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Eberhard Weber: Eberhard Weber: Colours
By
John McLaughlin
guitarb.1942

Mahavishnu Orchestra
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1971

Chick Corea
piano1941 - 2021

Return to Forever
band / ensemble / orchestraGerman bassist

Eberhard Weber
bassb.1940

Wolfgang Dauner
piano1935 - 2020

Joe Pass
guitar1929 - 1994

Stephane Grappelli
violin1908 - 1997
Weber brought a distinctive compositional styleas influenced by European classicism and contemporary minimalism as it was swing and improvisationto the table. The music had, at times, an ethereal quality that, despite the appearance of pianist Rainer Brüninghaus' synthesizer, was more spacious, more temporally unfettered and absolutely distanced, in its attention to space and nuance, from fusion music of the time. Equally important, Weber introduced, on the side-long "No Motion Picture," a custom-designed and unmistakable electro-bass; a five-string, electric upright bass that sounded like a cross between a double-bass and a fretless electric.
The combination of Weber's unique sound and compositional approach made Chlo? a jazz hit, garnering the prestigious German Grosser Deutcher Schallplattenpreis in 1975, and gaining the attention of musicians abroad, including fellow ECM artists vibraphonist

Gary Burton
vibraphoneb.1943

Ralph Towner
guitarb.1940

Pat Metheny
guitarb.1954

Jan Garbarek
saxophoneb.1947

Jaco Pastorius
bass, electric1951 - 1987

Weather Report
band / ensemble / orchestraThe result of Chlo?'s success was a near-overnight leap in visibility for Weber, as he found himself recruited for other albums including Burton's Ring (ECM, 1974) (which also announced Metheny's arrival to an international audience), Towner's Solstice (ECM, 1975) and, a couple years later, Metheny's sophomore effort, Watercolours (ECM, 1977). Following an American tour with Burton, Weber was faced with a burning desire to take Chlo? on the road and see where the music could go, and so he recruited Brüninghaus, Norwegian drummer

Jon Christensen
drums1943 - 2020

Charlie Mariano
saxophone, alto1923 - 2009
The result was a group that would become known as Colours. With one key personnel changethe replacement of Christensen with British drummer

John Marshall
drumsb.1952
Yellow Fields (1976)
From the opening notes of "Touch," it's clear that Weber had moved the concepts introduced on Chlo? both forward and into a more improvisationally rich space. As on Chlo?, Weber layers bowed bass to create a rich orchestral palette over a rhythmic foundation from Christensen that's characteristically elastic and backbeat-driven. A long-form theme occupies much of its five-minute duration, with soloing discrete, but not defined in the conventional jazz tradition of head-solo-head. With Brüninghaus' synthesizer buried into the mix, the track (and the album) possess an unmistakably contemporary tone that, 33 years later, avoids the dated sonics of groups like Weather Report and Return to Forever.Weber made another early decision that would further distinguish the group: Mariano, best known as an altoist, was to primarily play soprano saxophone, though he would also introduce further individuality on the ebony, double-reeded nagaswaram, featured heavily on "Sand-Glass." A simple, repetitive bass line sets up the song's premise, an early example of Colours' remarkable ability to extemporize both individually and as a group. Everyone finds their moment in the spotlight, most notably Mariano's nasal nagaswaram and Brüninghaus' electric piano; but it's Colours' collective improvisational acumen that allows it to expand such a spare idea into nearly 16-minutes of trance-inducing wonder.
The title track would become, along with Chlo?'s title track, one of Weber's most memorable compositions (both covered by Burton on Ring and his 1977 ECM follow-up, also featuring Weber, Passengers) . But whereas Burton would take "Yellow Fields" at a considerable clip, Weber keeps the tempo moderate. Like "The Colours of Chlo?," "Yellow Fields" possesses an opening theme, stated on Weber's uncannily vocal-like electro-bass, before leading into its main section, its complex changes setting into action a challenging navigational context for both Mariano (on soprano) and Brüninghauswhose swirling electric piano, Weber's rhythm-heavy but equally contrapuntal electro-bass and Christensen's temporal elasticity, created a group sound as recognizable as Weather Report, but with less over attention to virtuosity, even though every member of Colours was, indeed, a stunning player. Keyboard player

Joe Zawinul
keyboards1932 - 2007

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023
Overlooked in Weber's oeuvre, perhaps, but one of the most definitive closing tunes on any of his records, "Left Lane" opens, like "Sand-Glass," with a simple premise: an eight-note bass pattern over two chords that still manages to provide Brüninghaus with plenty to work with for one of his most exciting yet thematically focused solos of the set. When Mariano emerges on soprano, doubled by Brüninghaus' synth, it's to deliver another memorable melody that dissolves into a duet for Weber and Brüninghaus (this time on acoustic piano)an early example of the shared simpatico the pair would continue to explore on subsequent albums by Weber, and as co-members of Jan Garbarek's later groups beginning in 1988. Brüninghaus' classicism is especially evident when Weber drops out, making it curious that he's never achieved greater acclaim, despite two outstanding solo albums of his own Freigeweht (ECM, 1981) and the award-winning Continuum (ECM, 1984). A final section, with Weber and Christensen driving a propulsive 9/4 section that soars with Mariano's soprano solo and some of Christensen's most viscerally exciting playing, leads into a final electric piano solo from Brüninghaus, before a repeated phrase, first on soprano, then overdubbed with nagaswaram, ascends skyward as the track brings Yellow Fields to a conclusive fade-out.
While Weber doesn't avoid the use of overdubbing to expand the album's soundscape, Yellow Fields was, and remains, a remarkable calling card from a group that's easily withstood the test of time.
Silent Feet (1978)
The increasingly busy Jon Christensen, who had becomeafter emerging in the early 1970s on albums by Garbarek and guitarist
Terje Rypdal
guitarb.1947

