazz standard ending one of this band's standard-setting CDs. ~ Bill Meredith https://www.allmusic.com/album/830-mw0000198916

Personnel: Joe Zawinul – keyboards, bass synthesizer, vocoder, percussion; Wayne Shorter – tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone; Jaco Pastorius – fretless bass guitar, percussion, drums on "8:30" & "Brown Street"; Peter Erskine – drums; Erich Zawinul – percussion on "Brown Street"; The West Los Angeles Christian Academy Children's Choir – vocals on "The Orphan"

8:30

Monday, August 13, 2018

Miles Davis - Miles In The Sky

Styles: Trumpet And Cornet Jazz
Year: 1968
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:12
Size: 117,7 MB
Art: Front

(17:03)  1. Stuff
(12:45)  2. Paraphernalia
( 7:30)  3. Black Comedy
(13:52)  4. Country Son

With the 1968 album Miles in the Sky, Miles Davis explicitly pushed his second great quintet away from conventional jazz, pushing them toward the jazz-rock hybrid that would later become known as fusion. Here, the music is still in its formative stages, and it's a little more earth-bound than you might expect, especially following on the heels of the shape-shifting, elusive Nefertiti. On Miles in the Sky, much of the rhythms are straightforward, picking up on the direct 4/4 beats of rock, and these are illuminated by Herbie Hancock's electric piano one of the very first sounds on the record, as a matter of fact and the guest appearance of guitarist George Benson on "Paraphernalia." All of these additions are tangible and identifiable, and they do result in intriguing music, but the form of the music itself is surprisingly direct, playing as extended grooves. This meanders considerable more than Nefertiti, even if it is significantly less elliptical in its form, because it's primarily four long jams. Intriguing, successful jams in many respects, but even with the notable additions of electric instruments, and with the deliberately noisy "Country Son," this is less visionary than its predecessor and feels like a transitional album and, like many transitional albums, it's intriguing and frustrating in equal measures. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine https://www.allmusic.com/album/miles-in-the-sky-mw0000652711

Personnel:  Miles Davis – trumpet, cornet on "Stuff" and "Country Son";  Wayne Shorter – tenor saxophone;  Herbie Hancock – piano, electric piano on "Stuff";  Ron Carter – bass, electric bass on "Stuff";  Tony Williams – drums;  George Benson – electric guitar on "Paraphernalia"

Miles In The Sky

Tuesday, June 26, 2018

Wayne Shorter - Phantom Navigator

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1987
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:44
Size: 89,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:13)  1. Condition Red
(6:13)  2. Mahogany Bird
(7:58)  3. Remote Control
(6:30)  4. Yamanja
(6:10)  5. Forbidden, Plan-iT!
(6:38)  6. Flagships

Still drifting after leaving Weather Report, Shorter meanders about in a sea of electronically dominated backings, following the tide in search of a direction. Nothing wrong with electronics per se; it's just that Wayne's compositions in that idiom are weak, the endlessly undulating melodic lines go nowhere and have nothing fresh to say. Stu Goldberg, Mitch Forman, Jeff Bova and Jim Beard unimaginatively bathe the record in synthesizers, and the drum programming by a host of co-conspirators makes for a rather sterile rhythm environment. On a sheer technical level, Wayne's soprano and tenor work is alright, yet on "Yamanja" he does a depressingly mechanical sounding turn on a lyricon. Pass this right by.~ Richard S.Ginell https://www.allmusic.com/album/phantom-navigator-mw0000649731

Personnel:  Wayne Shorter – tenor, and soprano saxophones, lyricon, vocals;  Chick Corea – piano;  Jeff Bova – synthesizer;  Jim Beard – synthesizer;  Mitchel Forman – synthesizer;  Stu Goldberg – synthesizer, electric piano;  John Patitucci – bass;  Alphonso Johnson – bass;  Gary Willis – electric bass;   Tom Brechtlein – drums;  Jimmy Bralower – drums, percussion programming;  Bill Summers – percussion, drum programming;  Scott Roberts – percussion, drum programming;  Ana Maria Shorter – vocals;  Gregor Goldberg – vocals.

