SHNID 146504 Weather Report 1983-03-20
Orpheum Theatre, Boston, MA
Summary (download all files)
flac24/96khz RECORDING TYPE: Audience ["AR"]
TAPER: Barry Rogoff (Balrog)
SOURCE AND LINEAGE:
1983 - Nakamichi CM-300/CP1 > Sony WM-D6C (Dolby B in) > Maxell XLII-S
2010 - Maxell XLII-S > Nakamichi Dragon (Dolby B out) > RDL FP-UBC6 >
MOTU 896 > Sound Forge Audio Studio 9.0 > Wave [96kHz/24 bit] >
Izotope RX, CEP 2.0 with Izotope Ozone [mastering and
downsample/conversion to 44.1KHz/16 bit] > Wave > FLAC
TAPER: Barry Rogoff (Balrog)
SOURCE AND LINEAGE:
1983 - Nakamichi CM-300/CP1 > Sony WM-D6C (Dolby B in) > Maxell XLII-S
2010 - Maxell XLII-S > Nakamichi Dragon (Dolby B out) > RDL FP-UBC6 >
MOTU 896 > Sound Forge Audio Studio 9.0 > Wave [96kHz/24 bit] >
Izotope RX, CEP 2.0 with Izotope Ozone [mastering and
downsample/conversion to 44.1KHz/16 bit] > Wave > FLAC
Textdoc (download)
WEATHER REPORT DATE: 20 March 1983 LOCATION: Boston, Massachusetts, USA VENUE: Orpheum Theater LINEUP: Victor Bailey - bass Omar Hakim - drums Jose Rossy - percussion Wayne Shorter - saxophones Joe Zawinul - keyboards SETLIST: Vol. 1 01 - Procession 02 - Fast City 03 - The Peasant 04 - dB Waltz 05 - Blue Sound Note 3 06 - Molasses Run Vol. 2 07 - Two Lines 08 - Plaza Real 09 - Where the Moon Goes 10 - Zawinul/Shorter Duet 11 - Medley: Night Passage/Black Market/Badia/ A Remark You Made/Rockin’ in Rhythm/Birdland Accurate to the best of our knowledge, but errors/omissions may yet be identified by listeners. RECORDING TYPE: Audience ["AR"] TAPER: Barry Rogoff (Balrog) ORIGINAL ART: Gromek Three concert photos in the package have appeared before, in at least one case associated with an entirely different tour. Not only are they genuine PROCESSION tour stage shots, they were taken the very night previous to this one [New York City, 19 March]. SOURCE AND LINEAGE: 1983 - Nakamichi CM-300/CP1 > Sony WM-D6C (Dolby B in) > Maxell XLII-S 2010 - Maxell XLII-S > Nakamichi Dragon (Dolby B out) > RDL FP-UBC6 > MOTU 896 > Sound Forge Audio Studio 9.0 > Wave [96kHz/24 bit] > Izotope RX, CEP 2.0 with Izotope Ozone [mastering and downsample/conversion to 44.1KHz/16 bit] > Wave > FLAC REMASTER SUMMARY: EQ and other work to reveal - not mix - extant AR detail, to every extent possible as the audience heard and felt it. No attempts to alter band-crowd-venue sound balance, or to suppress crowd sound as it does not overwhelm either record mikes or band PA output. No compression or noise reduction applied. Tape hiss is noticeable, especially during the extremely quite Zawinul-Shorter duet, but even there the signal to noise ratio remains favorable enough to avoid risky NR. INDEPENDENT SOUND ANALYSIS: Several trusted ‘beta testers’, including Barry, Gromek and others FROM AN OFFICIAL "BLIND" WRB83 PROJECT TEST GROUP LISTENER: "So, where do I possibly begin about WRB83." First and foremost, once more, you have worked your magic on the record, not only are the separate instruments clearly discernible, but I can actually hear subtleties such as the mallets striking the vibraphone, the buzz of the reeds on the tenor and soprano saxes, the rivets on the crash cymbals, etc. Nuances of lower frequencies are present as well, how the bass would actually sound as amplified in the acoustics of the venue. Rarely can I just close my eyes and, to state what I feel may be an over-used phrase, be instantly placed at the performance. As usual, the dynamic range easily surpasses the best commercial releases (but then, your work on Barry’s ARs has no equal). My utmost appreciation for the privilege of another thrilling musical journey." A FEW WORDS ON THE WEATHER REPORT PERFORMANCE: "We would've really been in trouble if [Omar Hakim and Victor Bailey] couldn't play." -- Joe Zawinul, 1984 When Jaco Pastorius, Peter Erskine and Bobby Thomas Jr. all left Weather Report at once it came as a shock to me akin to my favorite ‘rock fusion’ band, Yes, losing its defining and unique vocalist a year or so earlier. I just didn’t think there was any way it could work any more after a personnel upheaval like that. The PROCESSION album seemed nice enough, but