Ian Carr
trumpet1933 - 2009

Soft Machine
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1966

Allan Holdsworth
guitar, electric1948 - 2017

Elton Dean
saxophone1945 - 2006
What Marshall brings to Silent Feet, almost from the start of the opening "Seriously Deep," is more overt virtuosity, a more direct kind of energy and a considerable change in texture. As opposed to Christensen's dark, splashy cymbal work, Marshall's was more delicate; but once the 18-minute track makes its way into Mariano's first solo of the set, Marshall's more unbridled power becomes inherently clear, as he lifts the group's energy level beyond anything heard on Yellow Fields. That said, unlike Yellow Fields' similarly lengthy "Sand-Glass," "Seriously Deep" was compositionally developed, with themes coming and going between more decided solo sections. As a soloist, Weber had evolved considerably; while in later years he would turn to greater scripting, here he was on the ascent in his improvisational prowess, a lithe player combining dexterity and lyrical intent with visceral glissandi to make him, to this day, one of the instrument's great soloists, and one whose electro-bass permitted him a facility not available to the more unwieldy double-bass. He solos for four glorious minutes before turning things over to Mariano who, on soprano, again asserts his position as a player who, recently deceased, was well-known but absolutely not reaching the larger audience he deserved.
If Yellow Fields was the calling card, to coin a phrase of King Crimson's guitarist

Robert Fripp
guitarb.1946
Opening with another lengthy bass solo, but this time in another empathic duet with Brüninghaus, Weber again takes four minutes to bring the rest of the group in to state the title track's simple but, as ever, stunningly effective and memorable melody. When Weber played a 65th birthday concert in 2005 with a full symphony orchestradocumented on Stages of a Long Journey (ECM, 2007)it was fitting that he chose the buoyant "Silent Feet" to open the performance, though in that case with Garbarek on saxophone. But here, the original stops on a dime after yet another potent solo from Mariano, moving into another segment of Weber's by now characteristically episodic approach to compositiona repeated 10/4 figure with a concluding rest that frames another singable melody, leading almost inevitably to a return to the song's optimistic main theme.
Mariano's flutes open the more abstract "Eyes That Can See in the Dark," Silent Feet's closerand yet another example of ECM producer

Little Movements (1980)
Two years and plenty of touring would take place before Colours recorded its final disc, 1980's Little Movements, opening with another classic Weber composition that the bassist would revisit twice moreon his return to small ensemble playing following a 16-year hiatus on Endless Days (ECM, 2001) and Stages of a Long Journey. "The Last Stage of a Long Journey" sets the tone for Colours' most subdued record, though by no means an unimpressive one. Another hummable melody over changes that approach song form, "The Last Stage of a Long Journey" also finds Weber putting down his electro-bass and, for the most part, returning to double-bass. His upper register arco, in tandem with Mariano's soft soprano, creates a gentle harmonic backwash behind Brüninghaus' tender acoustic piano solo.Little Movements also distinguishes itself as the only Colours disc to feature a composition from someone other than Weber. Brüninghaus' "Bali" would become one of the group's most compelling live tracks; one that begins seemingly where "The Last Stage of a Long Journey" leaves off; a rubato opening of long tones and Mariano's spare soprano taking its time before heading into the album's first sign of greater energy, with the pianist's lyrical writing a strong dovetail for Weber's own. A backbeat-driven solo section for Mariano links Colours with another groundbreaking ECM group that merged styles, while avoiding the by now dirty word "fusion," Pat Metheny Group. But while Metheny's writing with keyboardist

Lyle Mays
keyboards1953 - 2020

The closing "'No Trees?' He Said" is, along with Yellow Fields' "Touch," a rare Colours track to clock in at a brief five minutes, and while it's another feature for Brüninghaus' fine acoustic piano work, it's largely through-composed, albeit with no shortage of interpretive freedom . Thematically another strong closer, it looks forward, more than any other Colours track, to Weber's predilection for scripting on Endless Days.
It may seem like the group ending on something of a whimper rather than a bang, but Little Movements, taken in context with the other discs in the Colours box, suggests that Weber may have had a relatively consistent group in mind when he first put one together to tour The Colours of Chlo?, but he was not interested in standing still. From Yellow Fields's syntactic breaking of new ground to Silent Feet's greater exuberance and Little Movements' compositional focus, listening to the Colours box in sequence reveals a group of players unified in their leader's vision, but evolving over the course of its six-year existence. More importantly, in retrospect Colours emerges as a group that, avoiding the characteristics that ultimately time stamped its American counterparts, is just as significant as any of them. ">
Track Listing
CD1 (Yellow Fields): Touch; Sand-Glass; Yellow Fields; Left Lane.
CD2 (Silent Feet): Seriously Deep; Silent Feet; Eyes That See in the Dark.
CD3 (Little Movements): The Last Stage of a Long Journey; Bali; A Dark Spell; Little Movements; "No Trees? He Said.
Personnel
Eberhard Weber
bassCharlie Mariano
saxophone, altoRainer Bruninghaus
pianoJon Christensen
drumsJohn Marshall
drumsEberhard Weber: bass; Rainer Brüninghaus: keyboards (CD1), piano (CD2, CD3), synthesizer (CD2, CD3); Charlie Mariano: soprano saxophone, nagaswaram (CD1), flutes (CD2, CD3); Jon Christensen: drums (CD1); John Marshall: drums (CD2, CD3), percussion (CD3).
Album information
Title: Eberhard Weber: Colours | Year Released: 2009 | Record Label: ECM Records
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