Jazz The best music site on the web there is where you can read about and listen to blues, jazz, classical music and much more. This is your ultimate music resource. Tons of albums can be found within. http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/jazz/5588.html Wed, 24 Apr 2024 21:06:48 +0000 Joomla! 1.5 - Open Source Content Management en-gb Miroslav Vitous - Infinite Search (1969) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/jazz/5588-miroslav-vitous/20892-miroslav-vitous-infinite-search-1969.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/jazz/5588-miroslav-vitous/20892-miroslav-vitous-infinite-search-1969.html Miroslav Vitous - Infinite Search (1969)

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01. Freedom Jazz Dance [10:54]
02. Mountain In The Clouds [01:51]
03. When Face Gets Pale [07:38]
04. Infinite Search [06:49]
05. I Will Tell Him On You [11:00]
06. Epilogue [06:57]
07. Cérecka  [02:45]

Bass – Miroslav Vitous
Drums – Jack DeJohnette (tracks: 1-5, 7), Joe Chambers (tracks: 6)
Electric Piano – Herbie Hancock
Guitar – John McLaughlin
Tenor Saxophone – Joe Henderson

 

With John McLaughlin, Herbie Hancock, Joe Henderson, and Jack DeJohnette, this group rivaled the best fusion bands of the day. It must have been an intimidating challenge for a young Czech bassist to lead such a group on his debut album as a frontman, especially since he composed five of the six tracks. Recorded in late 1969, roughly the same time as the historic Bitches Brew, and the year before Vitous began a stint with the innovative Weather Report, this was trend-setting fusion. It's produced by Herbie Mann, for whom Vitous played on such albums as Memphis Underground and Stone Flute. ---Mark Allen, AllMusic Review

 

Miroslav Vitous is probably most known for being part of WEATHER REPORT when they first started out, but he has a long resume. This is his first solo album released before WEATHER REPORT's debut which came out the following year. Miroslav is such a talented bass player but he also plays violin and keyboards, and when he was younger he was a world class free- style swimmer. In fact after winning a scholarship to Berklee College of Music he had to decide between swimming and music. Thankfully he chose the latter. The lineup on this album is such that you should be sitting down when you read off the names. John McLaughlin on guitar, Jack DeJohnette on drums, Joe Henderson on sax and Herbie Hancock on electric piano. Told you so. My first impression of this album was that it wasn't very dynamic. It's more Free-Jazz perhaps, certainly not in the MAHAVISHNU ORCHESTRA style. And Vitous is very dominant here along with DeJohnette as the guitar, piano and sax come and go.

"Freedom Jazz Dance" opens with seemingly everyone being part of the sound. Very intricate stuff. Piano comes to the fore 3 minutes in. Bass is just throbbing away then the guitar takes the spotlight after 4 1/2 minutes. McLaughlin is ripping it up. Henderson's turn after 6 1/2 minutes. This is the most dynamic track. "Mountain In The Clouds" is a short tune with cymbals and bass leading early. Check out the bass and drums !

"When Face Gets Pale" opens with cymbals, bass, piano and intricate guitar. The bass is incredible here. Deep bass lines late. "Infinite Search" is led by bass, piano and drums. "I Will Tell Him On You" features sax, piano, bass and drums standing out early. Sax leads before 3 minutes. It gets pretty intense a minute later. Guitar takes the lead then piano 7 minutes in. Drums pound away after 8 1/2 minutes. "Epilogue" is the only track that DeJohnette isn't on, instead we get Joe Chambers. This one's fairly laid back as bass leads the way. Piano becomes more prominant 4 1/2 minutes in.

For me this is one of those albums you really have to pay attention to. It's not background music, you have to give attention to the detail. --- Mellotron Storm, progarchives.com

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Miroslav Vitous Thu, 29 Dec 2016 15:05:53 +0000
Miroslav Vitous - Miroslav (1977) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/jazz/5588-miroslav-vitous/26303-miroslav-vitous-miroslav-1977.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/jazz/5588-miroslav-vitous/26303-miroslav-vitous-miroslav-1977.html Miroslav Vitous - Miroslav (1977)

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A1 	Watching The Sunset Run 	8:01
A2 	Bassamba 	2:55
A3 	Tiger In The Rain 	8:52
B1 	Concerto In E Minor 	5:36
B2 	Pictures From Moravia 	4:49
B3 	Sonata For A Dream 	5:43

Miroslav Vitous - Acoustic Bass [Arco & Pizzicato], Piano, Electric Piano, Synthesizer [Mini-Moog, ARP String Ensemble]
Don Alias - Congas, Bongos, Drums (tracks: A1 to B2) 
Armen Halburian - Percussion (tracks: B3) 

 

1976-1977 sessions with Don Alias and Armen Halburian on percussion. Vitous overdubs bass and keyboards. A stunning musical trip through Afro-jazz texture music. "Tiger in the Rain" is absolutely captivating. ---Michael G. Nastos, AllMusic Review

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Miroslav Vitous Sun, 26 Jan 2020 19:52:42 +0000
Miroslav Vitous - Remembering Weather Report (2009) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/jazz/5588-miroslav-vitous/22822-miroslav-vitous-remembering-weather-report-2009.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/jazz/5588-miroslav-vitous/22822-miroslav-vitous-remembering-weather-report-2009.html Miroslav Vitous - Remembering Weather Report (2009)

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1 	Variations On W. Shorter 	5:13
2 	Variations On Lonely Woman 	7:27
3 	Semina (In Three Parts) 	13:31
4 	Surfing With Michel 	5:48
5 	When Dvořák Meets Miles 	10:57
6 	Blues Report 	4:48

Bass Clarinet – Michel Portal
Double Bass – Miroslav Vitous
Drums – Gerald Cleaver
Producer, Engineer – Miroslav Vitous
Tenor Saxophone – Gary Campbell
Trumpet – Franco Ambrosetti

 

On the surface, Remembering Weather Report possesses little in common with the fusion supergroup that Czech bassist Miroslav Vitous co-founded in the early '70s with keyboardist Joe Zawinul and saxophonist Wayne Shorter, before being summarily removed on the cusp of greater commercial success. Weather Report was a decidedly electric group; Vitous' is unapologetically acoustic, and doesn't really resemble, musically, early albums including WR's remarkable self-titled, 1971 debut and '72 follow-up, I Sing the Body Electric, both on Columbia. But scratch beneath the surface and there's an intrepid spirit there that pays greater homage than more direct tributes.

