Weather Report

Mysterious Traveller - 180 Gram (Columbia KC 32494)

Mysterious Traveller - 180 Gram View larger

Mysterious Traveller - 180 Gram

Weather Report

Speakers Corner

4260019714367

LPS 149640

Columbia KC 32494

JAZZ

1

Mysterious Traveller - 180 Gram

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Currently unavailable

LP 33,98 €

4 1/2 STARS ALL MUSIC GUIDE

PERSONNEL:

JOE ZAWINUL, keyboards, percussion, vocals
WAYNE SHORTER, tenor & soprano sax, piano
MIROSLAV VITOUS, ALPHONSO JOHNSON, bass
RAY BARRETTO, DOM UM ROMAO, percussion
SKIP HADDEN, ISHMAEL WILBURN, drums

Recorded in Devonshire Sound, North Hollywood, USA, 1974.

SIDE A:

01. Nubian Sundance
02. American Tango
03. Cucumber Slumber

SIDE B:

01. Mysterious Traveller
02. Blackthorn Rose
03. Scarlet Woman
04. Jungle Book

In Weather Report’s fourth album the mysterious multi-instrumentalist Joe Zawinul travels once again through his virtually endless sound universe. And once again the question arises as to whether he will manage to leave his genetic fingerprint – without resorting to routine – on all the newly created sounds. The magic word here is naturalness, which makes its way safely and surely through the electronic backdrop.
"Nubian Sundance", performed with two drummers and a percussionist, twists and turns in an apparently disoriented, meditative fashion through a mix of sizzling sound and colours, leading up to the final live applause that brings this dance to a close and making it a real experience for all. Following the translucent, will-o’-the-wisp-like "American Tango" is "Cucumber Slumber" with its compact funky sound created by a cool mix of saxophone and the sucking sound of a synthesizer. The two protagonists Zawinul and Shorter seem to be on a par with one another in the dazzling title piece where the lyrical saxophone part is supported by thunderous piano chords. Warm, dreamy harmonies are heard for a short while, only to be hacked apart in "Blackthorn Rose" – this is no orbital music floating around in your head but sheer tension, which makes you clutch your seat until landing. Back on earth the mysterious traveller was received with open arms with the readers of Down Beat magazine voting the LP 'Album of the Year 1974'.