| From Ira's Bulletin on Myspace.com (which is how I found the recording):
New tunes posted with Jaco Patorious featuring Joe Diorio, Jaco Pastorious , Steve Bagby.
One night at a session for my Ira Sullivan album recorded in '76, Jaco showed up with a rare instrument, a baritone bass guitar that was just custom built for him by a fan. Although it sounded like a bass and he played it like a bass, it actually resembled on of those large acoustic guitars that you see played by the Mariachi groups. The opening harmonics set the mood.
Jaco gave his new baritone guitar it's first go on the tune Portrait of Sal La Rosa, and that tune went on the record.
This music was an example of the what we played every night at the Unitarian Church in Miami on Monday nights that allowed us as musicians to play free form and play in the moment from our stream of consciousness, or as Joe would say, from the right side of the brain.
The tuned was composed by guitarist Joe Diorio as a tribute to one of Joe's Art instructor, Sal La Rosa. Rythym section is Steve Bagby on drums with Dona Alias on Congas along with my Afuche Cabasa.
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Ibanez Club #650
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