Miles Davis had publicly called him a madman. Leonard Bernstein found him, for his part, completely awesome. Few were those that didnât have a definitive opinion on Ornette Coleman. Some kind of outlaw who preferred playing his own compositions rather than jazz classics, the American saxophonist also developed harmolodics, a theory uniting harmonics and melody. This box of ten discs compiles one of the most important era in the career of his author. Between 1959 and 1961, he released six studio albums for the Atlantic label. Six albums that are present here and spiced up with alternative takes and various bonuses, all of this of course impeccably remastered by John Webber. Albums included: The Shape Of Jazz To Come (1959), Change Of The Century (1959), This Is Our Music (1960), Free Jazz: A Collective Improvisation (1960), Ornette! (1961) and Ornette On Tenor (1961), and the compilations The Art Of Improvisers (1970), Twins (1971), To Whom Who Keeps A Record (1975) and The Ornette Coleman Legacy (1993).
![]() Ornette Coleman â The Atlantic Years (2018)
On most of his Atlantic albums, Coleman recorded with a quartet that included trumpeter Don Cherry, plus either Charlie Haden or Scott LaFaro on bass, and either Billy Higgins or Ed Blackwell on drums. One notable exception is Free Jazz, a ground-breaking single-track album where Coleman led a double quartet through a nearly 40-minute collective improvisation. The stereo mix used for the album separates the quartets into different channels; one on the right and the other on the left. Coleman worked extensively with producer Nesuhi Ertegun on the music featured in this collection. Their partnership began in 1959 with Colemanâs Atlantic debut, The Shape of Jazz To Come, an album the Library of Congress added to its National Recording Registry in 2012.
Among the albums included in THE ATLANTIC YEARS are three compilations that Atlantic released in the 1970âs: The Art Of Improvisers (1970), Twins (1971), and To Whom Who Keeps A Record (1975.) These albums include outtakes from recording sessions for all six of Colemanâs studio albums.
Ornette Coleman â The Shape Of Jazz To Come (1959/2018)
Ornette Colemanâs Atlantic debut, The Shape of Jazz to Come, was a watershed event in the genesis of avant-garde jazz, profoundly steering its future course and throwing down a gauntlet that some still havenât come to grips with. The record shattered traditional concepts of harmony in jazz, getting rid of not only the piano player but the whole idea of concretely outlined chord changes. The pieces here follow almost no predetermined harmonic structure, which allows Coleman and partner Don Cherry an unprecedented freedom to take the melodies of their solo lines wherever they felt like going in the moment, regardless of what the pieceâs tonal center had seemed to be. Plus, this was the first time Coleman recorded with a rhythm section â bassist Charlie Haden and drummer Billy Higgins â that was loose and open-eared enough to follow his already controversial conception. Colemanâs ideals of freedom in jazz made him a feared radical in some quarters; there was much carping about his music flying off in all directions, with little direct relation to the original theme statements. If only those critics could have known how far out things would get in just a few short years; in hindsight, itâs hard to see just what the fuss was about, since this is an accessible, frequently swinging record. Itâs true that Colemanâs piercing, wailing alto squeals and vocalized effects werenât much beholden to conventional technique, and that his themes often followed unpredictable courses, and that the groupâs improvisations were very free-associative. But at this point, Colemanâs desire for freedom was directly related to his sense of melody â which was free-flowing, yes, but still very melodic. Of the individual pieces, the haunting âLonely Womanâ is a stone-cold classic, and âCongenialityâ and âPeaceâ arenât far behind. Any understanding of jazzâs avant-garde should begin here.
Tracklist:
01 â Lonely Woman 02 â Eventually 03 â Peace 04 â Focus On Sanity 05 â Congeniality 06 â Chronology
The second album by Ornette Colemanâs legendary quartet featuring Don Cherry, Charlie Haden, and Billy Higgins, Change of the Century is every bit the equal of the monumental The Shape of Jazz to Come, showcasing a group that was growing. Quality: FLAC 24 bit / 192 kHz (Tracks) Artist: Ornette Coleman Title: Change of the Century Released: 2011 Style: Jazz, Free Jazz RAR Size: 1.49 Gb Quality: FLAC 24 bit / 192 kHz (Tracks) Artist: Login.
Recorded on May 22, 1959.
