CJ Shearn Posted December 22, 2003 Report Posted December 22, 2003 I was listening to some of it last night (I bought the Mastersound edition a while back since it has the complete album unlike the domestic) and I think that compared to the other WR albums I have (Black Market, Live in Tokyo, Live and Unreleased, and Heavy Weather) it's the weakest of the bunch, the live portions are excellent, but the studio half is a little dissapointing, "Sightseeing" cooks, but "Brown Street" despite having some cool grooves and patterns (Zawinul's walking bass with a little "hump") but it doesn't go anywhere on the whole. "Live in Tokyo" is IMO the ultimate WR live album, they just take amazing chances on that. "8:30", as I understand it was a "greatest hits" sort of tour, so the risks they took may not have been as great during that time. Anyone care to weigh in their perspectives on "8:30"? Quote
jazzbo Posted December 22, 2003 Report Posted December 22, 2003 C J, I hear it pretty much as you do. I dug it when it first came out because I had SEEN that tour, but I never listen to it any longer. The lps up through Tale Spinnin' are da schitte for me NOW and I hardly spin any of the others at all. Quote
rockefeller center Posted December 22, 2003 Report Posted December 22, 2003 Never liked the stuff they did during the 1978 tour (Mr. Gone), which the live tracks of this album consist of, too much. I do like the version of "Scarlet Woman" (especially 06:05 - 06:40), "Sightseeing" and the title track with JP on drums. Some background info on 8:30 Quote
CJ Shearn Posted December 22, 2003 Author Report Posted December 22, 2003 thanks Rockfeller, I have read that info before. I just think with "8:30", it doesn't have an edge, even though the live stuff is great it doesn't have many risks as say "Live in Tokyo" or even tracks off "Live and Unreleased" from around the same time. I love the edition with Jaco, but I think the lack of percussion took out a pleasing textural element that was there before, and I think the groove thing they went it too maybe restricted things a tiny bit. Although I still think "Heavy Weather" and "Black Market" are great albums. Compositionally, HW is great. Quote
Guy Berger Posted December 22, 2003 Report Posted December 22, 2003 I was listening to some of it last night (I bought the Mastersound edition a while back since it has the complete album unlike the domestic) and I think that compared to the other WR albums I have (Black Market, Live in Tokyo, Live and Unreleased, and Heavy Weather) it's the weakest of the bunch, the live portions are excellent, but the studio half is a little dissapointing, "Sightseeing" cooks, but "Brown Street" despite having some cool grooves and patterns (Zawinul's walking bass with a little "hump") but it doesn't go anywhere on the whole. "Live in Tokyo" is IMO the ultimate WR live album, they just take amazing chances on that. "8:30", as I understand it was a "greatest hits" sort of tour, so the risks they took may not have been as great during that time. Anyone care to weigh in their perspectives on "8:30"? I've always thought it was pretty boring, even the live stuff. The best parts are "Sightseeing", "Black Market", and (especially) "Badia/Boogie Woogie Waltz". Guy Quote
GregK Posted December 22, 2003 Report Posted December 22, 2003 I've always been partial to their first 2 releases and the Live in Tokyo double disc. I've found much of the rest to be pretty boring Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.