Search - Ornette Coleman :: Free Jazz (With Bonus Tracks)

Free Jazz (With Bonus Tracks)
Ornette Coleman
Free Jazz (With Bonus Tracks)
Genres: Jazz, Pop
 
2002 remastered reissue of 1960 album. Featuring the extraordinary talents of Don Cherry, Freddie Hubbard, Charlie Haden & Eric Dolphy. Includes a bonus track of the first take of this historic session. Digipak.

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Ornette Coleman
Title: Free Jazz (With Bonus Tracks)
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Rhino/Wea UK
Release Date: 1/13/2008
Album Type: Import
Genres: Jazz, Pop
Style: Avant Garde & Free Jazz
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 081227360924

Synopsis

Album Description
2002 remastered reissue of 1960 album. Featuring the extraordinary talents of Don Cherry, Freddie Hubbard, Charlie Haden & Eric Dolphy. Includes a bonus track of the first take of this historic session. Digipak.

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CD Reviews

Looking for the Magic City
Matthew Watters | Vietnam | 01/20/2010
(2 out of 5 stars)

"An album of undeniable historical importance, Free Jazz is also not likely to be one you'll listen to often. It inspired, and continues to inspire, countless great recordings of collective improvisations, including a number of far greater albums that followed immediately in its wake in the 1960s. Sun Ra's Magic City (and his other experiments in conduction), John Coltrane's Ascension (and Live in Seattle), Albert Ayler's New York Eye and Ear Control, and Peter Brotzmann's Machine Gun are all more spiritually searching, musically soaring and just plain searing experiences, and, while Ornette deserves all the props for doing it first, you can hear all the musicians on Free Jazz concentrating too hard as they try to make their solo statements or comment on what the other players are doing. It's all a bit tentative compared to what would come later, and, as a maelstrom, it's all rather polite. Interestingly, Eric Dolphy's bass clarinet comes off as the dominant and most confident voice. He's seems to have been born to channel some sort of ineffable cry from the soul, and it's no wonder that Coltrane wanted to be near him."