like many I still managed to drift away. Decades later, as has happened more than once already when setting to work on a project like this, I now fully realize how shortsighted I was and what I’d been missing. It must be said the new lineup was a bit more ‘clinical’ sounding, but also every bit as inspired in its own way and creatively brilliant as any earlier one. My approach to audio work includes a great deal of listening and re-listening to raw master, work in progress and tentative final product, over a period of weeks and often months before release. On the first listen I already liked what I heard a great deal more than I expected to. The more I listened the more hooked I became, both on the playing and the new music. To me, a ‘purist’ by definition, this was still Weather Report in every way. What Joe Zawinul was going through at the time trying to keep his band alive and find the right new musicians to replace so much of it overnight makes the performance even more remarkable. Perhaps most impressive of all, apparently PROCESSION hadn’t even been recorded yet and its material was still being developed, during this and other Spring ’83 concerts! How Zawinul found his new band mates is storybook material and toward the end of this document you will find a more complete narrative from a fan Website, much of it in his own words. It’s a fascinating read. In the meantime, I hope this effort helps many others find the same new joy in PROCESSION-era Weather Report and their music. Given the stunning recording quality - best by far I’ve heard from the ‘83 tour and rivaling the best analog AR I had ever heard until now - fans already appreciative of it will no doubt be ecstatic. SOURCE AND AUDIO WORK AT GREATER LENGTH: It’s important to note first off that A-D conversion equipment and methods vary considerably, and naturally quality varies with them. In WRB83 as in all BLG projects you have the assurance of the best possible A-D conversions short of what studios using equipment costing hundreds of thousands of dollars can do. The WRB83 source meanwhile is a top shelf pre-1990s AR rivaling any other both for unbelievable sound capture, and for its own unique remastering challenges. It offers AR detail across the spectrum comparable to many from the present era, but had some weird properties requiring a few changes in approach to get it fully on display without being ‘harshed’ or otherwise distorted. Its one major wart: a mike cable connection problem on the night caused considerable left-channel dropout with static, but thankfully it’s almost completely confined to the second track ["Fast City"]. It presents in just a few other places, and in them is only a second to a few seconds in length. In this package we have a 'repaired' version I'm not exactly thrilled with either, but the dropout was truly awful and something had to be done or the track left out completely. In both raw master and first set of test EQ runs a ‘thin’, ‘piercing’ property in the uppermost frequencies was an annoyance and tended to obscure detail in others, but a couple of old tools used in a rather radical new fashion saved the day. Highs like upper cymbal tones remain VERY strong - something I now ascribe to the Sony record deck as it’s appeared in three so-recorded shows I’ve worked with, although Weather Report’s 1983 sound system was also a bit on the shrill side. These highs stop short of distortion’s edge however, and are in balance with other frequencies. They generated no complaints from the test group, and softening them any would suppress important natural tones in many other areas. What may sound at times like sibilance is actually vivid metal percussion detail, as the above reviewer suggests, and even provides an interesting illustration of the limits of early 1980s cassette technology. Every effort was made to reveal all possible detail in each tone of each instrument in all frequency bands as far as it occurred in the band’s PA mix. Lower crash cymbal tones and even audience clapping are among the important litmus tests for the entire spectrum, including low frequencies. Once they’re