

Sequenced by Reinhard Bock together with a transcription of Jaco’s solo Version by Jaco Pastorius, rearranged by Reinhard Bock together with a transcription Sequenced by Reinhard Bock including a transcription Sequenced by Reinhard Bock with Shorter’s and Zawinul’s solo The Chicken Jaco Birthday A Remark You Made The legendary electric bassist Jaco Pastorius recorded this powerhouse tune and arranger Kris Berg has adapted it for the Jazz Band Series. Whoa, hold on to your feathers! If you want energy and excitement and a funky groove, then check out Kris Berg's chart, The Chicken. For big band, with optional tuba, flute, french horn. Jaco Pastorius - Soul Intro + the Chicken (Full score and parts)! - Free download as PDF File (.pdf), Text File (.txt) or read online for free. Mind For Music free online sheet music, music transcriptions, arrangements and practice tools. The Chicken Jaco Pastorius 5 9 Trumpet 1 Trumpet 2 Trumpet 3 Trumpet 4 Tpt.2 Tpt.1 Tpt.3 Tpt.4 Tpt.1 Tpt.2 Tpt.3 Tpt.4. The legendary electric bassist Jaco Pastorius recorded this powerhouse tune and arranger Kris Berg has adapted it for the Jazz Band.


As a bonus, there’s also a pair of contributions made by Pastorius to other artists’ albums – “Nativity” from Airto Moreira’s I’m Fine, How Are You? and “Mood Swings,” from Mike Stern’s Upside Downside – and, to close out the two-disc set – a heretofore-unreleased performance of Charlie Parker’s “Donna Lee.By Alfred James Ellis / arr. The 22-track collection is predominantly culled from the trio of albums Pastorius recorded for WB: 1981’s studio effort, Word of Mouth, his big-band concert album The Birthday Concert (recorded, as you might’ve guessed, on his birthday…his 30th, to be exact, in ‘81), and Invitation, another concert album, but this one recorded in Japan in ’82. Since we doubt if you thought for a moment that we’d suddenly started talking about him by coincidence, it probably won’t come as any sort of surprise to you that, yes, we’ve got a brand new anthology which provides both new and old fans with the opportunity to explore Pastorius’s work during his tenure with Warner Brothers Records.

If you consider yourself a bass player and you don’t hold Jaco Pastorius in the highest esteem, then we can only presume you’ve never really listened to the man, because he’s one of those guys whose work with the instrument was so unique and groundbreaking that it’s hard to hear it without wanting to drop to your knees and begin recitation of the phrase, “I’m not worthy!”
