I just heard about the passing of one of the last living treasures of Jazz, so I am here with an appropriate tribute to one most worthy.
There isn't a whole lot to say except "thank you". There aren't many records that you could say are life-changing for a person, but The Shape of Jazz to Come was surely one of them for me.Composer, instrumentalist, inventor of the concept of harmolodics, and yes, one of the few artists ever -- OK, the only one -- to have played with both Eric Dolphy and The Grateful Dead. I'd say he'll be remembered and talked about -- and most importantly, his music played, argued over and performed -- for a long, long time. Like forever.
I was lucky enough to catch him once, in the mid 1990s at the SF Jazz Festival, so I feel like at least I got to see the man play. If I hadn't I'd be even more bummed right now. I bet some of the folks heading to those last Dead shows in Chicago were hoping he'd turn up and sit in one last time. The stories of the other times -- with him spiraling off into half-hour free-jazz interpretations of Dark Star's chord progression and Space's spaces whilst the other guys were towed behind in bewilderment for the ride -- are absolutely legendary.
There are unique artists and then there are one-offs. Ornette Coleman, who died of heart failure this morning at 85, is firmly and forever in the latter camp. Allow me to share a vintage Body Meta concert, recently rebroadcast on European satellite radio, from 1978 as a tribute to this fallen giant of the music of the world.
Ornette Coleman Sextet
Quartier Latin
Berlin, Germany
7.4.1978
01 Dream Talking
02 Mukami
03 Macho Woman
04 Song X
Quartier Latin
Berlin, Germany
7.4.1978
01 Dream Talking
02 Mukami
03 Macho Woman
04 Song X
Total time: 1:21:36
disc break can go after Track 02
Ornette Coleman - saxophone and violin
Bern Nix - guitar
Charlie Ellerbee - guitar
Albert Arnold - bass
Ronald Shannon Jackson - drums + percussion
Denardo Coleman, Jr. - drums + percussion
Bern Nix - guitar
Charlie Ellerbee - guitar
Albert Arnold - bass
Ronald Shannon Jackson - drums + percussion
Denardo Coleman, Jr. - drums + percussion
Astra Digital Radio rebroadcast, I think from 2011
474 MB FLAC/June 2015 archive link
3.9.1930 - 6.11.2015
Thanks for the commemoration, Bliss. Coleman was such a musical force, equal in stature to Miles -- perhaps more revolutionary. I too had the distinct privilege to see Coleman perform here in NY, the last time in June of 1991 at Carnegie Hall, of all places!
ReplyDeleteAnd many thanks to you for the excellent recording (with RS Jackson in the driver's seat!!)-- hadn't ever heard this one.
Pino
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ReplyDeletecould you reup this one, please? In fact they were James Blood Ulmer and Bern Nix on guitars and Fred Williams on bass.
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ReplyDeleteHi - Could you please pretty please please re-up this concert? Thank you so much.
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