natural enough sounding at any playback volume, everything else usually is too or needs only the tiniest additional work. In WRB83 the paramount BLG goals have been achieved - naturally occurring balance among all instruments across all frequencies, from the lowest through the mids to the highest, all in the most accurate natural detail possible, all as the audience experienced them to the extent possible in a recording. The sterility, coldness and lack of "space" in soundboards and savage mixing of industry "live" releases are preferred by many, but if you’re looking for a real 1983 Weather Report ‘audience experience’ having as much or even more sonic detail you have found it. In that spirit also, PA system output nuances and venue ambience among many other things paramount to the depth and realism only a good AR can provide have been preserved. One of the factors so damaging to live recordings in official releases is compression, inflicted with ‘consumer-friendly’ playback systems as a type of red book standard and indeed needed in some of them because they simply can’t reproduce the kind of dynamic range in a recording like WRB83. No compression afflicts this or any BLG project, but they should still be a delight in most if not all playback environments. Tape noise reduction was considered for WRB83 but ruled out. In an earlier BLG project involving a 1981 Weather Report recording it was unavoidable, due to much greater tape hiss amplitude and a lower Weather Report PA output amplitude. It was highly successful, generating no artifact or signal damage, but digital noise reduction technology remains so primitive and dangerous it should not be attempted by anyone without exceptional hearing acuity and the needed skills - and then only when absolutely necessary. It wasn’t here. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS: Many thanks to Weather Report for so much incredible music over so many years! Special thanks to Gromek for artwork so perfectly evocative of the show’s energy and this effort. Endless, endless thanks to Barry for another miraculous AR, the expertise and bravery it required. Please share freely but never, even THINK of selling for any sum anywhere. Reseed or redistribute this product in its complete and original form only. Should we become aware of an incomplete reseed or distribution, we will publicly discredit the party responsible. Last but not least, this effort is dedicated to the memory of Joe Zawinul and Jaco Pastorius, whose musical gifts to us all just keep on giving. Lestat, April 2010 NOTES FROM BARRY: I don't remember anything about this concert and, as Lestat says, that says something by itself. It was uneventful except for the cable problem. The cables were immediately replaced, of course. This recording is listenable at concert volume on audiophile-quality equipment. No constraints are placed on the dynamic range as is the case in commercial live recordings. For this reason, the peaks may exceed the capabilities of consumer-quality audio systems resulting in distortion from frequencies that cannot be properly reproduced. To obtain audiophile-quality equipment at an affordable price, consider getting high-end headphones, a headphone amplifier, and a CD player from eBay or other sources of pre-owned audio equipment. You will find that it's well worth the expense. My goal in taping concerts has always been to achieve time travel. I want go back in time and relive musical experiences that were much too important to me to allow them be heard once and lost forever. And I want the experience to be available to everyone who loves the music. NOTES FROM GROMEK: This has been one of the easiest and possibly the easiest cover art projects I’ve done so far for a BLG package, and yet it came out as pleasingly as any of the others! It’s more of a Gromek cover layout than a Gromek cover design. The images used are either from the Internet or sent to me by other members of the BLG team, and appear in the layout "as is" with no visual editing. The text layout is all mine of course, as well as the time put into it ;-) When I sent the test layout to