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Leaving Planet Earth: Amazon's Wayne Shorter Documentary Zero Gravity

Courtesy Rovi
He knows the power of the invisible world.
Matilda Buck
Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023
In the first part (or portal), we see Shorter and his brother Alan, portrayed in black and white by a pair of child actors, at play in a vacant lot near their house. There they would reinvent themselves as characters in all kinds of scenarios. They often visited the Adams movie theatre in Newark, and when they got home, they would "sing back" as much of the music as they could remember. Later, as bebop took hold of their imaginations, they styled themselves Doc Strange and Mr. Weird, mooching around the neighborhood in long overcoats and hats with the brims cut right back.
This episode ("Newark Flash in NYC") covers Shorter's career up to 1971, including his time with the Jazz Messengers and

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Weather Report
band / ensemble / orchestra
Milton Nascimento
guitar and vocalsb.1942

Steely Dan
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1972
The story of his life is told through interviews and images; there is no authorial voice. Dorsey Alavi managed to film everyone who was still around, family and friends as well as musicians. Where there are no available interviews, the director has found terrific archive film or video footage. In the section that relates the tragedy of Shorter's second wife Ana Maria's death in a plane crash, Alavi has somehow got hold of the audio from the control tower. Where no archive material existed, as in much of the first part of the documentary, she uses clever recreations and animations. The most striking of these accompanies a psychedelic sequence reminiscent of Disney's Fantasia, full of fairies and other mythological beings. "[Wayne] knows the power of the invisible world," comments a long-time family friend. "Fairies do work when everybody else is asleep."
The Mr. Weird moniker was truer than Wayne realized as a child: even as an old man, he was fascinated by fairies. "You're even weirder than I previously thought you were," comments his friend, the astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson more than 70 years later, after Wayne shows him his huge collection of fairy and action hero figures. It was this childlike quality that fueled his art, as his early collaborator

Art Blakey
drums1919 - 1990
So yes, by any normal standard Wayne Shorter was weird. But more to the point, the documentary convincingly portrays him as a genius who was barely of this world, so preoccupied was he with his infinitely inventive and unfettered imagination. A gifted visual artist in the comic-book style, Shorter brought this skill to his 2018 triple album Emanon, which was accompanied by his own 74-page graphic novel.
He became an adherent of Nichiren Buddhism, which not only influenced his world-view, but helped him get through a number of personal tragedies. Despite his otherworldliness, he seems to have been a warm and lovable human being, who

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940
The great man was a brilliant mimic: whenever he tells a story involving Miles Davis, his voice becomes Miles' urgent, whispered rasp. Art Blakey likewise springs to life through Wayne's gravelly rendition of his voiceparticularly in the memorable scene where Miles calls up during a Jazz Messengers rehearsal and tries to poach Shorter for his own band.
It helped, from the filmmaker's point of view, that Shorter was an avid film buff, since this allows the inclusion of clips from The Red Shoes (1948) and The Giant Spider Invasion (1975)the latter a hilarious piece of dreck that Shorter excitedly called pianist

Danilo Pérez
pianob.1966
Alavi and her editors have done a terrific job of editing the film down to a manageable length, to the essentials. As a result, it is never boring. Actually, it would have been nice to spend a little more time on Shorter's early years with Blakey and Miles. But there is so much to talk about that the time goes by in a flash (Newark Flash, incidentally, being the nickname Shorter was given around the time he first came to the attention of

Sonny Stitt
saxophone1924 - 1982
He loved working with gifted women, collaborating at different times with

Joni Mitchell
vocalsb.1943

Terri Lyne Carrington
drumsb.1965

Esperanza Spalding
bassb.1984
Although at times a little too cosmic, the film is always a joy to watch, and gives us the most all-encompassing view we are ever likely to get of Wayne Shorter.
Tags
Film Review
Wayne Shorter
Peter Jones
Jazz Messengers
Miles Davis
Weather Report
Milton Nascimento
steely dan
Art Blakey
Danilo Perez
Sonny Stitt
Joni Mitchell
Terri Lyne Carrington
Esperanza Spalding
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