Jaco Pastorius - Jaco Pastorius (1976) {1991, Reissue} CD-Rip
Artist: Jaco Pastorius
Title: Jaco Pastorius
Year Of Release: 1976 / 1991
Label: CBS Inc. / Epic CDEPC 81453
Genre: Fusion, Post-Bop
Quality: EAC Rip -> FLAC (Tracks+Cue+m3u, Log)
Total Time: 00:41:50
Total Size: 232 Mb (Full Scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Pastorius was best known as the flamboyant bassist in Weather Report (1976-81), the man who would throw talcum powder on the stage so he could slide-shuffle on one foot while playing a driving samba riff. But as this extraordinary 1976 debut shows, he was a musical star long before international celebrity called. Though often dismissed as a fusion player, he was championing bebop ("Donna Lee") just as fusion was in its first flush of juvenile excess. He was no purist though, and one of the joys of this album is the range of music he covers, from jazz to soul to samba to afro-beat, giving it all his unmistakable signature. Virtuosity, a dirty word in some circles, was never abused in Jaco's hands. The brilliant playing on such as "Kuru" and "Portrait Of Tracy" is all in the service of musicality, and became a benchmark for a generation of bass players. ~ Mark GilbertTitle: Jaco Pastorius
Year Of Release: 1976 / 1991
Label: CBS Inc. / Epic CDEPC 81453
Genre: Fusion, Post-Bop
Quality: EAC Rip -> FLAC (Tracks+Cue+m3u, Log)
Total Time: 00:41:50
Total Size: 232 Mb (Full Scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
It's impossible to hear Jaco Pastorious' debut album today as it sounded when it was first released in 1976. The opening track -- his transcription for fretless electric bass of the bebop standard "Donna Lee" -- was a manifesto of virtuosity; the next track, the funk-soul celebration "Come On, Come Over" was a poke in the eye to jazz snobs and a love letter to the R&B greats of the previous decade (two of whom, Sam & Dave, sing on that track); "Continuum" was a spacey, chorus-drenched look forward to the years he was about to spend playing with Weather Report. The program continues like that for three-quarters of an hour, each track heading off in a different direction -- each one a masterpiece that would have been a proud achievement for any musician. What made Jaco so exceptional was that he was responsible for all of them, and this was his debut album. Beyond his phenomenal bass technique and his surprisingly mature compositional chops (he was 24 when this album was released), there was the breathtaking audacity of his arrangements: "Okonkole Y Trompa" is scored for electric bass, French horn, and percussion, and "Speak Like a Child," which Pastorious composed in collaboration with pianist Herbie Hancock, features a string arrangement by Pastorious that merits serious attention in its own right. For a man with this sort of kaleidoscopic creativity to remain sane was perhaps too much to ask; his gradual descent into madness and eventual tragic death are now a familiar story, one which makes the bright promise of this glorious debut album all the more bittersweet. (This remastered reissue adds two tracks to the original program: alternate takes of "(Used to Be a) Cha Cha" and "6/4 Jam").
~ Rick Anderson, All Music
Track List:
01. Donna Lee [2:28]
02. Come On, Come Over [3:53]
03. Continuum [4:33]
04. Kuru - Speak Like A Child [7:40]
05. Portrait of Tracy [2:22]
06. Opus Pocus [5:26]
07. Okonkole Y Trompa [4:23]
08. (Used To Be A) Cha-Cha [8:54]
09. Forgotten Love [2:14]
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