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Weather Report Concert

Karl Marx Theater (Havana, Cuba)

Weather Report concert at Karl Marx Theater on Mar 2, 1979

03.02.1979
Tracks: 1 / Total Time: 8:13
Catalog: King Biscuit

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Concert Summary

For the first time since the Cuban Revolution in 1959, when Fidel Castro first gained power, the less combative stance of the Carter administration opened an important diplomatic window between Cuba and the United States. After two decades, the U.S. ban on travel to and from Cuba was lifted, creating new diplomatic and cultural exchange opportunities. Sensing the time was right, CBS Records, in conjunction with the U.S. State Department, staged an international coup by organizing an unprecedented three-night series of concerts in the Cuban capital of Havana. Dubbed "Havana Jam," this…entire summary

Concert Set List

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  • Anonymous | Tuesday, October 20, 2009 | 9:46 am

    Yeah!!

  • drumzzandmore | Thursday, July 09, 2009 | 8:04 pm

    Weather report is sorely missed. Zawinul,Patorius R.I.P, was there any more interesting band than this one? They really made wonderful music, and always evolving with Gravett,Acuna,Mouzon,Erskine,Pastorius and Miroslav. Love anything and everything by these champs. Another magical group gone.

  • Reverend C.E. | Monday, March 09, 2009 | 12:28 am

    Hey, kingero, pay attention before you comment, ok? Read the credits, this was a band without a guitar. Jaco did some seriously twisted shit with his bass that may easily be misinterpreted as a guitar but you kinda missed the boat to Havana there....

  • Anonymous | Sunday, March 08, 2009 | 7:08 pm

    actually the only thing correct about your statement is about the drums coming in faster than the keyboard. The keys locked in immediately with the drums. The next melodic phrase was played by the bass,not a guitar, and the phrasing was in time with the drums, though done in an ad lib fashion very similar to the original album version. You should at least be able to at least identify correctly the instruments in a band and be familiar with their recorded work before critiquing. I saw this band play the same arrangement in Santa Barbara. Jaco was singing the third synth part that was on the album. Amazing not only in being able to sing that high but also while playing the bass line.

  • Anonymous | Sunday, March 08, 2009 | 6:58 pm

    Uuuugh...... there is no guitar.

  • kingergo | Sunday, March 08, 2009 | 6:11 pm

    The first minute sucks. They were on 3 different metronome settings! Keyboards came in slow. Drums came in fast. The guitar tried to go in between. Not until the bass came in that he glued everyone together. The warbling did most of the counting to create the groove. Thanks Jaco. It did not sound like your fretless Fender.

  • Reverend C.E. | Sunday, March 08, 2009 | 3:09 pm

    Me? Don't give a flying fuck about the politics, just the music. These folks had the music world by the short-and-curlies and everybody since then has had to pay close attention to what they put out there, especially this tune. Say what you will about Jaco's scatting, the whole thing hangs together and absolutely grooves you into another world! RIP, we will be lucky to see/hear anything of this caliber again, Weather Report will be forever missed.....

  • tmansrp | Saturday, March 07, 2009 | 8:50 pm

    Re: the Peter Erskine quote in Bevisvamp's message, "The take on "8:30" is identical to the one on Havana Jam...", Erskine was referring to the version of Black Market that appeared on HJ, not this track. This excellent performance of Birdland differs significantly from the one on 8:30. Like that version, Erskine reshapes the groove to make the song swing to great affect, and all 4 players are clearly rockin' the house, but I agree that Jaco's excessive vocal noodlings are a bit over the top. They're equally annoying on the version of Birdland found on the live DVD included in the Weather Report box set, Forecast Tomorrow. That, however, is the only blemish on the otherwise stellar concert recorded for German television in 1978. Highly recommended for all WR enthusiasts and worth the price of the box set on its own.

  • Eeklair | Saturday, March 07, 2009 | 6:26 pm

    @Bevisvamp: Typical politics for the day. I wouldn't be surprised if they hijacked the introduction and slapped it to the 8:30 recording. This sounds like it has a touch less reverb added over the 8:30 version... Possibly even a different mix altogether.. I wish WV had the entire Havana set. And thank god for this forum - say no more.

  • Bevisvamp | Friday, March 06, 2009 | 6:07 pm

    I'm not sure how much of the contents of the two Havana Jam albums mentioned above are genuinely from the Havana gigs. Peter Erskine of Weather Report stated "The take on "8:30" is identical to the one on Havana Jam, because the version we played in Havana sounded pretty crappy. Since the band was in the middle of mixing 8:30 at the time, the decision was made to just send CBS the version which was already mixed from the Long Beach concert. Completely identical, despite some reviewers' contrasting analyses of the two performances." .The McLaughlin/Pastorius/Williams Trio of Doom material has similar problems. John McLaughlin "CBS called me about two weeks later and said, "So, we're going to put it out." And I said, "You're going to put what out' You're not going to put that out. You put it out over my dead body. That's terrible." So they asked if we wanted to re-record it over at Columbia Studios on 52nd Street."

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