Black market (Zawinul) Zawinul has spoken often of the inverted keyboard that he played on "black market." It was made possible by a feature on the arp 2600 that allowed inverting the keyboard voltage so that the upper portion of the keyboard played the lower sounds and vice versa. Len lyons, in a 1977 keyboard magazine interview, asked zawinul why he experimented with it: Because it was a challenge for me to play in a mirrored system. It's good for the mind. If you improvise on chords, for example, You've got to transpose, and your mind has to be very, very fast. I was recording one day at home on the inverted setup, and that's When the song "black market" was put together. After listening to it, i played the melodies on the straight keyboard, and it didn't Sound as good as it did the mirrored way. Then i had to write the melody down and relearn it on the inverted keyboard, because at First it was improvised. On-stage, i play the first melody of the song with the right hand on the inverted keyboard, and the left hand Accompanies on the rhodes until after the first six notes into the bridge. Then the right hand plays the contrapuntal chord voicings On the polyphonic [oberheim] synthesizer. The left hand continues the melody where the right hand stopped, putting a chord or two On the rhodes into the spaces. It takes a little while to get used to thinking in the mirrored system. Only c and f# are the same as On the straight keyboard. B becomes c#, bb becomes d, a becomes eb, and so on. I also play chords on the bridge of "black Market" on the oberheim. The chord is going upwards and the melody is going downwards--in contrary motion. It's beautiful to Challenge yourself visually. It makes you play new things. Zawinul explained to conrad silvert that "when you change keys and play it with the left hand, it's very difficult. But it changes the Rhythmic and melodic feeling of the music, like a mirror image. It's almost like going into the fourth dimension, like being on both Sides of that wall simultaneously." In terms of the character of the sound zawinul achieved on "black market," lyons asked him if there were sounds he could only get With a particular instrument. "yes," zawinul replied. "the sound on 'black market' is one i can only get on the arp, not because of The reversed voltages, but because of a certain twang that only the arp has. If you check out the melody of 'black market,' you'll Hear something unique, something you can't really recognize." Zawinul went on to say, "i try to stay away from electronic sounds And go for natural sounds instead. They don't have to be known natural sounds. On 'black market,' for example, the sound isn't One that's known--you wouldn't recognize it as anything else--but it is acoustic. It sounds like some kind of native instrument." in 1984 he explained, "on 'black market' the melody i played was totally different, and it was hip. The filter moves through It another way and you get those different shadows and shades. It takes a lot of thinking." In other interviews zawinul has said the sound of "black market" goes back to his accordion-playing childhood. "when i came up [as a child] and played the accordion, i immediately started playing with the instrument. I took the soundboard off and glued felt Into it. I got the sound of 'black market.' i did the same thing on the bass side, where the buttons are and then i reversed the Whole thing, to get the melodies with the bass notes. Imagination had limits in the older days. Now it doesn't." And, "with The accordion you have these different registers that change the sound continuously. I took pieces of felt and covered the sound Holes and glued it in different ways to give it a nasal sound. It's like filtering, and it's the same as the first arp sounds i had, you Know, these little woodwind sounds." Regarding the voices heard at the beginning of "black market," alex acuna explained their origin to zawinul biographer brian Glasser. "the song 'black market,' at the start there's the sound of many people talking, like a market. Joe copied that from a tape Of mine. I had that tape playing in my room when we were in adjoining rooms on tour, and he came in and said, 'hey, alex, let me Hear that!' then he borrowed the tape, and it's now 'black market.' that's a tape that i made in my house with my family, live. I Was listening to music and i was recording music, and my family and children were in the background--that's there voices. He never Told me that, but i knew it because i can recognize it." Both chester thompson and narada michael walden performed on "black market." "on the first song on the album there are two Drummers from two different days," thompson told glasser. "if you listen carefully, the sound completely changes in the middle, Where the music changes. The feel goes from straight-eight to a sort of swing feel. Most people don't catch it at first, though once You hear it it's so obvious it's quite funny." Walden told glasser: "it starts out with chester, then there's a hard edit onto me when The song changes and switches gears all of a sudden. I play on from there through the whole jam, just smokin'. Wayne's solo was Cut live. I played on the whole song, but i think he wanted to keep the opening with chester because it was so relaxed. Then he Wanted a big short of fire when he cut me in. We maybe played it two or three times. It wasn't too many times, because the fire was So hot. It was hot, man! I was surprised when it came out they didn't use the whole version i cut, but i think it's brilliant the way he Did it. I think it's right." |