Tale Spinnin' - Weather Report

Tale Spinnin'

Weather Report

  • Genre: Jazz
  • Release Date: 1975-01-01
  • Explicitness: notExplicit
  • Country: USA
  • Track Count: 6

  • ℗ 1975 Sony Music Entertainment Inc.

Tracks

Title Artist Time
1
Man In the Green Shirt Weather Report 6:28 USD 1.29
2
Lusitanos Weather Report 7:24 USD 1.29
3
Between the Thighs Weather Report 9:33 USD 1.29
4
Badia Weather Report 5:20 USD 1.29
5
Freezing Fire Weather Report 7:29 USD 1.29
6
Five Short Stories Weather Report 6:56 USD 1.29

Reviews

  • The WR bridge album

    5
    By giantkb
    This is an important album if you are a WR fan. It was a bridge from Mysterious Traveler where the melodic structures became more defined and mainstream oriented to the Jaco years and Black Market. To knock any effort by this group of innovators should be outlawed. WR should be required study for music composition students. The whole idea of Jazz is to expand musical possibilities....as long as we have musicians who are willing to do this....we will continue to inspire future generations.
  • weather report tale spinnin

    5
    By avantgroidd
    The review above is clearly intended for Weather Report's debut featuring drummer Alphonse Mouzon and the late Zawinul's sickly sweet 'Orange Lady'. WR's first was a fine album in its own right no doubt. it's just not the same thing as 'Tale Spinnin'-- a bona fide undersung classic. Mainly methinks because it came between the stellar 'Mysterious Traveler' which preceded, and Jaco's bigtime debut on 'Black Market', which followed. Be all that as it may, TS is as meaty bouncy and maaaaaad phonky as any album WR ever made.Not least thanx to the deep diving whirlygig pocket of bassist Alphonso Johnson, (Weather Report's second 'Alpho-'male), power n' finesse drummer Ndugu Leon Chancler and percussion wizard number 3(after Airto and Dom), Alyrio Lima. TS is also as relentlessly lyrical as any WR too thanks to Zawinul and Shorter's superlative, cliche-allergic compositional chops. Why Zawinul's 'Badia' and 'Five Short Stories' haven't become modern jazz standards is damn near attributable to xenophobia (though you can hear those tracks influence in every movie soundtrack composed since that attempts to conjure a now-generic hybrid Asian North African Middle Eastern atmosphere). Shorter's bullseye tenor, as paradoxically buoyant and melancholic as ever, especially slays on 'Five'. Overall there's a bubbly, organic effervescence and transparency going on here that was, I think, lost on subsequent albums--as superb, ( and even more rockin',in spots)as some of those were, Heavy Weather notwithstanding. But this version of WR sounds especially 'in tune' with itself, more relaxed and comfortable in its skin than others, and therefore more prone to self-editing and insuring grandstanding got kept to a minimum. In hiphop terms TS just has mad-flow, not to mention a surfeit of rich,succulent melody,wicked 'groove-ocity' and seductive sonic ear candy to keep you constantly tickled, animated and intrigued. If this is fusion, nobody ever did it more elegantly,musically or flavorfully.
  • album date

    5
    By slzavec
    This album was released in 1975 - I-tunes, please fix....
  • Tals Spinnin

    5
    By forangels
    The description of this record is not correct you can see Ndugu on the far left and the great Alfonso Johnson next to him delivering the funkiest line up, and melodic at the same time. Great music. I loved Joco too but I really missed Alfonso when he left. Dom um Romano adds some great Brazilian rhythms. A must buy for Weather Report fans. We will miss you Joe Zawinul RIP
  • See "Between the Thighs"

    5
    By RJ_Daya
    Listen to this...an incredible composition. How does electronic jazz get any better than this song! Great album...May love Black Market in whole a bit more.
  • bad info

    3
    By handsomerbob
    this album does not include erskine or pastorius. It is not a bad album, very rhythmic. The cut "man in the green shirt" is worth the purchase price alone

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