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Original Release: Columbia PC 34099 Producer/Orchestrator: Zawinul
Asked about the changes in a March 1976 article, Zawinul said, "We're always happy with the group, because if we're not happy, we change it. There are a lot of musicians out there in the world. All the people who have played with us are great mother-fucking musicians. They have fantastic skills. But sometimes they're going in one direction and we're going in another one, so we have to make a change. Changing musicians gives us fresh blood, new ideas." [PRM76] In that article, Shorter and Zawinul said it didn't really matter who played what--it was the end result that counted. "You can enjoy a symphony orchestra without knowing everybody's name," Shorter said. "You don't have to know who the concertmaster is to know that the string section is incredible." Zawinul added, "I've been playing our new album [Black Market] for some other musicians, and even some of them can't always tell who's playing what, or what instruments are being used at a given time. I like that. I like that a lot. Why should people know? We're not a bunch of individual musicians. We're a group." [PRM76] The personnel for Black Market took shape over the course of 1975, following the release of Weather Report's previous album, Tale Spinnin'. Early in the year the problematic drum chair was filled by Thompson, who was recommended by Johnson. "Alphonso was in the band," Thompson recalled, "and we had already played together in a couple of situations, and he urged me to come down and jam, so I guess it was kind of informal audition, just free playing. And it was one of those bands that just clicked. I was not at all nervous. I knew they'd had several drummers in the year before. I had a large and pretty wide experience. I'd been interested in playing lots of different kinds of music. I'd been in experimental kinds of bands, and in technically demanding kinds of bands--[Frank] Zappa's was the most technically demanding ... I'd had a lot of chance to play jazz; by the time I was 15, I was playing in really good jazz groups. I played funk, too, probably an equal amount, having grown up in the '60s, with early James Brown and Motown going on." [IASW, p. 176] Initially joining Johnson and Thompson was 25-year old percussionist Alyrio Lima, a holdover from the Tale Spinnin' sessions. In October he was replaced by Alejandro ("Alex") Acuña. Born in Lima, Peru, Acuña had been living in Las Vegas since 1973, playing with Elvis Pressley, Ann Margaret, and Ike and Tina Turner, among others. [TP77] Zawinul heard about him from Don Alias, Miroslav Vitous and Dave Leibman, and Zawinul him without an audition. "Joe came to Las Vegas," Acuña recalled, "and he saw me, and he said, 'Man, just by looking at you I can see you are a great player! Can you come over? We're gonna do a tour in Europe, and everything you need, instruments, we'll take it, and you come with the band.' And I said, 'Great, Fantastic!' That's how everything started. He never saw me play; he just saw me walking. Of course, he also had the recommendation of three great musicians." [IASW, p. 177] In a 2001 interview, Acuña described his first rehearsal with the band. "When I arrived at the studio they were playing great stuff, Joe, Chester Thompson, Alphonso Johnson. Wayne was writing music on a little table. For about 15 minutes I was just listening to how good they played, and later I went up and join them and played for another 15 minutes. It was great and it was real, too. After we finished playing, everybody came to say 'hi' and introduced themselves, and Wayne came to me and said, 'Alejandro, if I were a percussionist I would play the way you play.' I immediately began to understand the body language and the different way of communications that these giant musicians were displaying toward me--no ego but only truth and honesty about everything they were about." [IFS01a] With Thompson and Acuña in the fold, things fell into place. "To me, the best band during my time was with Chester Thompson and Alex Acuña," Johnson recalled. "That band could play anywhere, any time, and just raise the roof." [IASW, p. 178] Zawinul agreed. "Chester had just left Frank Zappa," Zawinul recalled. "He was [a] helluva drummer for a certain kind of music and that suited us at that time and together with Al [Johnson]--Chester was from Baltimore and Al was from Philadelphia--they had a tight little thing going. Then we added Alex Acuña on percussion, who loosened that stuff up--Alex was also a great jazz drummer. I remember we were playing at the Bottom Line in New York and Miles Davis was sitting in the front row. When we finished Miles led a standing ovation, and that was really nice. Afterwards, all he was talking about was the band, it was really smokin'." [JR, p. 173] Zawinul and Shorter reminisced about the Johnson-Thompson band in 1978:
Midway through the recording of Black Market the band took a break for the end of year holidays, and Alphonso Johnson announced that he would be leaving. "I knew that my time with Weather Report was coming to an end after we found Chester Thompson on drums," Johnson recalled to Marco Piretti in 2000. "There was so much time and energy spent in my first year on finding a drummer that by the time Chester joined the band I was burned out. So when I heard that George Duke and Billy Cobham were putting together a new group I decided to check it out. The potential of playing with a fusion group that featured vocals intrigued me." [IFS01c] "Al Johnson had been on Mysterious Traveller, Tale Spinnin', and part of Black Market when he told us he wanted to quit," Zawinul recalled in 1984. "He wanted to form a band with George Duke where he was the co-leader, rather than just a sideman. We felt that everybody should do what they wanted to do, and by that time I had already met Jaco [Pastorius]. Jaco had sent me a tape of his band, and I was really impressed with the way he played; but I wasn't sure if he could really play funk. [Drummer] Tony Williams had played with him, and assured us that Jaco could play anything. Jaco was a great Cannonball Adderley fan, and I had written a song called 'Cannonball,' so I said to myself, 'it might be a good idea, just for the fun of it, to have Jaco play on that tune and audition him at the same time.' We flew him in, he played on the tune, he wrote a song for Black Market, and the rest is history!" [KB84] Jaco's initial introduction to Joe Zawinul in Miami has been oft-told and is now part of the Jaco lore. It took place in Miami in either late 1974 or early 1975. Jaco told his version to BBC radio journalist Clive Williamson in a 1978 interview:
Zawinul told his version to an interviewer for a 2000 German television documentary (as translated to English by Thomas Kober):
Adding more richness to the encounter, Pat Metheny told Zawinul biographer Brian Glasser:
In 1977 Pastorius told a journalist that he hadn't even heard Weather Report's music prior to joining the band.
Meanwhile, Chester Thompson's return from the holidays was awkward, as he told David Negrin for his World Of Genesis web site:
Indeed, Black Market would be Thompson's Weather Report swan song. His next stop would be the band Genesis, for whom he cut several records and toured with for several years. Further details of Thompson's departure from Weather Report are on Heavy Weather page.
SIDE ONE The personnel listings below are based on the original LP liner notes, which indicate on which tracks Johnson, Pastorius, Walden and Alias play. These notes do not indicate the absence of Thompson or Acuña on any tracks, so it is assumed they participated in them all. 1. BLACK MARKET (ZAWINUL) Personnel: Zawinul, Shorter, Johnson, Thompson, Acuña, Walden, Alias In his liner notes for Live & Unreleased, Alan Leeds wrote: "Asked what single song best represented all that Weather Report meant to him, Zawinul quickly answered 'Black Market.'" [LAU02] Zawinul has spoken often of the inverted keyboard that he played on "Black Market." It was made possible by a feature on the ARP 2600 that allowed inverting the keyboard voltage so that the upper portion of the keyboard played the lower sounds and vice versa. Len Lyons, in a 1977 Keyboard magazine interview, asked Zawinul why he experimented with it:
Zawinul explained to Conrad Silvert that "when you change keys and play it with the left hand, it's very difficult. But it changes the rhythmic and melodic feeling of the music, like a mirror image. it's almost like going into the fourth dimension, like being on both sides of that wall simultaneously." [DB78b] In terms of the character of the sound Zawinul achieved on "Black Market," Lyons asked him if there were sounds he could only get with a particular instrument. "Yes," Zawinul replied. "The sound on 'Black Market' is one I can only get on the ARP, not because of the reversed voltages, but because of a certain twang that only the ARP has. If you check out the melody of 'Black Market,' you'll hear something unique, something you can't really recognize." Zawinul went on to say, "I try to stay away from electronic sounds and go for natural sounds instead. They don't have to be known natural sounds. On 'Black Market,' for example, the sound isn't one that's known--you wouldn't