Musicians:
Ornette Coleman â alto saxophone Don Cherry â cornet Charlie Haden â bass Billy Higgins â drums Ornette Coleman â Change Of The Century (1959/2018)
The second album by Ornette Colemanâs legendary quartet featuring Don Cherry, Charlie Haden, and Billy Higgins, Change of the Century is every bit the equal of the monumental The Shape of Jazz to Come, showcasing a group that was growing ever more confident in its revolutionary approach and the chemistry in the bandmembersâ interplay. When Coleman concentrates on melody, his main themes are catchier, and when the pieces emphasize group interaction, the improvisation is freer. Two of Colemanâs most memorable classic compositions are here in their original forms â âRamblin'â has all the swing and swagger of the blues, and âUna Muy Bonitaâ is oddly disjointed, its theme stopping and starting in totally unexpected places; both secure their themes to stable, pedal-point bass figures. The more outside group improv pieces are frequently just as fascinating; âFree,â for example, features a double-tongued line that races up and down in free time before giving way to the ensembleâs totally spontaneous inventions. The title cut is a frantic, way-out mélange of cascading lines that nearly trip over themselves, brief stabs of notes in the lead voices, and jarringly angular intervals â it must have infuriated purists who couldnât even stomach Colemanâs catchiest tunes. Coleman was frequently disparaged for not displaying the same mastery of instrumental technique and harmonic vocabulary as his predecessors, but his aesthetic prized feeling and expression above all that anyway. Maybe thatâs why Change of the Century bursts with such tremendous urgency and exuberance â Coleman was hitting his stride and finally letting out all the ideas and emotions that had previously been constrained by tradition. That vitality makes it an absolutely essential purchase and, like The Shape of Jazz to Come, some of the most brilliant work of Colemanâs career.
Tracklist:
01 â Ramblinâ 02 â Free 03 â The Face Of The Bass 04 â Forerunner 05 â Bird Food 06 â Una Muy Bonita 07 â Change Of The Century
Recorded on October 8 & 9, 1959.
Musicians:
Ornette Coleman â alto saxophone Don Cherry â pocket trumpet Charlie Haden â bass Billy Higgins â drums Ornette Coleman â This Is Our Music (1960/2018)
With two landmark albums already under its belt, the Ornette Coleman Quartet spent nearly a year out of the studio before reconvening for This Is Our Music. This time, Billy Higgins is replaced on drums by Ed Blackwell, who has a similar knack for anticipating the ensembleâs direction, and proves a more fiery presence on tracks like âKaleidoscopeâ and âFolk Tale.â The session is also notable for containing the only standard (or, for that matter, the only non-original) Coleman recorded during his tenure with Atlantic â Gershwinâs âEmbraceable You,â which is given a lyrical interpretation and even a rather old-time, sentimental intro (which may or may not be sarcastic, but really is pretty). In general, though, Coleman disapproved of giving up his own voice and viewed standards as concessions to popular taste; as the unapologetic title of the album makes clear, he wanted to be taken (or left) on his own terms. And that word âourâ also makes clear just how important the concept of group improvisation was to Colemanâs goals. Anyone can improvise whenever he feels like it, and the players share such empathy that each knows how to add to the feeling of the ensemble without undermining its egalitarian sense of give and take. Their stark, thin textures were highly distinctive, and both Coleman and Cherry chose instruments (respectively, an alto made of plastic rather than brass and a pocket trumpet or cornet instead of a standard trumpet) to accentuate that quality. Itâs all showcased to best effect here on the hard-swinging âBlues Connotationâ and the haunting âBeauty Is a Rare Thing,â though pretty much every composition has something to recommend it. All in all, This Is Our Music keeps one of the hottest creative streaks in jazz history going strong.
Tracklist:
01 â Blues Connotation 02 â Beauty Is A Rare Thing 03 â Kaleidoscope 04 â Embraceable You 05 â Poise 06 â Humpty Dumpty 07 â Folk Tale
Recorded on July 19, 26 & August 2, 1960
Musicians:
Ornette Coleman â alto saxophone Don Cherry â pocket trumpet Charlie Haden â bass Ed Blackwell â drums Ornette Coleman â Free Jazz: A Collective Improvisation (1960/2018)
As jazzâs first extended, continuous free improvisation LP, Free Jazz practically defies superlatives in its historical importance. Ornette Colemanâs music had already been tagged âfree,â but this album took the term to a whole new level. Aside from a predetermined order of featured soloists and several brief transition signals cued by Coleman, the entire piece was created spontaneously, right on the spot. The lineup was expanded to a double-quartet format, split into one quartet for each stereo channel: Ornette, trumpeter Don Cherry, bassist Scott LaFaro, and drummer Billy Higgins on the left; trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, bass clarinetist Eric Dolphy, bassist Charlie Haden, and drummer Ed Blackwell on the right. The rhythm sections all play at once, anchoring the whole improvisation with a steady, driving pulse. The six spotlight sections feature each horn in turn, plus a bass duet and drum duet; the âsoloistsâ are really leading dialogues, where the other instruments are free to support, push, or punctuate the featured playerâs lines. Since there was no road map for this kind of recording, each player simply brought his already established style to the table. That means there are still elements of convention and melody in the individual voices, which makes Free Jazz far more accessible than the efforts that followed once more of the jazz world caught up. Still, the album was enormously controversial in its bare-bones structure and lack of repeated themes. Despite resembling the abstract painting on the cover, it wasnât quite as radical as it seemed; the concept of collective improvisation actually had deep roots in jazz history, going all the way back to the freewheeling early Dixieland ensembles of New Orleans. Jazz had long prided itself on reflecting American freedom and democracy and, with Free Jazz, Coleman simply took those ideals to the next level. A staggering achievement.
