75 (Heads Up Records)

Joe Zawinul & The Zawinul Syndicate

Released October 2008

Grammy Award for Best ContemporaryJazz Instrumental Album 2010

Jazzwise Top 10 Releases of 2008

YouTube:

https://music.youtube.com/watch?v=a5dbc3eKC1g&list=OLAK5uy_lPa0DuDOLAxN1ZMIh7lqKo_p26fg8HYEY

Spotify:

https://open.spotify.com/album/4yQhtNLokSo2MBnIKYfVF0?si=AEUulZQZQb2cJyaJXppalw

About:

Live Joe Zawinul Recording Marks Jazz Legend’s Final Birthday

Keyboardist and composer Joe Zawinul, who succumbed to cancer September 11, 2007 at age 75, left behind a half-century legacy of brilliant music that will last for generations. Born in Austria and originally trained in classical music, Zawinul embraced the jazz tradition at a young age and eventually pushed the art form to unprecedented limits via his two most innovative projects, Weather Report and later the Zawinul Syndicate.

Despite the medical and physical challenges of his final months, Zawinul’s regimen of composing and performing never let up. Indeed, one of his final performances proved to be one of his best.

The aptly titled 75 (HUCD 3162), set for release on Heads Up International on February 24, 2009, was recorded in concert at a festival date in Lugano, Switzerland, on July 7, 2007 – the last birthday Zawinul would celebrate before his death two months later. The two-disc set is a final snapshot of this brilliant and dedicated road warrior of jazz, surrounded by his revered Zawinul Syndicate, a collection of stellar collaborators hailing from every corner of the globe. In addition to the Switzerland performance, 75 also includes a track recorded on a Hungary stage, where Zawinul is joined by legendary saxophonist and Weather Report co-founder Wayne Shorter.

“For me, this recording is both sad and joyful at the same time,” says filmmaker Anthony Zawinul, Joe’s son who has recorded many of the senior Zawinul’s performances. “He was so full of life, so full of amazing musical ideas. He knew his illness was terminal, so maybe all the creative channels were open and operating at full capacity, and he was just expressing what he felt by doing what he did best – playing and improvising. I look at the recording as a kind of extension to what he was feeling in those last weeks and months.”

Disc one of 75 gets under way with “Orient Express,” a song first heard on Zawinul’s 1996 masterpiece, My People. The track opens with a highly atmospheric and otherworldly introduction built upon the Middle Eastern riffs of Moroccan vocalist Aziz Sahmaoui. The intro quickly catapults into a driving, high-energy track – ten minutes in all – that resembles the legendary train from which it takes its name.

The exotic “Madagascar” (from Weather Report’s 1980 recording, Night Passage) gets its groove from Mauritius-born bassist Linley Marthe doubling Zawinul’s familiar synth line before settling into a Jaco-esque walking line, while drummer Paco Sery slams with authority and uncanny precision underneath. “Dig Joe’s funky, facile electric piano solo in the middle,” says veteran jazz critic Bill Milkowski in his liner notes. “Clearly, this cat was not about to give up. The gift of music burned brightly inside him, always.”

The buoyant, African-flavored “Zansa II” (from the 1998 live recording, World Tour) features some marvelous kalimba work by Sery and some marimba-sounding synth accompaniment from Zawinul, while “Café Andalusia” (from Faces & Places, 2002) highlights the dramatic intensity of vocalist Sabine Kabongo, the Belgian singing sensation from the ranks of Zap Mama.

The second disc opens with an invigorating medley of “Fast City” and “Two Lines” (from Night Passage and World Tour, respectively). The tempo and energy here are mind-boggling, thanks in large part to Marthe’s phenomenal bass work.

Zawinul then reaches all the way back to the early and mid ‘70s with the back-to-back Weather Report compositions, “Badia” and “Boogie Woogie Waltz” (from Tale Spinnin’ in 1975 and Sweetnighter in 1973). These are followed by a lighthearted moment wherein Kabongo leads the Swiss audience through a heartwarming chorus of “Happy Birthday” to the maestro.

Fittingly, the concert closes with the gentle “Hymn,” performed by Zawinul on church-like organ with accompaniment from percussionist Jorge Bezzera.

As an added treat, this collection contains a rare and beautiful moment from an August 2, 2007, concert in Veszprem, Hungary, the second to last show Zawinul ever played. He is joined onstage for an emotional reunion with his longtime musical partner and Weather Report co-founder Wayne Shorter for a moving sax-synth duet on Zawinul’s anthemic “In a Silent Way,” a piece the two recorded together on Miles Davis’ landmark 1969 album of the same name. The two musicians’ telepathic exchanges and empathetic playing over the course of the 14-minute track is pure magic.