Phantom Navigator

Tuesday, June 5, 2018

Wayne Shorter Quartet - Beyond the Sound Barrier

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:14
Size: 141,0 MB
Art: Front

(11:50)  1. Smilin' Through (Arthur Penn)
( 6:27)  2. As Far as the Eye Can See
( 4:35)  3. On Wings of Song (Felix Mendelssohn)
( 1:59)  4. Tinker Bell (Wayne Shorter Quartet)
(11:19)  5. Joy Ryder
(12:33)  6. Over Shadow Hill Way
( 6:03)  7. Adventures Aboard the Golden Mean
( 6:24)  8. Beyond the Sound Barrier

When saxophonist Wayne Shorter put together his first all-acoustic group since the '60s for a 2001 tour and live recording, Footprints Live!, it was an important confirmation that even one of the most significant artists of the past six decades could (and, perhaps, should) have something new to say. That first recording featuring pianist Danilo Perez, bassist John Patitucci, and drummer Brian Blade was as much about the thrill of discovery and new ways to look at famous Shorter compositions, including "Footprints" and "JuJu," as it was about the kind of chemistry that rarely occurs for an artist more than once in a lifetime. In the case of Shorter, who shared an equally simpatico relationship with pianist Herbie Hancock, bassist Ron Carter, and drummer Tony Williams as part of Miles Davis' mid-'60s quintet, it's proof that lightning can indeed strike twice. It's too soon to tell if Shorter's quartet will have the kind of lasting impact that Miles' quintet did, but on the strength of Beyond the Sound Barrier, there's certainly evidence that it's one of the most important working groups on the scene today. Like Footprints Live!, the new album was recorded in concert, but this time at shows dating as far back as '02 and as recently as '04. And while some groups who tour as much as this unit can run the risk of becoming complacent, finding their way into patterned behaviour and predictable responses, it's clear from the first notes of Arthur Penn's movie theme "Smilin' Through" that, if anything, this quartet is reaching even further, revelling in a shared telepathy that makes every performance a risk and a reward. Like the magic of planets aligning but far less predictably the members of Shorter's quartet sometimes appear to be circling in the same direction, but in different orbits, until the precise moment where everything converges into remarkable unity. There's an even greater sense of exploration going on this time around, but also a more vivid sense of conjoined interplay you can feel Perez, Patitucci, and Blade hovering expectantly around Shorter's theme on "Smilin' Through" until, more than six minutes in, Blade suddenly breaks into a powerful groove and everyone comes together, only to fluidly and continually dissolve and reconvene until the tune's end. In addition to Penn's tune, the quartet tackles Mendelssohn's "On the Wings of a Song," as well as five Shorter compositions including two tracks from his '88 synth-laden release Joy Ryder, proving that the value of a song is in its essence, not always its treatment. That Shorter should find a consistent working group in his seventies, able to imbue his often cerebral compositions with a visceral energy and completely unencumbered aesthetic, is proof that the humility to accept there are always new things to learn is paramount to the furtherance of any art. Beyond the Sound Barrier is a major step forward for Shorter, an artist who has always placed potential ahead of pandering and bold ideation ahead of conventional thought. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/beyond-the-sound-barrier-wayne-shorter-verve-music-group-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Wayne Shorter: tenor and soprano saxophones; Danilo Perez: piano; John Patitucci: bass; Brian Blade; drums.

Beyond the Sound Barrier

Saturday, January 27, 2018

Wayne Shorter - The Soothsayer

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1965
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:07
Size: 115,0 MB
Art: Front

(7:16)  1. Lost
(4:51)  2. Angola
(6:42)  3. Angola (alternate take)
(8:23)  4. The Big Push
(9:40)  5. The Soothsayer
(5:36)  6. Lady Day
(7:37)  7. Valse Triste