Tracklist:
01 â Free Jazz (Part 1) 02 â Free Jazz (Part 2)
Recorded on December 21, 1960.
Musicians
Left channel: Ornette Coleman â alto saxophone Don Cherry â pocket trumpet Scott LaFaro â bass Billy Higgins â drums Right channel: Eric Dolphy â bass clarinet Freddie Hubbard â trumpet Charlie Haden â bass Ed Blackwell â drums Ornette Coleman â Ornette! (1961/2018) ![]()
Recorded a little over a month after his groundbreaking work Free Jazz, this album found Coleman perhaps retrenching from that idea conceptually, but nonetheless plumbing his quartet music to ever greater heights of richness and creativity. Ornette! was the first time bassist Scott LaFaro recorded with Coleman, and the difference in approach between LaFaro and Charlie Haden is apparent from the opening notes of âW.R.U.â There is a more direct propulsion and limberness to his playing, and he can be heard driving Coleman and Don Cherry actively and more aggressively than Hadenâs warm, languid phrasing. The cuts, with titles derived from the works of Sigmund Freud, are all gems and serve as wonderful launching pads for the musiciansâ improvisations. Coleman, by this time, was very comfortable in extended pieces, and he and his partners have no trouble filling in the time, never coming close to running out of ideas. Special mention should be made of Ed Blackwell, with one of his finest performances. Ornette! is a superb release and a must for all fans of Coleman and creative improvised music in general.
Tracklist:
01 â WRU 02 â T & T 03 â C & D 04 â RPDD
Recorded on January 31, 1961.
Musicians:
Ornette Coleman â alto saxophone Don Cherry â pocket trumpet Scott LaFaro â bass Ed Blackwell â drums Ornette Coleman â Ornette On Tenor (1961/2018)
Itâs an understatement to say that Ornette Colemanâs stint with Atlantic altered the jazz world forever, and Ornette on Tenor was the last of his six LPs (not counting outtakes compilations) for the label, wrapping up one of the most controversial and free-thinking series of recordings in jazz history. Actually, itâs probably his least stunning Atlantic, not quite as revolutionary or memorable as many of its predecessors, but still far ahead of its time. Coleman hadnât played much tenor since a group of Louisiana thugs beat him and destroyed his instrument, but he hadnât lost his affection for the tenorâs soulful, expressive honk and the ease with which people connected with it. That rationale might suggest a more musically accessible session, but that isnât the case. Ornette on Tenor is just as challenging and harmonically advanced as any of his previous Atlantics. In fact, itâs arguably more so, since there arenât really any memorable themes to return to. That means there are fewer opportunities for Coleman and Don Cherry to interact and harmonize, which puts the focus mainly on Colemanâs return to tenor playing. And, actually, it isnât tremendously different from his alto playing. There are a few traces of Colemanâs early Texas gutbucket R&B days, plus a few spots where he explores a breathier tone, but for the most part his spiraling solo lines are very similar to his other Atlantic albums, and his upper-register sound is often a dead ringer for his plaintive alto cries. With Coleman ostensibly exploring new territory, itâs hard not to be a little disappointed that Ornette on Tenor doesnât have the boundary-shattering impact of his previous work â but then again, itâs probably asking too much to expect a revolution every time out.
Tracklist:
01 â Cross Breeding 02 â Mapa 03 â Enfant 04 â EOS 05 â Ecars
Recorded on March 22 & 27, 1961.
