AUTOR

Monday, June 20, 2016

Pat Metheny Group-Travels (1983)

In 1982, the contract between the Pat Metheny Group and the German record label ECM was about to expire; in fact, it would end two years later. However, the contract stipulated that the American musician still had three more works to deliver to his label. A year later, Metheny wanted to capture his live shows on an official recording, so it was decided to release the double live album "Travels" in 1983. This double album was recorded during the second half of 1982 on the North American tour following the album "Offramp", in the cities of Philadelphia, Sacramento, and Dallas. With this release, Pat Metheny fulfilled one of the recordings he owed to ECM, and at the same time, ensured a brilliant epilogue to his time with the German label. For this tour, Pat Metheny had expanded his band with Brazilian percussionist and singer Naná Vasconcelos, whose presence lent the songs a greater atmospheric dimension, thanks to his captivating backing vocals and subtle Latin touch in the percussion. The rest of the band consisted of his regular members, including keyboardist and Pat Metheny's right-hand man, Lyle Mays, drummer Danny Gottlieb, and bassist Steve Rodby, while Pat himself handled acoustic and electric guitars and guitar synthesizer. At that time, Pat Metheny had not yet steered his music towards rock influences, although some of his earlier work contained progressive compositions, always within a jazz framework. Tracks like “Phase Dance” and “San Lorenzo”, however, are imbued with a truly symphonic and progressive grandeur, where, as usual, Pat Metheny pours all his feeling into his memorable solos, all accompanied by passionate piano and synthesizer melodies, brilliantly executed by Mays. “Travels” is full of enchanting moments, as demonstrated by the dramatic and epic “As Falls Wichita Falls, So Falls Wichita Falls”. As a counterpoint to all of this, the closest to rock music is found in the opening track, “Are You Going With Me?”, one of Pat Metheny’s most charismatic songs, with its famous guitar synthesizer solo. With “Travels”, Pat Metheny would not achieve the number one ranking of his previous “Offramp” on the Billboard Jazz charts, achieving “only” a commendable eighth place, however he would repeat the top award for the best Jazz Fusion performance of the year in 1984 at the Grammy Awards.