Miroslav Vitous (Weather Report)

By Thomas Semioli 

 

He is an icon of the instrument, and nearly competed in the Olympics as a free style swimmer!

 

A protégé who studied at the Prague Conservatory and Berklee College of Music, Miroslav Vitous arrived in New York City in 1967 and immediately found himself on the bandstand and recording studio with Chick Corea, Miles Davis, Freddie Hubbard, and Herbie Mann, among others.

 

Akin to many young jazz players in the late 60s, Vitous was open to electrified rock and rhythm & blues influences, which landed him a gig with Weather Report in 1971. As the anchor of Joe Zawinul and Wayne Shorter’s watershed ensemble, Vitous waxed slabs which are considered among the most influential jazz fusion history: Weather Report (1971), I Sing The Body Electric (1972) , Sweetnighter (1973) which also featured Andrew White on bass, and Mysterious Traveler (1974) which also featured Alphonso Johnson on electric.

 

Inspired by his native Czech folk music, along with such players as Scott LaFaro, Ron Carter, and Gary Peacock, Miroslav is a  prolific solo recording artist, band member, collaborator, academic, and educator – among other titles, whose curricula vitae spans post-bop, fusion, avant-garde, big band and permutations thereof.

 

Among the more adventurous releases under his own name includes Universal Syncopations (2006) wherein Vitous bases his compositions on “symphonic samples” which he accrued over a seven-year period.

 

Vitous also leads a Weather Report repertory ensemble which continues the sonic, harmonic, and rhythmic explorations of the famed collective.

 

Dig Miroslav…

 

Weather Report Live 1971: https://youtu.be/iRJC5WeeNSI

 

“Synthesizers Dance” https://youtu.be/7RmXGzTUyOQ 

 

Project Q Live 2013 https://youtu.be/gLcBOwvBn1s

 

Chick Corea “Now He Sings, Now He Sobs” https://youtu.be/eVeGH6JC-eE

 

From Universal Syncopations ll:

 

“Universal Evolution” https://youtu.be/yNoSADkgHLo

 

“Solar Giant” https://youtu.be/TE0B6iTAhiU

 

Bunny Brunel (Chick Corea, Wayne Shorter)

Courtesy of ESP Courtesy of ESP

Courtesy of ESP

A giant of the electric bass in a primarily jazz-fusion context, Bernard “Bunny” Brunel has waxed seminal sides and performed on stage with Al Di Meola, Mike Stern, Joe Farrell, Chick Corea, Herbie Hancock, Tony Williams, Al Jarreau, and Wayne Shorter to cite a select few.

In addition to his tenure in fusion super-group CAB with Tony McAlpine and Dennis Chambers, Bunny is an award winning solo recording artist, writer, clinician, arranger, soundtrack composer (The Unforgiven with Clint Eastwood; Highlander, among others), bass designer, and educator.  Brunel cites his influences as Sam Jones, Ray Brown, Ron Carter, Eddie Gomez, Miroslav Vitous and Stanley Clarke.

Bunny’s weapons of choice include Fender, Carvin, ESP, Yamaha, the GIBSON Bunny Brunel model, EUB upright, and LaBella round-wound strings.

Dig Bunny with CAB in 2017 https://youtu.be/04iFeMqmLlw

Dig Bunny with Chick and Al Jarreau “Spain” https://youtu.be/JmNd83q2PLc

Dig Bunny rendering the title track to his 1979 slab Touch https://youtu.be/QVrU4zJu8Cc

Cecil McBee (Alice Coltrane, Wayne Shorter)

Cecil McBee_opt.jpg Cecil McBee_opt.jpg

“I have to be on the stage. That’s when it comes to me… period.”

He started out on clarinet, then took up the doghouse at age seventeen, honed his craft in military bands in the 1950s, paid his dues as Dinah Washington’s musical director for a few years, migrated to Detroit’s burgeoning jazz scene in the early 60s, then relocated to New York City a few years later to emerge as one of the most versatile and prolific bassists in modern jazz.

An educator, composer, and recording artist, Cecil McBee’s canon spans seminal works by Charles Lloyd, Wayne Shorter, Yusef Lateef, Pharoah Sanders, Alice Coltrane, Joe Farrell, Leon Thomas, Lonnie Liston Smith, and Norman Connors to cite an extremely select few.

McBee’s work in the late 1960s “soul jazz” movement was watershed, as he rendered melodic passages and deep grooves that inspired both upright and electric players.

Dig Cecil with…

Leon Thomas “The Creator Has a Master Plan” https://youtu.be/uoYnvw-97II

Alice Coltrane “Journey to Satchidananda” https://youtu.be/TQtEFdyhgdE

Pharoah Sanders “Summun Bukmun Umyun” https://youtu.be/0qHLbGALJZg

Yusef Lateef “Juba Juba” https://youtu.be/LNXq4OE0Vw0

Norman Connors “Dance of Magic” https://youtu.be/NYCb8J6h-0s