Don Cherry Music


Jazz-Music-Reviews-->Bands-->Cherry, Don-->17
Related Subjects: Christian, Charlie Clarke, Stanley Cobham, Billy Coleman, Ornette Coltrane, John Corea, Chick Davis, Miles DeJohnette, Jack Di Meola, Al
More Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
Don Cherry Music sorted by Title: A to Z .

 Don Cherry
Swing for Two Plus
Format: Audio CD from Collectables (2004-04-27)
Artist: Don Cherry
List price: $14.97
New price: $8.92
Used price: $8.17
Tracks:
Disc 1
  • When the Sun Comes Out - Don Cherry, Koehler, Ted
  • For You - Don Cherry, Dubin, Al
  • Love Is Just Around the Corner - Don Cherry, Robin, Leo
  • I'll String Along With You - Don Cherry, Dubin, Al
  • I Didn't Know About You - Don Cherry, Russell, Bob
  • So Rare - Don Cherry, Sharpe, Jack
  • I'm Yours - Don Cherry, Harburg, E.Y.
  • I'm Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter - Don Cherry, Ahlert, Fred E.
  • Please Be Kind - Don Cherry, Cahn, Sammy
  • My Future Just Passed - Don Cherry, Marion, George Jr.
  • I Don't Care If the Sun Don't Shine - Don Cherry, David Mack
  • Sleepy Time Gal - Don Cherry, Alden, Joseph Reed
  • Give Me More - Don Cherry, Engvick, William
  • If I Had My Druthers - Don Cherry, Mercer, Johnny
  • The Story of Sherry - Don Cherry, Hassall, Christophe
  • There's a Place Called Heaven - Don Cherry, Engberg, Ann
  • Don't You Worry Your Pretty Little Head - Don Cherry, Schroeder, Aaron
  • The Last Dance - Don Cherry, Cahn, Sammy
  • April Age - Don Cherry, Engvick, William
 Don Cherry
Swingin' For Two
Format: LP Record from Columbia ()
Artist: Don Cherry
List price:

 Don Cherry
Swingin' for Two
Format: LP Record from Columbia ()
Artist:
List price:

 Don Cherry
Symphony for Improvisers
Format: Audio CD from Blue Note Records (1994-09-20)
Artist: Don Cherry
List price: $15.98
New price: $7.75
Used price: $2.99
Tracks:
Disc 1
  • Symphony for Improvisers: Symphony for Improvisers/Nu Creative Love
  • Manhattan Cry: Manhattan Cry/Lunatic/Sparkle Plenty/Om Nu
Average review score:

Don Cherry - Symphony for Improvisers
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-12-14
This Blue Note CD is a limited edition with Super Bit Mapping. These Don Cherry composiitons were recorded on September 19, 1966 and feature Don Cherry on cornet, Leandro 'Gato' Barbieri on tenor sax, Pharoah Sanders on tenor sax and piccolo, Karl Berger on vibes and piano, Henry Grimes on bass, Jenny Clark on bass, and Edward Blackwell on drums.

Excellent liner notes by A.B. Spellman.

Produced by Alfred Lion, recorded by Rudy Van Gelder, mastered by Larry Walsh, produced for release by Michael Cuscuna.

Track listing:
1. Symphony for Improvisers
2. Nu Creative Love
3. What's Not Serious
4. Infant Happiness
(Movement 1 - total time 19:43)
5. Manhattan Cry
6. Lunatic
7. Sparkle Plenty
8. Om Nu
(Movement 2 - total time 19:19)

 Don Cherry
Symphony for Improvisers
Format: LP Record from Blue Note Records (1994-09-20)
Artist: Don Cherry
List price: $15.98
New price: $26.95
Tracks:
Disc 1
  • Symphony for Improvisers: Symphony for Improvisers/Nu Creative Love
  • Manhattan Cry: Manhattan Cry/Lunatic/Sparkle Plenty/Om Nu
 Don Cherry
Symphony for Improvisers
Format: Audio CD from Blue Note Records (2005-07-19)
Artist: Don Cherry
List price: $11.98
New price: $6.45
Used price: $6.26
Tracks:
Disc 1
  • Symphony for Improvisers: Symphony for Improvisers/Nu Creative Love
  • Manhattan Cry: Manhattan Cry/Lunatic/Sparkle Plenty/Om Nu
Average review score:

Don't get it
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-07
I enjoyed the cornet playing of Don Cherry, although I wonder if the rest of the musician really know how to play. I just did not get this album. Improvisation has to have some discipline or it sounds like you don't know the music. I would recommend Ornette Coleman if your looking for free jazz.

Don Cherry starts finding his own voice.
Helpful Votes: 23 out of 23 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-01
In 1966, Don Cherry was finally stepping into his own as a band leader. Whereas Cherry's mentor Ornette Coleman had what many New York musicians felt was no pedigree, Cherry was a journeyman of free jazz, having spent several years with Coleman, recorded an album with John Coltrane, toured with Sonny Rollins, blew horn opposite Archie Shepp in the New York Contemporary Five, and played Europe with Albert Ayler.

