some of some of the most important words ever spoken by an african individual
have occurred after reconciliation between the meaning of obscure french phrases
Thanks for this.
I was into Sonny Sharrock when I was like 14 from Guitar Player magazine and got burnt out on so much jazz in my mid 20s after that. I must have got The Shape of Jazz to Come for Christmas when I was 14 or 15. I never really explored Don Cherry solo though. That just sounds absolutely awesome. Like Arabic bebop rhythms with bebop Master Musicians of Joujouka. I will have to deep dive into Don Cherry discography.
Pharoah and Elvin paired together just ain't fair
happy to hear you enjoyed the Don Cherry vid. discovered by me the day it was posted
there is simply no replacement for the opportunity to watch skilled musicians interact to create sound
Berliner Jazztage 1971
Ornette Coleman - alto, trumpet, violin
Dewey Redman - tenor
Charlie Haden - bass
Ed Blackwell - drums
recorded late '67, released '69 on a compilation album of the same name.
performed just a couple of months after Nefertiti, this song signals the end of the second great quintet of Miles, Wayne Shorter, Ron Carter, Herbie Hancock, and Tony Williams.
what makes it unique is twenty-one year old Joe Beck playing electric guitar.
believed to be the first non-acoustic Miles track recorded, just before Miles in the Sky in January of the following year when Herbie and Ron go full electric on stuff and George Benson brings his own paraphernalia