recognize it as anything else--but it is acoustic. It sounds like some kind of native instrument." [KB77b] In 1984 he explained, "On 'Black Market' the melody I played was totally different, and it was hip. The filter moves through it another way and you get those different shadows and shades. It takes a lot of thinking." [DB84] In other interviews Zawinul has said the sound of "Black Market" goes back to his accordion-playing childhood. "When I came up [as a child] and played the accordion, I immediately started playing with the instrument. I took the soundboard off and glued felt into it. I got the sound of 'Black Market.' I did the same thing on the bass side, where the buttons are and then I reversed the whole thing, to get the melodies with the bass notes. Imagination had limits in the older days. Now it doesn't." [DB88] And, "With the accordion you have these different registers that change the sound continuously. I took pieces of felt and covered the sound holes and glued it in different ways to give it a nasal sound. It's like filtering, and it's the same as the first ARP sounds I had, you know, these little woodwind sounds." [DB84] Regarding the voices heard at the beginning of "Black Market," Alex Acuña explained their origin to Zawinul biographer Brian Glasser. "The song 'Black Market,' at the start there's the sound of many people talking, like a market. Joe copied that from a tape of mine. I had that tape playing in my room when we were in adjoining rooms on tour, and he came in and said, 'Hey, Alex, let me hear that!' Then he borrowed the tape, and it's now 'Black Market.' That's a tape that I made in my house with my family, live. I was listening to music and I was recording music, and my family and children were in the background--that's there voices. He never told me that, but I knew it because I can recognize it." [IASW, p. 179] Both Chester Thompson and Narada Michael Walden performed on "Black Market." "On the first song on the album there are two drummers from two different days," Thompson told Glasser. "If you listen carefully, the sound completely changes in the middle, where the music changes. The feel goes from straight-eight to a sort of swing feel. Most people don't catch it at first, though once you hear it it's so obvious it's quite funny." Walden told Glasser: "It starts out with Chester, then there's a hard edit onto me when the song changes and switches gears all of a sudden. I play on from there through the whole jam, just smokin'. Wayne's solo was cut live. I played on the whole song, but I think he wanted to keep the opening with Chester because it was so relaxed. Then he wanted a big shot of fire when he cut me in. We maybe played it two or three times. It wasn't too many times, because the fire was so hot. It was hot, man! I was surprised when it came out they didn't use the whole version I cut, but I think it's brilliant the way he did it. I think it's right." [IASW, p. 180] Years later Shorter described Walden this way: "Narada's groove was very natural. He had a sunny presence. Sun emanated from his rhythmic self. His rhythmic accompaniment was uplifting, never going down into the floor. It just flowed out of him, and he would take the heavy edge off anything that had a low sound. Low sounds can slow things down. Michael's drum beat would add transparency." [MD03] 2. CANNON BALL (ZAWINUL) Personnel: Zawinul, Shorter, Pastorius, Thompson, Acuña, Walden A tribute to Zawinul's former boss, Julian "Cannonball" Adderley, who died on August 8, 1975. Zawinul and Shorter arranged for Jaco to come to Los Angeles specifically for this recording. It was a kind of audition. In Bill Milkowski's Jaco biography, Zawinul explained, "Cannonball was from Florida too, and I wanted that Florida sound on this particular track. Plus, I remembered how much Jaco loved Cannonball's music, so I figured he might be the right guy to use. We brought him in, and that was more or less his audition. Wayne and I talked it over, and we both agreed that this kid could play." [Jaco] Narada Michael Walden recalled the recording of "Cannon Ball" to Brian Glasser: "Jaco was trying to impress Joe in the rehearsal of the song. He learned the song so quickly, and he was adding all these things, and then Joe stopped right in the middle and said, 'Don't play all that shit on my song.' And I saw the look on Jaco's face--like, whoah, man!