the BLG members they liked it so much that I was told not to change a thing and go with it as it is now! So that was an easy decision for me. I hope that you, the listeners, like it as much too. It’s not overdone, not too fancy, but we feel it is just right for the musical imagery created by Weather Report. So please, enjoy the show, the imagery and all the work that went into them. Gromek, April 2010 FROM THE WEATHER REPORT DISCOGRAPHY WEBSITE WWW.BINKIE.NET/WRDISC [edited here for brevity] "1982 was supposed to be an off-year for Weather Report, but things didn't work out that way. Their previous album, the self-titled Weather Report, was delayed several months and wasn't released until February 1982. As a consequence, a planned November 1981 tour had to be canceled, and the band's management scheduled a new tour in the spring of '82. But by then, Robert Thomas Jr., Peter Erskine and Jaco Pastorius had committed themselves elsewhere. Thomas was with Herbie Mann and Monty Alexander, among others; Jaco was leading his Word of Mouth big band, which included Erskine, on a tour of Japan; and Erskine was committed to a summer tour with Steps Ahead. Zawinul and Shorter found themselves in a bind, as Zawinul explained to Keyboard magazine's Greg Armbruster in 1984: By the time the [Weather Report] album was finished, we had no band at all. I was going back and forth to Austria because my mother was dying, and then we had problems with our management. As great as they were for other people, they didn't really know what to do with us. So it was spring 1982; we had a contract signed and we couldn't change the tour. We already had several lawsuits because we canceled the November tour. We had to go out on the road, otherwise we would have been finished as a band. About three weeks before the tour, I called [jazz violinist] Michael Urbaniak in New York. He goes to all the clubs and knows a lot of musicians. He said, 'I know this guy, Omar Hakim; he's a genius. He's the greatest drummer in New York.' I got in touch with Omar, and at that time he had a deal coming up with Warner Bros. to do his own record. He's also a singer and guitar player. He plays all the instruments and wanted to do his own thing, so he wasn't sure he could make it. The time for the tour grew closer and closer, and finally he said he would do it. We had never met, but I asked him to find a percussionist and a bass player, because we didn't know anybody who could do the tour with us. We trusted Omar to bring the right musicians. Omar got [bassist] Victor Bailey and [percussionist] José Rossy and we signed all three of them before we ever met them; we trusted Hakim. Two and a half weeks before the tour started, Omar, Victor, and José walked in and started rehearsing. We would've really been in trouble if they couldn't play. It was just one of those things, and I call this our real fortunate period, because we could have really been on ice. It was tough, and after a couple of weeks we hit the road. After one month playing in the United States, we went into the studio and recorded the Procession album. Then my mama passed away and my family spent some time in Austria. We didn't do anything for the rest of the year. In 1983 we did 86 concerts with this band and it really developed into something else. It was not such a flamboyant band as the one we had before but the compositions were really being played very correctly, interpreted correctly. [KB84]" In the spring of 1983 Zawinul compared the current line-up to the previous Pastorius-Erskine line-up. "It [the Pastorius-Erskine band] was one of the greatest bands of all time! That band was a hummer! But I'll tell you, I think this one is developing into an even better one. Before, we were a knock-out band, we'd dazzle people and they'd have certain expectations about us, particularly Jaco. Now I didn't mind all of Jaco's gimmicry. I thought it was strong musically and really entertaining for the crowd. But look at what's driving the band now: not any sort of gimmicry but the music itself." [BAM83] The material for Procession took shape during a month-long tour of