A good month for tenor saxophone connoisseurs, April 2008, with a second Rudy Van Gelder re-master released alongside Ike Quebec's signature Blue & Sentimental (Blue Note, 2008). The Soothsayer may be comparably less of a benchmark in Wayne Shorter's discography, and remains to some extent overshadowed by its close contemporary Speak No Evil (Blue Note, 1964), but it's a solid and enduring album despite 15 years between the recording session and the original LP release. Things were happening big time for Shorter in early 1965, when The Soothsayer was recorded. After five years with drummer and band leader Art Blakey as musician, composer and, finally, musical director, the saxophonist had recently joined trumpeter Miles Davis' second great quintet. With Davis, Shorter would record six studio albums over the next three years the first, E.S.P. (Columbia, 1965) was recorded two months before The Soothsayer plus a further four under his own name. There was an embarrassment of Shorter riches around, and The Soothsayer was initially shelved to make way for the release of the more structurally adventurous The All Seeing Eye (Blue Note, 1965). When Shorter left Davis and joined Weather Report, The Soothsayer, temporarily, was overtaken by events. It was finally released in 1980. The album finds Shorter in the company of two Davis quintet colleagues bassist Ron Carter and drummer Tony Williams together with pianist McCoy Tyner, then a member of saxophonist John Coltrane's classic quartet, trumpeter Freddie Hubbard and the relatively unsung alto saxophonist James Spaulding. Hubbard and Carter had been retained from Speak No Evil; Tyner had been featured on the earlier Shorter albums Night Dreamer (Blue Note, 1964) and Ju Ju (Blue Note, 1964). Spaulding and Williams were new recruits. Shorter's virile playing aside, the album is worthwhile for the presence of drum prodigy Williams (Shorter's regular drummers of the time were Elvin Jones and Joe Chambers) who turns in an inventive solo on "Angola" and for the strength of Shorter's writing. The triple meter, medium groove "Lost," the opener, is quintessential Shorter of the period. Eight years before the release of The Soothsayer it was featured on Weather Report's Live In Tokyo (Columbia, 1972). "Angola," which follows, sounds like it could have been written earlier, for Blakey's band. The haunting "Lady Day" is a ballad tribute to singer Billie Holiday. Of interest too is Shorter's re-arrangement of Finnish composer Jean Sibelius' pretty "Valse Triste" on Speak No Evil, Shorter had credited Sibelius as a key inspiration for that album's "Dance Cadaverous." The word "deconstruction" may not have been common jazz parlance in 1965, but deconstruct is exactly what Shorter does here, sensitively and engagingly. ~ Chris May https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-soothsayer-wayne-shorter-blue-note-records-review-by-chris-may.php

Personnel: Wayne Shorter: tenor saxophone; James Spaulding: alto saxophone; Freddie Hubbard: trumpet; McCoy Tyner: piano; Ron Carter: bass; Tony Williams: drums.

The Soothsayer

Thursday, January 18, 2018

Blue Note All Stars - Our Point Of View

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 90:28
Size: 207.1 MB
Styles: Post bop, Jazz-funk, Electric jazz
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[ 1:31] 1. Bruce’s Vibe
[ 8:39] 2. Cycling Through Reality
[ 9:01] 3. Meanings
[ 4:22] 4. Henya
[17:41] 5. Witch Hunt
[ 5:39] 6. Second Light
[ 9:23] 7. Masquelero
[13:40] 8. Bayyinah
[ 7:05] 9. Message Of Hope
[10:57] 10. Freedom Dance
[ 2:23] 11. Bruce, The Last Dinosaur

The creative young voices of Jazz have been the lifeblood of Blue Note Records throughout its storied history, from Thelonious Monk and Herbie Hancock to Freddie Hubbard and Joe Henderson, all of whom made their debut albums for the legendary label. The Blue Note All-Stars continue that legacy with the release of Our Point of View, the debut recording from a supergroup of young visionaries that formed in 2014 for a series of live performances in honor of Blue Note’s 75th anniversary. Featuring trumpeter Ambrose Akinmusire, keyboardist Robert Glasper, bassist Derrick Hodge, guitarist Lionel Loueke, drummer Kendrick Scott, and tenor saxophonist Marcus Strickland, the album also boasts a special guest appearance by Blue Note legends Wayne Shorter and Herbie Hancock, and is dedicated to the memory of beloved longtime Blue Note President Bruce Lundvall, who passed away in 2015.

The song list includes originals by each of the band members, including two elegies for Lundvall which open and close the album, as well as two renderings of Shorter compositions: an expansive version of “Witch Hunt,” from Shorter’s 1965 Blue Note classic Speak No Evil, and a stunning performance of “Masquelero” on which the sextet is augmented by Shorter and Hancock.

“This is a band of open-minded, versatile musicians who are getting together for the love of the music. That can only equal great things,” says Glasper who co-produced the album with current Blue Note President Don Was. “The music itself should reflect the time period you’re in. We all love the history of the music. We’re infatuated with the history of jazz, but none of us are held back by the history of jazz. I feel like we’re all making our own history now.”