--because nobody ever talks to Jaco like that. But Joe was fearless. Jaco had no more than plugged in, learned the song, and half an hour later Joe was in his ass! And I don't mean easy. I mean, 'Don't you play that fuckin' shit on my song!' Jaco was auditioning for the guy; it really shocked him. It just changed the whole mood of the song. It just made Jaco... whatever he did play, he really meant it, as opposed to playing because he could. That's why the song is so tender, because Joe said, 'You gotta understand, this song is for Cannonball. I'm either going to call it "Cannon Ball" or "Empty Chair"...'" [IASW, p. 187-188] Of course, Jaco's bass sound is one of the signature characteristics of "Cannon Ball." Clive Williamson asked Jaco whether he got that "incredible singing bass sound" on an ordinary guitar, or through the use of special effects. "I don't use anything special," Jaco replied. "I've actually got less on it! I have a fretless bass, so it's virtually like I'm playing a wood bass. In other words, the strings go into the wood on the neck and then--being that it's a bass guitar--it gets that bright, direct sound. So I'm the first guy to be using a fretless, is actually what it boils down to, and then more, because I'm the first to really get down and play it, because other guys cannot play it in tune, y'know? I've been playing the bass guitar for almost 12 years, and I've been playing fretless for about nine, so I've got quite a bit of mileage in my hands already. I play in tune like a cello player, and use legitimate vibrato. There are no tricks... it's just all in the hands! I just have a standard 1962--I think it is--Fender Jazz bass, that I took the frets out of." [BBC78] Williamson asked Jaco what amplifier he used. "In the studio I don't use an amp, I just go direct, right into the desk. It's virtually acoustic is what I'm doing, you see? And then on stage I use an old Acoustic 360--two of those amps, actually--and you get into all sorts of fun! It's a whole different thing on stage... (laughs) Are you comin' to the show tonight? (smiles) You should really come along, because it's some other stuff completely (laughs). This is some real fun!" [BBC78] Neil Tesser's 1977 Down Beat article described Jaco's technique on fretless this way:
3. GIBRALTER (ZAWINUL) Personnel: Zawinul, Shorter, Johnson, Thompson, Acuña "This is my improvisation from beginning to end," Zawinul told Milkowski in 2002. "It was one of those things I put together and then I wrote it out for the band and we played itas simple as that." [JTW02] In In A Silent Way, Thompson recalls being "thrown" by the "detail of the charts." "Everything was charted for stuff like 'Gibralter,' which made it quite difficult to read, because it wasn't the typical kind of thing." On the other hand, the drum parts weren't notated, but were communicated verbally. [IASW, p. 180] According to Stuart Nicholson's book Jazz-Rock: A History, "Gibralter" was originally slated to open the album. [JR] SIDE TWO 4. ELEGANT PEOPLE (SHORTER) Personnel: Zawinul, Shorter, Johnson, Thompson, Acuña In the liner notes for Live & Unreleased, Shorter explained the meaning of "Elegant People": "That state of living where one can say, with no regrets, 'I reached the point of pride and elegance of being a human being.' It's so elegant to be a human being--elegant meaning good fortune. We are very fortunate to be born as human beings. So if we realize that fortune, why not strive to be the most elegant in everything we do?" [LAU02] Alex Acuña told Glasser, "You recall the song 'Elegant People?' [Wayne] wrote that because of the way I play. He didn't tell me that, but I knew it, because he is like a tailor--he makes the suit to fit the person. So it was because I was in the band. Then, okay, now we can really feel this groove! You can see in that tune the way the percussion is applied." [IASW, p. 177-178] Chester Thompson told Glasser, "'Elegant People' was absolutely written out, but once you learned it, that was it--you'd never see a chart again. You basically learned the songs and then did them. They were very well aware of not over-rehearsing. I don't think anything more than a couple of takes--maybe three or four on something. Spontaneity was crucial. Afterwards, Joe would certainly get in there and do all sorts of things, putting in extra synths or editing or whatever." [IASW, p. 180] 5. THREE CLOWNS (SHORTER) Personnel: Zawinul, Shorter, Johnson, Thompson, Acuña
"Three Clowns" and the subsequent track "Barbary Coast" were the subject of a Down Beat blindfold test in which bassist Steve Swallow was asked to comment about the tunes without being told what was being played. Of "Three Clowns" he said:
6. BARBARY COAST (PASTORIUS) Personnel: Zawinul, Shorter, Pastorius, Thompson, Acuña, Alias Jaco's first composition recorded by Weather Report. "At first, I didn't like that tune so much," Zawinul told Pastorius biographer Milkowski. "It sounded too much like a Horace Silver line to me. But then we worked a little bit with it and got a nice groove happening. And, of course, that became a kind of signature piece for Jaco." Milkowski explained the significance of the opening sound of a train roaring along the tracks: "This sound is much more than atmospheric filler; it resonates with deep meaning for anyone who grew up in Fort Lauderdale near the tracks that run alongside Dixie Highway. As a kid, Jaco would often wander along those tracks for miles, dreaming of places he might visit one day. Ironically, those same tracks run past the Kalis Funeral Home in Fort Lauderdale, the site of Jaco's wake on September 24, 1987." [Jaco] Steve Swallow's blindfold test comments about "Barbary Coast:"
7. HERNANDU (JOHNSON) Personnel: Zawinul, Shorter, Johnson, Thompson, Acuña Zawinul described "Hernandu" to Milkowski of JazzTimes as, "A great fucking tune by Alphonso Johnson in 11/4 time that I did some further orchestrating on. This tune I really like." [JTW02] Johnson told Glasser, "I brought that song in. It's an odd meter--it's in eleven--and again, with that one they only kept two parts of the song. They kept it in an odd meter, and the intro line was a melody I'd brought in, but Joe expanded it using synth voicings in his Zawinul kind of way, which made it really unique. Again, I'm totally happy with the way it turned out." [IASW, p. 181] As to the title, Johnson told Glasser, "We were on a tour in Europe--Copenhagen, I think--and I walked into this clothing store and it was called Herandnu. I asked what it meant, and they said, 'Here and now.' And what impressed me about this store was that downstairs they had a little corner set aside for kids, so that while Mom shopped they could play, which is fashionable now but back then was really progressive thinking!" [IASW, p. 181]
"It's difficult to believe that one group can remain so bountifully resourceful year after year. In reality, it's the genius and rapport of two members--Zawinul and Shorter--that comprises the meaningful core of Weather Report. Yet, despite their dominance, these two artists are able to incorporate and stimulate the talents of their transient sidemen, particularly in the bass department as the dual presence of Johnson and Pastorius makes abundantly clear. The final product always appears as and, in a fashion, actually is a group effort in the highest sense of the term. Following logically from past efforts, Black Market is both a culmination of a certain period in Weather Report's history as well as a new, radical departure. By itself, Black Market stands as a gorgeous, sensitive Moorish/Mediterranean suite." ***** --Ray Townley, Down Beat, July 15, 1976
"Black Market shows Weather Report in full transition from much of their stoney roots austerity manifest on such previous works as I Sing The Body Electric and Mysterious Traveller. Now that keyboards genius Joe Zawinul is sharing a lot of composition credits the music is a great deal more accessible on first listening, without ever sacrificing the hard line jazz influence and durable heaviness of the band's structural abilities... The music is of such a consistently high standard that there are no obvious standout cuts... Perhaps Black Market is the finest Weather Report set yet from one of California's most highly gifted outfits." --Max Bell, New Musical Express, 1976
"Weather Report was smack dab in the middle of the jazz-rock fusion maelstrom that tore up the '70s. With Black Market the group dug in its heels, providing ample ammunition for both sides debating the question of the decade: is it jazz or is it popular music?... [Jaco] Pastorius' rock sensibility steered the group away from the mattress-on-the-floor, Indian-bedspread-on-the-wall mentality of the earlier recordings toward a more aggressive rock-funk path." **** --Elaine Guregian, Down Beat, September 1989
"Given the musical roll they were on, it's hardly surprising that Black Market was another of their most satisfying records, and yet one can but marvel at the depth of its quality. During these anni mirabili, Weather Report seemed to be inventing a new language with every record they made, apparently congenitally unable to rest on their laurels. If Tale Spinnin' was almost Mozartian in its bright surfaces and its ability to wring depth from the lightest of touches, Black Market was a move towards heaviness a la Beethoven--the beats were more pronounced and the thematic material was of a grander scale." --Brian Glasser, In A Silent Way, 2000
Jazz Album of the Year, 41st Annual Down Beat Readers Poll Jazz Group of the Year, 41st Annual Down Beat Readers Poll |