Musicians:
Ornette Coleman â tenor saxophone Don Cherry â pocket trumpet Jimmy Garrison â bass Ed Blackwell â drums Ornette Coleman â The Art Of Improvisers (1970/2018)
Like many of Ornette Colemanâs Atlantic sides, The Art of the Improvisers was recorded in numerous sessions from 1959-1961 and assembled for the purpose of creating a cohesive recorded statement. Its opening track, âThe Circle with the Hole in the Middle,â from 1959, with the classic quartet of Don Cherry, Ed Blackwell, and Charlie Haden, is one of Colemanâs recognizable pieces of music. Essentially, the band is that quartet with two very notable exceptions: The last tracks on each side feature a different bass player. On the end of side one, the great Scott LaFaro weighs in on âThe Alchemy of Scott La Faro,â and Jimmy Garrison weighs in on âHarlemâs Manhattanâ to close the album out. These last two sessions were recorded early in 1961, in January and March respectively. As an album, The Art of the Improvisers is usually undervalued when placed next to This Is Our Music or The Shape of Jazz to Come. This is a mistake in that some of Colemanâs most deeply lyrical harmonic structures reside here in tracks such as âJust for You,â with literally stunning intervallic interplay between him and Cherry from the middle to the end. The track also messes with standard blues form and comes up in a modal way without seemingly intending to. The set roars into âThe Fifth of Beethoven,â which collapses a series of flatted fifths around Haden and Cherry, and Coleman goes on a Texas blues spree in his solo, dancing all around them. âThe Alchemy of Scott La Faroâ must have pissed off the hard boppers like nothing else. Here is a straining sprint that the quartet takes in stride as LaFaro and Blackwell charge around the edges in frightening time signatures. Coleman and Cherry for the most part clamor around a B flat-C sharp major figure and run circles around each other in muscular fashion as LaFaro goes pizzicato to head with Coleman in the middle, turning the saxophonistâs phrases into rhythmic structures which Blackwell accents as if cued. But heâs not; this is invented on the spot. Colemanâs deep lyricism shines through despite the tempo, and the entire thing goes out in a blaze of light. âThe Legend of Bebopâ is a jazz history lesson with the band working out on the front line, quoting from Sidney Bechet and Louis Armstrong, moving through some Ellingtonian themes, and slipping around the corner to a slow, blued-out bebop before taking off in consonant solos and counterpoint. âHarlemâs Manhattan,â with Garrison in Hadenâs bass chair, begins with a quote right from Parker and Gillespie before challenging the framework of the blues and its tempos. Blackwell is a blur of the dance, his cymbal work against Garrisonâs punctuated accents make Colemanâs and Cherryâs jobs knotty and difficult, but always rooted in the melody that blues inspires. This is basically one of Colemanâs most uptempo records for Atlantic, but also one of his most soulful. It deserves serious re-evaluation.
Tracklist:
01 â The Circle With A Hole In The Middle (Recorded on October 9, 1959) 02 â Just For You (Recorded on May 22, 1959) 03 â The Fifth Of Beethoven (Recorded on July 26, 1960) 04 â The Alchemy Of Scott Lafaro (Recorded on January 31, 1961) 05 â Moon Inhabitants (Recorded on July 26, 1960) 06 â The Legend Of Bebop (Recorded on July 26, 1960) 07 â Harlemâs Manhattan (Recorded on March 27, 1961)
Musicians:
Ornette Coleman â alto saxophone; tenor saxophone on âHarlemâs Manhattanâ Don Cherry â pocket trumpet; cornet on âJust for Youâ Charlie Haden â bass on 1959 and 1960 tracks Scott LaFaro â bass on âThe Alchemy of Scott LaFaroâ Jimmy Garrison â bass on âHarlemâs Manhattanâ Billy Higgins â drums on 1959 tracks Ed Blackwell â drums on 1960 and 1961 tracks Ornette Coleman â Twins (1971/2018)
Ornette Colemanâs Twins (first issued on LP in 1971) has been looked at as an afterthought in many respects. A collection of sessions from 1959, 1960, and 1961 with different bands, they are allegedly takes from vinyl LP sessions commercially limited at that time to 40 minutes on vinyl, and not initially released until many years later. Connoisseurs consider this one of his better recordings in that it offers an overview of what Coleman was thinking in those pivotal years of the free bop movement rather than the concentrated efforts of The Art of the Improvisers, Change of the Century, The Shape of Jazz to Come, This Is Our Music, and of course the pivotal Free Jazz. There are three most definitive selections that define Colemanâs sound and concept. âMonk & the Nunâ is angular like Thelonious Monk, soulful as spiritualism, and golden with the rhythm team of bassist Charlie Haden and drummer Billy Higgins driving the sweet and sour alto sax of Coleman and piquant trumpeting of Don Cherry. âCheck Upâ is a wild roller coaster ride, mixing meters, tempos, and dynamics in a blender in an unforgettable display of sheer virtuosity, and featuring bassist Scott LaFaro. âJoy of a Toyâ displays the playful Ornette Coleman in interval leaps, complicated bungee jumps, in many ways whimsical but not undecipherable. It is one of the most intriguing of all of Colemanâs compositions. Less essential, âFirst Takeâ showcases his double quartet in a churning composition left off the original release This Is Our Music, loaded with interplay as a showcase for a precocious young trumpeter named Freddie Hubbard, the ribald bass clarinet of Eric Dolphy, and the first appearance with Colemanâs groups for New Orleans drummer Ed Blackwell. âLittle Symphonyâ has a great written line with room for solos in a joyful hard bop center with the quartet of Coleman, Cherry, Haden, and Blackwell. All in all an excellent outing for Coleman from a hodgepodge of recordings that gives a broader view of his vision and the music that would come later in the â60s.