Weather Report's early "everybody solos, nobody solos" ethos was a democratic dictum, asserting complete equality and independence. No conventional timekeeping rhythm section—at least in its early years—and that's the real link between two groups distanced by nearly 40 years. With a core quartet featuring Italian trumpeter Franco Ambrosetti, tenor saxophonist Gary Campbell and drummer Gerald Cleaver—the latter two back from the bassist's award-winning Universal Syncopations II (ECM, 2007)—with the superb Michel Portal guesting on bass clarinet on three tracks, Vitous has assembled a truly egalitarian ensemble—though his strong voice, especially on arco, does tend to dominate much of the proceedings. Still, with a distinctive, fleet-fingered approach and lyrical bent with a bow that rivals Swedish bassist Anders Jormin's similar ability to make his instrument sing, Vitous has never sounded so distinctive, or so good.

Opening with a tribute to Shorter, Vitous references the saxophonist's enduring "Nefertiti," but only loosely. His relationship with the intuitive Cleaver is kinetic, as the horns wrap around both Shorter's theme and Vitous' alternating arco and pizzicato, creating an increasingly turbulent setting that's all about interaction and nothing about overt virtuosity, even though there's no denying the mastery of every player. "Variations on Lonely Woman" is more faithful to Ornette Coleman's classic, with multiple cued segments acting as rallying points for the group, as its exploration creates some especially wonderful sonic combinations, especially when arco bass, tenor sax, trumpet and clarinet orbit around and, finally, coalesce into its iconic melody.

Vitous also pays tribute to Zawinul on "Semina" by referencing the recently departed keyboardist's European classicism—a characteristic that has continued to imbue Vitous' music throughout his career, but which Zawinul deserted early on, in favor of funkier and, later, world music-informed writing. A duet with Portal, "Surfing With Michel," is a high point of Remembering Weather Report if only because, stripped down to two largely linear instruments (though Vitous strums chords throughout), it vividly exposes their endearing qualities, with Vitous managing to keep time and deliver free flights of fancy in direct response to Portal's equally unfettered ideation.

Those looking for more direct reference to its titular inspiration may be disappointed, but for those who remember its original spirit and premise, Remembering Weather Report is an album that takes Weather Report's original premise and places it firmly in a 21st Century context of spirited contemporary improvisation and empathic interplay. ---John Kelman, allaboutjazz.comm

 

Miroslav Vitous was the founding bassist in Weather Report, a band that by its end, had traveled very far from its roots. But it is indeed that band's musical foundation that interests Vitous here on his tribute to that musical, freedom-seeking egalitarian spirit that was evidenced so profoundly on its 1971 debut album and I Sing the Body Electric. With trumpeter Franco Ambrosetti, tenor saxophonist Gary Campbell, drummer Gerald Cleaver, and a guest appearance by Michel Portal on bass clarinet on three tracks, Vitous, following his return to ECM in 2003, sets about not only rediscovering the original vision that guided him during his stay with WR, but ultimately demanding it in his brief liner essay that is indeed born out by the music here. "This album is a reminder that the way of playing discovered at this time pointed toward a future music yet to be fully realized. Now it is time for it to come upfront: there is no other way to go, if you wasn't to progress towards musical freedom and a universal concept of equal sharing." Indeed, where WR was, in the beginning of the collective mind that "everybody solos/nobody solos" aesthetic, so it is with this excellent unit, grounded as it is in that self-same principle. "Variations on Wayne Shorter" takes Vitous' former bandmate's composition "Nefertiti" and uses its phrases sparingly, ultimately creating a new improvisational and lyrical theme for its frame. "Variations on Lonely Woman" does indeed invoke Ornette Coleman's composition while using Antonin Dvorák's largo from the 9th Symphony. Vitous' bowing is impeccable and indeed the equal of anyone currently out there, including ECM's other great arco player, Anders Jormin. Likewise his "When Dvorak Meets Miles" is a very loose evocation on the former composer's motifs as adapted to Miles Davis' more rhythmically savvy, open-ended modes. There is also an excellent duo improvisation called "Surfing with Michel," and a stellar new composition by Vitous entitled "Semina," that is dedicated to the "nobler aspirations of Joe Zawinul." (To be fair, Vitous seems to conveniently forget his own jazz fusion days when he wore a coat of pure sheepskin on record covers and evoked the cosmos and funk fuzak on his own records -- perhaps it his own nobler aspirations he is referring to as well. You could at least dance to Zawinul's tunes.) Here, the sparse notational music that allows for each instrument to play an intensely, exquisitely balanced role in creating a mass of not only sound, but something that can only be called "song" is truly inspiring -- Cleaver's cymbal work, and the lower-end arco playing of Vitous put the rhythm section in the moment of creation instead of merely holding it down for the horns. This is an excellent set; proof that modern jazz that recognizes improvisation as a direct result of form, and indeed inspires it further, is a case in point for a modern jazz where anything at all still is possible. ---Thom Jurek, AllMusic Review

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Miroslav Vitous Fri, 05 Jan 2018 14:08:42 +0000