Ornette Coleman Music
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14:25 of WOW!!Review Date: 2007-11-01

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Disc 1
- Lonely Woman
- Clergyman's Dream
- Sadness
- Falling Star
- Interview

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Disc 1
- Cross Breeding
- Mapa
- Enfant
- Eos
- Ecars

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Disc 1
- Cross Breeding
- Mapa
- Enfant
- EOS
- Ecars

GuttyReview Date: 2007-11-26
the Best!Review Date: 2003-05-28
Century or The Shape of Jazz to Come first (or either of the
Contemporary CDs). But if you just happen to go nuts for
Ornette like I did -- this one's the absolute BEST! Great to
hear him on Tenor, and a very open ended format for the best
jamming you'll hear from him. Mind you I'm almost a completist;
I've only skipped some of the Prime Time electric stuff.
As for the earlier review that it's garbage -- you're right!
If it
sounds like garbage to you, then that's what it is.
You'll know one way or other with Ornette, but make sure to
give
it an honest try with something earlier than his Prime
Time electric band -- preferably with Don Cherry in the earlier
CDs
or with Moffet and Izenzon in the middle-period trio work.
pure unadulterated BRILLIANCEReview Date: 2003-07-03
His critics portrayed him as a charlatan with inadequate technique and an insufficient grasp of musical theory - and while in retrospect it's not too surprising that he managed to alienate so many people at the time, it's incredible to think that he can still provoke such knee-jerk reactions well over 40 years later.
Coleman's musical vision (which came to be known as harmolodics) defies easy categorisation and his own attempts to explain it have been frustratingly vague. Basically he wanted to free his playing from the restrictions of harmonic and rhythmic conventions prevalent in the jazz of the 1950's - and crucially, to create improvisations using the melodic line as a starting point which were not dependent on chord changes. Although his name will always be associated with "free jazz", Coleman's music is far from "free" and contains an abundance of logic, melody and rhythm, as well as being deeply rooted in the blues.
Despite causing so many waves among the jazz establishment (or maybe because of it) Coleman also managed to attract a hardcore of devotees and win the support of other young musicians looking for new ideas and fresh approaches to playing (Don Cherry, Charlie Haden, Scott La Faro, Billy Higgins, Ed Blackwell and others). The core of his most influential output was recorded during numerous sessions for the Atlantic label between 1959 and 1961, including groundbreaking albums like "The shape of jazz to come", "Change of the century", "This is our music", "Free jazz" etc....
The complete recordings can be found in chronological order on the 6 cd set "Beauty is a rare thing", but if your budget doesn't stretch that far, "Ornette on tenor" from 1961 is as good an example as any of Coleman's music from this period. Although he usually plays alto sax, Coleman switched to the tenor for this album because in his opinion "the best statements Negroes have made of what their soul is have been on tenor saxophone"....
Like nearly all the Atlantic sessions, it's a quartet recording and features sublime performances from the leader with great support from Don Cherry on trumpet, Jimmy Garrison on bass and Ed Blackwell on drums. With no piano in the line-up (the omission of which was still pretty revolutionary in those days) Garrison and Blackwell's role is as much melodic and interactive as it is rhythmic - and their choice of phrases sometimes suggest new directions for Coleman and Cherry, who both play with incredible fluency and almost telepathic understanding. Coleman's expressive solos make full use of the tenor's deeper range, while Cherry's contributions are generally more subtle (particularly on the awesome "Cross breeding", when after the leader's stunning solo there's not much left to say).
There seems to be an endless amount of space in this music - so many melodic possibilities for the players to explore and four decades on it still sounds remarkably fresh and contemporary. Not just great jazz but great music, period. Free your mind....
Doesn't quite come together as nicely as you'd like.Review Date: 2005-09-01
Largely, I suspect this is because of Garrison-- for someone who a few years later would be one of the most adventerous and exciting bassists on the planet, he is tentative on this recording-- his playing throughout shows he's not really embracing the music of Ornette Coleman. The rest of the band, however, performs admirably. With Coleman taking extended solos on tenor, Cherry assumes a much more aggressive stance than usual and seems concerned with filling his space more effectively. The result is both horns sounding drastically different than usual. The definite highlight is opener "Cross Breeding"-- even with Garrison's tentativeness, the catchy start-stop riff bleeds into a partially unaccompanied solo by Coleman full of grunts and growls before being joined by the rhythm section and switching to his more linear lines. Underneath Cherry's solo, Garrison finally "gets it" (this is a common thread-- he seems more comfortable playing under Cherry) and the whole thing comes together.
But the unusual instrument led to some odd experimentation that is less than successful-- "Mapa" feels uneven in its delivery and the "Ornette" sound is totally absent, and while "Enfant" feels more like a Coleman piece, it just lacks any particular energy to it. Admittedly, my two star rating is a bit harsh, but the Atlantic recordings are of such high quality, I have a tendency to look at it relative to those. Newcomers should start with the superlative "The Shape of Jazz to Come", converted may want to check this one out, it's a decent listen, just not as good as his other Atlantic work.
Ornette can do it allReview Date: 2002-02-01
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2. Clergyman's Dream 19:03 - ditto
3. Sadness 3:55 - not bad, but not great by O.C. standards
4. Falling Star 14:25 - If you're into prime Ornette you gotta hear this as the improvising is of a higher quality than usual for him, which is really saying something. He plays trumpet and violin (not together) and no sax on this piece. Violin playing is wild and beautiful. Trumpet playing is delicate and beautifully nuanced. A far cry from the rather unvarying neobop style he has tended to play on sax, (and still does, usually with lots of great blues feeling) throughout most of his career.
(David Izenzon - bass; Charles Moffett - drumset)
Live at the Tivoli Copenhagen November 30 1965