“My dad raised the bar in the music world as a true artist to his profession,” says Anthony Zawinul. “He never compromised his art. You either liked it or you didn’t. One thing is for sure though, you always knew it was Joe Zawinul. As a bandleader, he was able to pull out performances from his bandmates and take them to heights they never knew existed.” Seventy-five years from now, the legacy will still be very much alive.

Track Listing:

Disc 1

1. Introduction To Orient Express (Joe Zawinul) 3:10

2. Orient Express (Joe Zawinul) 10:07

3. Madagascar (Joe Zawinul) 10:00

4. Scarlet Woman (Joe Zawinul) 6:55

5. Zanza II (Paco Sery / Joe Zawinul) 6:39

6. Cafe Andalusia (Joe Zawinul) 8:52

Disc 2

1. Medley: Fast City/Two Lines (Joe Zawinul) 12:37

2. Clario (Alegre Corrêa) 5:45

3. Medley: Badia/Boogie Woogie Waltz (Joe Zawinul) 10:16

4. Happy Birthday (Nilred Hill / Patty Hill) 1:41

5. In a Silent Way (Joe Zawinul) 14:20

6. Hymn (Joe Zawinul) 3:29

Personnel:

Joe Zawinul: keyboards, vocoder

Sabine Kabongo: vocals, percussion

Alegre Correa: vocals, berimbau

Linley Marthe: bass

Paco Sery: drums, kalimba, vocals

Jorge Bezerra: percussion, vocals

Aziz Sahmaoui: percussion, vocals

Wayne Shorter: soprano saxophone (Disc 2, #5)

Recorded July 7, 2007, at Estival Jazz Lugano, Switzerland, and August 2, 2007, at Veszprem Festival, Hungary

Produced by Joachim Becker

Mastered by Marko Schneider

Mixed by Joachim Becker, Klaus Genuit

Review:

Some artists play until they drop—not always a good thing—but for Weather Report co-founder/Zawinul Syndicate leader Joe Zawinul, his life was defined by a tough stoicism. Unlike drummer Elvin Jones, whose final days were tragic in the loss of his signature strength, the groundbreaking keyboardist gigged—despite the Merkel cell carcinoma that would result in his passing on September 11, 2007—until very near the end. Based on 75—taken from gigs recorded within two months of passing—there were certainly no indicators that he was ill, let alone approaching death. 
The closing tracks on the second of this two-CD set represent a musical eulogy to Zawinul, who not only fused jazz and rock, but music from cultures around the world, and created sweeping orchestral arrangements with his array of keyboards. Most of 75 was recorded on Zawinul’s 75th birthday on July 7, 2007, and the group’s rendition of “Happy Birthday” begins with the familiar tune from vocalist Sabine Kabongo, breaking into a joyous percussion celebration for drummer Paco Sery and percussionists Jorge Bezerra and Aziz Sahmaoui that highlights Zawinul’s integrated world view with players from locales as distant as Brazil, Morocco, the Ivory Coast and Madagascar. Zawinul’s classic “In a Silent Way,” recorded a month later on August 2, 2007, is a surprise duet with Weather Report co-founder Wayne Shorter—a moving tribute to a musical partnership that began in the late-’60s with Miles Davis but, even after Weather Report’s dissolution, remained an enduring friendship. Zawinul’s closing “Hymn,” is an elegiac piece that almost seems as though he knew the end was near. 

75 is filled with the Syndicate’s trademark infectious grooves, bountiful melodies and cultural cross-pollination. Nearly half the songs come from Weather Report’s extensive discography. An early excursion into world music on Tale Spinnin’ (Columbia, 1976) and even earlier piece of hypnotic funk from Sweetnighter (Columbia, 1973) come together on Zawinul’s often recorded medley of “Badia/Boogie Woogie Waltz,” though with Sery and bassist Linley Marthe—one of the set’s clear stars, adding an African vibe and his own fervent energy to late bassist Jaco Pastorius’ inventions—it’s never been this fiery. “Scarlet Woman,” from Mysterious Traveller (Columbia, 1974), gets a greasy rework, the familiar theme a sharp punctuation amongst the visceral groove and Zawinul’s extended soloing, while “Fast City,” from Night Passage (Columbia, 1980), and “Two Lines,” from Procession (Columbia, 1983), are taken at a faster clip, joined by Zawinul’s group introduction that gives everyone a moment in the spotlight, including equally remarkable guitarist Alegre Correa, who also adds berimbau—the gourd/string instrument made famous by Nana Vasconcelos—to “Badia.” 
A number of Syndicate tracks, old and new, round out this largely exciting 93-minute set. That the disc sounds, even weeks before his passing, as vibrant as ever, makes 75 a fitting finale to the career of an artist whose creativity, forward thinking and extensive discography mean that he may be gone, but he’ll never be forgotten.

John Kelman (All About Jazz)