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Eberhard Weber - Works '1985

Works
ArtistEberhard Weber Related artists
Album name Works
Country
Date 1985
GenreJazz
Play time 00:44:40
Format / Bitrate Stereo 1420 Kbps / 44.1 kHz
MP3 320 Kbps
Media CD
Size 233 mb (+3\%rec.)
PriceDownload $1.95
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Tracks list

Our tenth stop along the “Works” railway attests to the unique
attunement of Eberhard Weber’s talents as bassist and composer to the ECM
universe. In the former capacity, he contributed an unmistakable style to myriad
recordings as sideman, and by the time of this compilation had already
established an indelible footprint. A particularly evocative example comes to us
by way of guitarist Ralph Towner’s 1975 masterpiece, Solstice. In the
track “Sand,” Weber’s cello and bass render textures of
glass, water, and stone alike. Jan Garbarek’s soprano saxophone is a
seagull crying overhead as Towner’s 12-string laps the shore with phases
of time and Jon Christensen’s colorful percussion sets Weber coolly
aflame.
Even more substantial offerings are to be found in Weber’s own work as
leader, as in “More Colours” from his 1974 debut, The Colours Of
Chloë. Over the cellos of the Stuttgart Südfunk Symphony Orchestra, he
paints with his own cello like a water droplet hitting the water in time-lapse
sequence. The piano of Rainer Brüninghaus traces the ripples of its
disappearance, as if to carve its memory in mindful stone. It’s a
configuration echoed in “Moana II” (The Following Morning, 1977), in
which Weber’s bass, in search of a beat, finds only electroacoustic
expanse. Further colors abound in 1978’s Yellow Fields, of which
“Touch” evokes the blush of first love through the lenses of Charlie
Mariano (soprano saxophone), Brüninghaus (keyboards), and Christensen
(drums). The music is parthenogenetic and eternal, spotlighting Mariano’s
purposeful lines and Christensen’s blinding cymbal work. From the light
to the night, we find ourselves endowed with “Eyes That Can See In The
Dark.” Interpreted by the same instrumentation, though now with John
Marshall replacing Christensen, this masterpiece from 1978’s Silent Feet
is easily one of Weber’s crowning achievements for its joyful register.
“A Dark Spell,” from 1980’s Little Movements, continues in
that vein. Its explosion of piano and cymbals sets up a smooth ride across
flatter terrain, as Weber’s fluid bass and Brüninghaus’s
pianism glide—sometimes crossing paths, sometimes in
parallel—toward a groovy, dramatic finish.
Perhaps more than any other of the “Works” series, this one shows
the evolution not only of an artist in his prime but also of music itself at a
watershed moment in recorded history, traced in the orthography of a label
unafraid to open the very doors it builds.


Tracks:

01. Sand (Weber) - 4:13
02. A Dark Spell (Weber) - 8:26
03. More Colours (Weber) - 6:46
04. Touch (Weber) - 5:04
05. Eyes That Can See in the Dark (Weber) - 12:24
06. Moana II (Weber) - 7:47