Along the way, Cherry also led bands in the U.S. with a young tenor sax player named Pharoah Sanders, bassist Henry Grimes, and drummer Ed Blackwell, discovered Argentinian Gato Barbieri in Europe, laid down an album with Barbieri, Grimes, and Blackwell ("Complete Communion"), then took off back to Europe with Barbieri, where he gigged with, among others, German pianist Karl Berger and French bassist Jean-Francois Jenny-Clark. Cherry brought Jenny-Clark, Berger, and Barbieri back to the studio in New York to augment the band he'd left behind there (Sanders, Grimes, and Blackwell). The result is two suites-- "Symphony for Improvisers" and "Manhattan Cry", both released under the former title.

The first suite, "Symphony for Improvisers", feels triumphant in the way a march does, or perpaps in the way Ayler's music does, with swelling, explosive themes. Sanders plays on piccolo throughout, weaving in and out of the other the two horns and Berger (who is featured on vibes). Cherry and Berger play wonderfully, trading solos on the second movement ("Nu Creative Love"), but its Blackwell who steals the show, with his incomparable accompaniment and eventual solo space in the funky third movement and the fourth. In this last movement ("Infant Happiness") is some of Blackwell's finest playing, with a delicate solo playing against space-- Blackwell was a man who understood that even if polyrhythmic playing, space can often be as valuable unfilled as filled.

The second suite, "Manhattan Cry", is a bit more sparse in its form. This is probably most obvious as the Barbieri and Sanders are not heard together at all-- Blackwell's superb drum solo (a trend on this album) marks the point where Barbieri stops playing and Sanders starts. But throughout, there's a bit more variety of form on these pieces-- from the opening movements delicate and beautiful theme (and soloing) with a traditional form of horn, piano, bass, and drums to Sanders' searing solo on the third movement. The piece in general though is a bit less rewarding then "Symphony for Improvisers".

Its interesting that Cherry chose to include two bassists on this session as, like the tenor sax, only one bass is ever heard at a time and the two switch off during both pieces. Likewise while the roll of both Sanders and Barbieri is clear on "Symphony for Improvisers", I wonder why Cherry didn't have one of them layout altogether rather than switching horns midway through.

The reissue is remastered by Rudy Van Gelder, original engineer for the sessions. Sonically, its nearly flawless, and while the previous issue sounded awfully good too (I haven't done a side-by-side comparison), it hasn't been in print and ages and this is a welcome return. The original liner notes are included as is a new essay by Bob Blumenthal.

In the end, this material is very satisfying, and I've often felt this record, even with its odd shifts in active musicians, is the best of Cherry's Blue Note work. And while the influence of Coleman and Ayler is still pretty heavy on this, Cherry's identity is starting to come through. Its also quite interesting to hear Pharoah Sanders before he hooked up with Coltrane. For both historical and intrinsic value, this recording is recomended.

Contemporary then, and now...
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-21
An outstanding array of musicians. Like a frame around a painting, the hard driving rhythm section and the themes (yes, there are melodies) frame the hard-driving, sometimes screaming and screeching Pharoah Sanders and--Gato Barbieri (heard on "smooth jazz" radio stations)! It's a production in which you will hear a little more each time you listen to it...isn't that what we ask for in music? Well, some of us do. I have little to add to the other excellent review, so, just buy it and share it with someone who thinks that jazz should be (ugh) "smooth!"

If there's a better Don Cherry album, I haven't heard it
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-27
There is just as much emphasis on melody here as free jazz fury, though with Gato Barbieri and Pharoah Sanders playing tenor there is the passionate disonance here that one might expect, though honestly they seem to be playing with more restraint than might be expected given other recordings they played on circa 1966. Comprised of two rather long compositions (both approach 20 minutes), my first thought is that this is one of those jazz albums where everything just fits together beautifully. This album is really carried by Don Cherry's trumpet and Ed Blackwell's drumming, and both players seem to display an almost superhuman amount of propulsive energy. In addition to the tenor, Pharoah Sanders also plays the piccolo on this date, which he does with so much grace that I would hold this up to a Pharoah Sanders detractor - and there seem to be a lot of these - as an example of just how versatile and intelligent an improviser he is. Finally, Karl Berger, who mostly plays vibes here and is someone I know little about, sounds as if he's really listening to the other musicians as he compliments what they are doing with minimalist precision.

I have the same thought as one of other reviewers (Michael Stack) about questioning why there are even two bass players on here since I think they just play one at a time. With these players I expected to hear some murky two bass interaction as on Coltrane's Ole or Ayler's Live at Greenwich Village, but that doesn't happen here. Yet still, this is hardly even something to complain about since there's certainly enough happening overall to feel very enthusiastic about this album, and at least to my ears right now, it seems that the sound quality might be even better than the typically high standards for the RVG remasters; each of these improvisers - all in there prime - comes through with such sonic precision that I'm confident this is a CD I will come back to many times.