Tracklist:
01 â First Take (Recorded on December 21, 1960) 02 â Little Symphony (Recorded on July 19, 1960) 03 â Monk And The Nun (Recorded on May 22, 1959) 04 â Check Up (Recorded on January 31, 1961) 05 â Joy Of A Toy (Recorded on July 26, 1960)
Musicians:
Ornette Coleman â alto saxophone Don Cherry â pocket trumpet; cornet on âMonk and the Nunâ Charlie Haden â bass on 1959 and 1960 tracks Scott LaFaro â bass on âFirst Takeâ and âCheck Upâ Billy Higgins â drums on âFirst Takeâ and âMonk and the Nunâ Ed Blackwell â drums on 1960 and 1961 tracks Freddie Hubbard â trumpet on âFirst Takeâ Eric Dolphy â bass clarinet on âFirst Takeâ Ornette Coleman â To Whom Who Keeps A Record (1975/2018)
To Whom Who Keeps a Record is a compilation album credited to jazz composer and saxophonist Ornette Coleman, released by the Japanese subsidiary Warner Pioneer of Warner Bros. Records in 1975. The album was assembled without Colemanâs input, comprising outtakes from Atlantic Records recording sessions of 1959 and 1960 for Change of the Century and This Is Our Music. Sessions for âMusic Alwaysâ took place at Radio Recorders in Hollywood, California; all others at Atlantic Studios in New York City. The track titles spell out âmusic always brings goodness to us all, p.s. unless one has some other motive for its use.â
Tracklist:
01 â Music Always (Recorded on October 8, 1959) 02 â Brings Goodness (Recorded on July 26, 1960) 03 â To Us (Recorded on July 26, 1960) 04 â All (Recorded on July 26, 1960) 05 â P.S. Unless One Has (Blues Connotation # 2) [Recorded on July 19, 1960] 06 â Some Other (Recorded on July 26, 1960) 07 â Motive For Its Use (Recorded on July 26, 1960)
Musicians:
Ornette Coleman â alto saxophone Don Cherry â pocket trumpet Charlie Haden â bass Billy Higgins â drums on âMusic Alwaysâ Ed Blackwell â drums on 1960 tracks Ornette Coleman â The Ornette Coleman Legacy (1993/2018)
The Ornette Coleman Legacy, featuring six songs originally released for the first time in 1993 as part of Rhinoâs CD boxed set âBeauty Is A Rare Thingâ.
Tracklist:
01 â Rise And Shine 02 â The Tribes Of New York 03 â I Heard It Over The Radio 04 â Revolving Doors 05 â Mr. And Mrs. People 06 â Proof Readers
Recorded in 1959-1961.
Musicians:
Ornette Coleman â alto saxophone, tenor saxophone Don Cherry â pocket trumpet Charlie Haden â bass Ed Blackwell â drums
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Twins is an album credited to jazz composer and saxophonist Ornette Coleman, released by Atlantic Records in 1971. The album was assembled without Coleman's input, comprising outtakes from recording sessions of 1959 to 1961 for The Shape of Jazz to Come, This Is Our Music, Free Jazz: A Collective Improvisation, and Ornette! Sessions for 'Monk and the Nun' took place at Radio Recorders in Hollywood, California; for 'First Take' at A&R Studios in New York City, and all others at Atlantic Studios also in Manhattan. The track 'First Take' was a first attempt at 'Free Jazz' from the album of the same name.
Track listing[edit]
All compositions by Ornette Coleman.
Personnel[edit]
References[edit]
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Twins_(Ornette_Coleman_album)&oldid=866167169'
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