the US. Shorter told Detroit Free Press reporter W. Kim Heron. "I call it a universal festive feeling," Shorter said of the album's feel. "It's not really carnival or a party time thing. But it's a celebration, that's the word (that ends the song) 'Where the Moon Goes.' The mood came very early and we had to come up with a word that would cover it without being misleading in any way, so the one we came up with was 'Procession.'" [DFP83] Heron's article went on to say, "The album is dominated by the thick layers of synthesized keyboards which have become the Weather Report trademark. For many, it's hard to listen to his Weather Report playing and not miss the more expansive and freewheeling style of Shorter's pre-Weather Report days. But Shorter sees all of his playing as a whole. 'It may not always be in the same form, but the same essence comes out,' said Shorter of his past and his present. 'You don't hang up your lightweight gloves when you move on to the heavyweight gloves, heavyweight meaning the larger audiences.'" [DFP83] Blair Jackson interviewed Zawinul and Shorter in mid-April 1983 for a BAM article: Jackson: Even with all the personnel changes Weather Report has undergone over the years, there is an unmistakable continuity from album to album. Is this because the two of you are responsible for nearly all the music? Zawinul: Yes, it's always been our music. And in the last few years, I've written more of it than Wayne, so it's followed a certain line. When I write something or when Wayne writes something we are usually writing the whole composition, even the other players' parts. Now that will change with different players and with differences in style, but the stock of the music is more or less the same as it was twelve years ago. Shorter: The concept of the band hasn't changed; we're sticking to the form of the original musical conversations we had. We haven't let that thing that happens to so many bands happen to us, which is they forget why they got together in the first place. [BAM83]" length expanded size cdr WAVE problems fmt ratio filename 9:25.965 325996004 B cxx -- ---xx flac 0.6388 01.flac 11:07.439 384444746 B cxx -- ---xx flac 0.6455 02.flac 11:54.284 411427442 B cxx -- ---xx flac 0.5887 03.flac 17:51.039 616918748 B cxx -- ---xx flac 0.6520 04.flac 11:57.704 413397440 B cxx -- ---xx flac 0.6021 05.flac 7:27.669 257857388 B cxx -- ---xx flac 0.6501 06.flac 22:21.679 772807304 B cxx -- ---xx flac 0.6345 07.flac 7:36.380 262874846 B cxx -- ---xx flac 0.6127 08.flac 14:08.271 488604302 B cxx -- ---xx flac 0.6422 09.flac 11:29.530 397169588 B cxx -- ---xx flac 0.5409 10.flac 19:00.000 656640044 B cxx -- ---xx flac 0.6376 11.flac 144:19.961 4988137852 B 0.6247 (11 files)
Media Size
0
Media Size Uncompressed
0
SHN Disc Count
0
WAV Disc Count
0
Date Circulated
Entered By
mvernon
Created At
Sat May 25 2019 10:23:26 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)
Updated At
Sat May 25 2019 10:23:26 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)
Checksums
ffp (download)
;flac fingerprints generated by xACT 2.46 on 2019-05-25 14:03:19 +0000 01.flac:52f47d1b28be313a128e80e07c9a3070 02.flac:a088948a00b38e7c19ebc986a8d2666d 03.flac:8a360109089996eb69fe573a091b4927 04.flac:3e37ebad88cd293c19307f0a7eff8729 05.flac:abf07aeabd86458cea4d749022a59f6b 06.flac:ee76c15fa601615dcfac5f9b00b1402b 07.flac:e3c96660df4afd07e115c2c966d8214c 08.flac:3447d2ef41beea05cd554e91fc8dcdc7 09.flac:a08e4bbc6180d14eef01ac3925a3644d 10.flac:34ea4b05ad3ba3f123569bed6733de8c 11.flac:61bcb7687ec435a7d8871f0451d95dd8
flac-md5 (download)
#MD5 checksums generated by xACT 2.46 on 2019-05-25 14:03:26 +0000 238722b97a561d7f6b7766087d37446f *01.flac a6b7cdc82af192a5e6ec31a331568f8b *02.flac 7675ed04075babf0011de04722084601 *03.flac e18e71704415a992f832004af5313294 *04.flac 24f697e5fad6c6f70739eefa46747f1d *05.flac 475f31a28279f638ba5fe82aff5961d1 *06.flac a9d2831b867b275735fddfe59feb158d *07.flac d8a104641eaa3746b1db16752b3a99a4 *08.flac 63683bf0345a9a31e899226d7c4c44b6 *09.flac be655403dfcc1a1eebc638895ee91c59 *10.flac b4c63cea39c26e15a5d8a46c68d438b2 *11.flac
No users own this source