![]() Hearing their interplay so beautifully recorded will give those familiar with Weather Report much to celebrate, while to those not it will serve as the eyepiece of a time-honored microscope looking in on a watershed moment of jazz history. In “Acrobat Issues,” Vitous rebinds an old book with burnished leather, leaving the gold stamping to the dialoguing tenors and the final stitching to his drummers. Wayne Shorter’s “Pinocchio” gets an even freer treatment that traces the present band’s luminescence with astronomical precision. Esen’s atmospheric touches in “Birdland” evoke more of the same, only now with a more nostalgic feel that’s still fresh as a sunrise. Best described in Vitous’s own words as “two galaxies or universes pulling and affecting each other,” the two tandems therein create more than they replace. Evelyn Taft Lovely images of Evelyn Taft. Below is a list of beautiful weather forecasters who capture the most television views and ratings worldwide: 1. Like the two “Multi Dimension Blues” of Vitous sandwiching it, it finds beauty behind closed eyes and open hands. The worlds most beautiful weather forecasters Pretty and charismatic weather girls improve the ratings of TV channels. In that same spirit the sextet takes on a reshuffled “Birdland Variations,” wherein joy abounds. The music of Joe Zawinul is a touchstone of the program, which opens with “Scarlet Woman Variations” in a necklace of reiterations as threaded by an electronically enhanced Vitous and the clarion sopranism of Campbell. Along with “Morning Lake,” which unleashes a quiet army of melodic water skeeters, it references Weather Report’s very first album from 1971 on Columbia. Rounded by Turkish keyboardist Aydin Esen, the sound is best realized on the tune “Seventh Arrow,” in which both sides of this improvisationally free equation flip on a glowing equals sign. Fascinating not only for its audacity, but also for its assembly, it pairs drummers Gerald Cleaver, occupying the left channel with saxophonist Gary Campbell, and Nasheet Waits, occupying the right with saxophonist Roberto Bonisolo. Unlike its soft companion, Remembering Weather Report, which evoked the feel of his seminal band, this latest redux dives headlong into the cofounder’s originals that made Weather Report shine. In the intervening six years since leaving Weather Report, he had deepened his voice on the instrument, taking his arco dialects into more fluent directions than ever. The bass of Miroslav Vitous has been a hub of creative activity since making its ECM debut on 1979’s collaboration with Terje Rypdal and Jack DeJohnette. ![]() Recorded March and May 2010, February and March 2011 at Universal Syncopations Studios Relaxing Music & Rain Sounds - Beautiful Piano Music, Background Music, Sleep Music You & Me - YouTube Relaxing music and rain sounds (10 hours) by Soothing Relaxation. Recording producer and engineer: Miroslav Vitous Firdaus (Arabic) It means paradise, but it’s derived from an earlier word meaning garden or enclosure. Roberto Bonisolo soprano and tenor saxophones Gary Campbell soprano and tenor saxophones
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