“It’s pushing the threshold in trying to do the next thing and not looking back,” Was adds. “That to me epitomizes what Blue Note is all about.”

Our Point Of View mc
Our Point Of View zippy

Monday, January 8, 2018

Wayne Shorter - Etcetera

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:15
Size: 100,0 MB
Art: Front

( 6:21)  1. Etcetera
( 6:46)  2. Penelope
( 7:24)  3. Toy Tune
(11:08)  4. Barracudas (General Assembly)
(11:35)  5. Indian Song

In Harold and the Purple Crayon,” a children’s book from 1955, the intrepid hero, a sturdy toddler, decides to go for a walk in the moonlight. There is no moon, and so, with his purple crayon, Harold draws one, and then decides to draw a straight path to walk upon. When this leads him nowhere, he follows his crayon under the moon’s watchful eye through a series of adventures, conjuring a field, a forest, an apple tree, a nasty dragon, an ocean, a sailboat, a beach, a picnic lunch of pie, a moose and a porcupine to eat it, a mountain to climb, a balloon to ferry him down it, a house, a front yard, a city full of windows, and a policeman to point the way home. Then, finally, he draws his bedroom window around the moon, draws his bed, draws himself under the covers, drops the pen and goes to sleep. This synesthetic process is not unlike what Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, Cecil McBee, and Joe Chambers did at Rudy Van Gelder’s studio on June 14, 1965, when they made Etcetera, Shorter’s fifth recording for Blue Note. Like each of Shorter’s other Blue Note sessions from that era, it was a one-shot affair.  “There was nothing developmental as a band,” he told his biographer Michelle Mercer. “A recording was just one movie, and then the next was another movie, in a kind of dream away from Miles.”

The notion of an imaginary screenplay in notes and tones suits the ambiance of this exceptional date. Each piece evokes a fantasy world, tells a story with a beginning, a middle and an end upon which the protagonists improvise, creating lines that assume a life of their own and following them wherever they choose. As Hancock put it thirty-seven years later, “The world is Wayne’s stage; he can grab a metaphor from almost anything in life.” Perhaps that cinematic, episodic quality is one reason why Etcetera, which would not be released until fifteen years after it was recorded, resonates so deeply with numerous Boomer jazzfolk. Another is the humanity of Shorter’s instrumental voice, efflorescent in the quartet setting, emotional, hardcore, expressing the same passion, vulnerability and free spirit that suffuses his pieces.

Consider the kaleidoscopic emotional range conveyed on the noirish title track, on which the leader and Hancock, already close friends after nine months together with Miles, offer soliloquies conveying ecstasy, torment, and angst, navigating the tricky harmonic terrain with melodies that meander through, around, and in synch with Joe Chambers’ roiling, orchestrative, funky beats. On the meditative “Penelope,” dedicated perhaps to the wife of Odysseus or to a real, live woman (Shorter doesn’t say), the composer channels his inner Strayhorn, while on “Toy Tune,” a mid-tempo swinger that doesn’t settle on a key center, Shorter offers a master class on building tension over multiple choruses. On Gil Evans’ “Barracudas,” he uncorks a Coltrane-inflected declamation (Hancock’s response is equally intense) whose thematic coherence is undoubtedly informed by his year-earlier solo flight on Evans’ swirling arrangement of that piece on The Individualism of Gil Evans.  Of “Indian Song,” an anthemic line propelled by Cecil McBee’s insistent bass vamp and Joe Chambers’ impeccable, surging, polyrhythmic 5/4 beat, Shorter further refracts Coltrane’s syntax and spirit into his own argot on a lengthy first section, before Hancock, himself a force of nature, completely changes the feel. Perhaps another reason why Etcetera has become such a notable signpost is that, as much as any other Shorter album, it emblemizes an aspiration that Shorter stated in 2003, while traveling in Europe with his present quartet in the aftermath of the U.S. invasion of Iraq. “Music is a part of the struggle,” he said. “They talk about the unknown factor they don't know what's going to happen. Why don't we do that every night on stage?  There's no school, no university for the unknown. Music is mysterious. Everything is. The unexpected is what's happening.”

Personnel:  Wayne Shorter (Tenor saxophone); Herbie Hancock (Piano); Cecil McBee (Bass); Joe Chambers (Drums).

Etcetera