Ornette Coleman – Genesis Of Genius

For years, Ornette Coleman was regarded by many critics and musicians alike as something of a fraud and a trickster. Miles Davis described his music as “unlistenable”; Roy Eldridge called him a charlatan; the critic Benny Green once memorably wrote: “By mastering the useful trick of playing the entire chromatic scale at any given moment, he has absolved himself from the charge of continuously wrong notes; like a stopped clock, Coleman is right at least twice a day.” So it’s something of a shock to hear quite how orthodox Ornette Coleman’s 1958 debut, Something Else!!!!, sounds now. The freaky duets with trumpeter Don Cherry hint at what was to come, but it is a pleasant surprise to hear Ornette playing bebop-inspired tunes (like the big-swinging “The Blessing” and the Afro-Cuban-tinged “Jayne”) in a relatively disciplined setting with a pianist, something he barely did for the rest of his career (his next pianist, Geri Allen, with whom he collaborated in 1996/7, was barely six months old when Something Else!!!! was recorded).

It’s 1959’s sophomore effort, Tomorrow Is The Question!, that really sets the template for Coleman’s subsequent releases. Without a pianist, Coleman and Cherry are walking a sonic tightrope over nifty, simple tunes like “Turnaround” and “Endless”. You can hear them developing a kind of telepathy – switching between tight unison playing, free freakouts and fragmented takes on the blues. By 1959, the piano-less combo certainly wasn’t new in modern jazz. The garrulous saxophonist Sonny Rollins had pioneered the tenor sax/bass/drums trio with 1957’s Way Out West, an album that also features drummer Shelly Manne, a star of Tomorrow Is The Question!. Earlier than that, at a 1952 live date, Gerry Mulligan and Chet Baker had, inadvertently, ended up recording an unorthodox baritone sax/trumpet/bass/drums session when a pianist failed to show up. But where the Baker/Mulligan quartet recordings were clean, geometric, almost orchestrally contrapuntal affairs, Coleman and Cherry play with a recklessness and abandon that recalls earlier forms of jazz.

This two-disc package features an excellent, lengthy mini-biography and appreciation of Coleman from Ashley Kahn, best known as a biographer of John Coltrane, although oddly he doesn’t mention Coleman’s close friendship with Coltrane around this time. Several tracks on this package were covered by Coltrane on The Avant-Garde, an album he recorded with Don Cherry and other Coleman sidekicks in 1960 (although it wasn’t released until 1966). Coltrane, a more famous and much better established player, was such a dutiful disciple of Coleman’s wayward approaches to improvisation that he tried to rigorously copy them, and ended up sounding a little stiff and mathematical. Ornette’s original recordings, however, breathe and swing with an infectious energy that can put a smile on your face.

Rock

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Miranda Writes Teams Up with BPM Superstar Rob Rivera for Afro-House Remix of “Boyz”
Sylvie’s Songs Release “Heart Break Like Mine (feat. Bryon Harris)”
Madrid’s Ictiandro Unveils Heartfelt Debut Album, Weaving Poetry and Emotion with Musical Mastery
Curious Dreamers Release New Music