 Don Cherry
Take a Message to Mary/ in My Youth
Format: LP Record from Monument ()
Artist:
List price:
Used price: $22.50

 Don Cherry
Tamma With Don Cherry and Ed Blackwell
Format: Audio CD from Odin ()
Artist: Tamma With Don Cherry and Ed Blackwell
List price:
New price: $22.81
Used price: $39.99
Tracks:
Disc 1
  • Don's Tune/Samodado - Tamma, Cherry, Don
  • Tamma Song/Afro Disco
  • Senegal
  • Oo Dja Na/Ga Song - Tamma, Balke, Jon
  • Tara
  • Ebou - Tamma, Secka, Ebou
 Don Cherry
Then You Tell Me Goodbye/When I Found I'd Lost Your Love (Don Cherry)
Format: LP Record from Verve ()
Artist:
List price:
Used price: $5.00

 Don Cherry
Thinking of You
Format: Audio CD from Sepia Recordings (2007-11-13)
Artist: Don Cherry
List price: $24.98
New price: $16.25
Used price: $16.48
Tracks:
Disc 1
  • The Third Man Theme - Don Cherry, Karas, Anton
  • Mona Lisa - Don Cherry, Livingston, Jay
  • Thinking of You - Don Cherry, Ruby, Harry
  • Here in My Arms - Don Cherry, Rodgers
  • I'll Always Love You - Don Cherry, Livingston
  • It May Be on Sunday - Don Cherry, Miller, Julian II
  • I Need You So - Don Cherry, Hunter, Ivory Joe
  • Can't Seem to Laugh Anymore - Don Cherry, Parker, Johnny
  • When You Return - Don Cherry, Benjamin
  • The Seven Wonders of the World - Don Cherry, Coben
  • Beautiful Madness - Don Cherry, Renzo
  • Chapel of the Roses - Don Cherry, Baer, Abel
  • I Apologize - Don Cherry, Hoffman, Al
  • Bring Back the Thrill - Don Cherry, Rugolo, Pete
  • Don't Cry - Don Cherry, Piaf, Edith
  • Don't Leave Me Now - Don Cherry, Lisbona, Edward
  • Powder Blue - Don Cherry, McGrane, Paul
  • Vanity - Don Cherry, Wood, Guy
  • I Can See You - Don Cherry, Brodszky, Nicholas
  • My Life's Desire - Don Cherry, Evans, Tolchard
  • Belle, Belle, My Liberty Belle - Don Cherry, Merrill, Bob
  • Cara Cara Bella Bella - Don Cherry, Carter, Ray
  • Maybe It's Because - Don Cherry, Berlin, Irving
  • While We're Young - Don Cherry, Wilder, Alec
  • I Can't Help It - Don Cherry, Williams, Hank
  • Grievin' My Heart out for You - Don Cherry, Davis, Jimmie
Disc 2
  • Take Me Back - Don Cherry, Spector, Abner
  • Neither Am I - Don Cherry, Allen, Robert
  • Sentimental Tears - Don Cherry, Brown, George
  • It Doesn't Matter Where I Go - Don Cherry, Colby, Robert
  • My Mother's Pearls - Don Cherry, Dee, Sylvia
  • Wonder - Don Cherry, Hersh, Marion
  • Silver Dew on the Blue Grass Tonight - Don Cherry, Burt, Ed
  • It's Been So Long, Darling - Don Cherry, Tubb, Ernest
  • I Don't Want to Set the World on Fire - Don Cherry, Seiler, Eddie
  • From Your Lips Only - Don Cherry, Kennedy, Jimmy
  • The Second Star to the Right - Don Cherry, Cahn, Sammy
  • How Long - Don Cherry, Ross, Harry
  • Changeable - Don Cherry, Reid, Don
  • All by Myself - Don Cherry, Berlin, Irving
  • I've Got to Pass Your House to Get to My House - Don Cherry, Brown, Lew
  • No Stone Unturned - Don Cherry, Cox, Lester
  • Till the Moon Turns Green - Don Cherry, Gordon, Jack
  • Too Long - Don Cherry, Kamano, Johnny
  • I'm Through with Love - Don Cherry, Malneck, M.
  • I'm Just a Country Boy - Don Cherry, Brooks, Fred
  • Where Can You Be? - Don Cherry, Herman, Pinky
  • Home Again - Don Cherry, Bernstein, Morris
  • Sip of Moonlight - Don Cherry, Daly, Lew
  • The Thrill Is Gone - Don Cherry, Brown, Lew
  • Wanted Someone to Love Me - Don Cherry, Alberts, Al
  • Rumble Boogie - Don Cherry, Curtis, Eddie
  • Band of Gold - Don Cherry, Musel, Robert
Average review score:

at last
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-21
finely don cherry on decca all the great songs and the sound is terrific too.great liner notes too.what a wonderful cd..


Jazz-Music-Reviews-->Bands-->Cherry, Don-->17
Related Subjects: Christian, Charlie Clarke, Stanley Cobham, Billy Coleman, Ornette Coltrane, John Corea, Chick Davis, Miles DeJohnette, Jack Di Meola, Al
More Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19