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Drummers as Bandleaders: An Alternative Top Ten Albums

I didn't sit down to write politically inspired material, but I was turning on my TV and seeing tower blocks burning and people being deported and the National Health Service on the brink of collapse. I was responding to what was around me. There's a lot of darkness.
Moses Boyd
Max Roach
drums1925 - 2007

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955

Elvin Jones
drums1927 - 2004

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Chick Webb
drums1905 - 1939
But with every decade that passes, the distinction between "front line" and "rhythm section" becomes more blurred. One consequence is that there will be a corresponding increase in drummers as bandleaders. You can feel the graph rising right now. At the time of writing (spring 2020), three extraordinary albums led by drummers have been released in the last four months alone.
Most jazz libraries will contain a few high-profile drummer-led albums. Likely items include

Art Blakey
drums1919 - 1990

Tony Williams
drums1945 - 1997

Terri Lyne Carrington
drumsb.1965
There are plenty of other goodies out there, too. Here are ten of them. A few are well known, most of them less so. Hopefully, you will find one or two new favourites among them.
DRUMMERS AS BANDLEADERS: OFF THE BEATEN PATH

Chico Hamilton Quintet
Pacific Jazz, 1955
For a brief period in the mid 1960s, Californian chamber jazz was quite a thing. But like so-called West Coast cool, with which it was frequently conflated, it received a hammering from the East Coast jazz establishment, and disappeared almost as quickly as it had arrived. The truth is, much chamber jazz was as anaemic as the critics labelled it. At its best, however, it extended the tonal and compositional possibilities of jazz.
This album by Los Angeles'

Chico Hamilton
drums1921 - 2013

Buddy Collette
saxophone, tenor1921 - 2010

Jim Hall
guitar1930 - 2013

Fred Katz
cellob.1919
Carson Smith
bassb.1931
Hamilton had a knack for spotting emerging talent. His 1963 album Man From Two Worlds (Impulse!) features

Charles Lloyd
saxophoneb.1938

Larry Coryell
guitar1943 - 2017

Out Of The Afternoon
Impulse!, 1962
During his seventy-year recording career,

Roy Haynes
drums1926 - 2024
Kirk, who plays tenor saxophone, manzello, stritch and a variety of flutes, bursts out of the gate on the

Artie Shaw
clarinet1910 - 2004
Such is the impact of Kirk's playing that Out Of The Afternoon is in all but name a Kirk album, buttressed by the superb rhythm section of Haynes, pianist

Tommy Flanagan
piano1930 - 2001

Henry Grimes
bass, acoustic1935 - 2020

"In" Jazz For The Culture Set
Impulse!, 1965

Charles Mingus
bass, acoustic1922 - 1979

Dannie Richmond
drums1935 - 1988

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
"In" Jazz For The Culture Set is unlike any of Richmond's work with Mingus. The opening track is

Gary McFarland
vibraphone1933 - 1971

Creed Taylor
producer1929 - 2022

Jimmy Raney
guitar, electric1927 - 1995

Toots Thielemans
harmonica1922 - 2016

Jaki Byard
piano1922 - 1999

Cecil McBee
bassb.1935

Willie Bobo
percussion1934 - 1983
Victor Pantoja
percussionThe nine tracks include McFarland's "Pfoofnick," Raney's "Freedom Ride," Byard's "The Berkeley Underground," George Weiss' "John Kennedy Memorial Waltz" and Chuck Berry's "Sweet Little Sixteen." A curiosity which does not extend the boundaries of jazz, but of interest because it was led by a drummer who did.

Afro-Jazz
Columbia, 1969
In the 1960s and early 1970s, the drummer and composer Guy Warren was part of a school of progressively inclined, culturally adventurous London-based jazz musicians which also included trumpeter

Ian Carr
trumpet1933 - 2009

Don Rendell
saxophoneb.1926

Michael Garrick
piano1933 - 2011
The album is a precursor of the so-called world jazz which emerged in the late 1970s and even of the culturally inclusivist stylings of the 2020 alternative London jazz scene. Warren plays kit drums and an array of hand drums and percussion, supported by second kit drummer

Trevor Tomkins
percussionb.1941
Other Warren albums to look out for are his debut, Africa Speaks America Answers (Decca, 1956), and African Rhythms: The Exciting Soundz Of Guy Warren And His Talking Drum (Decca, 1962). But anything with Warren's name on it is a-grade, even the album of library music titled Native Africa which he made for business-to-business label KPM in 1969.

The Free Slave
Muse, 1972
Roy Brooks
drumsb.1938

Horace Silver
piano1928 - 2014

Yusef Lateef
woodwinds1920 - 2013

Alice Coltrane
piano1937 - 2007
Brooks suffered from mental health issues throughout his life and was off radar for much of the late 1960s. He returned to view in the early 1970s. The Free Slave was recorded live at Baltimore's Left Bank Jazz Society with tenor saxophonist

George Coleman
saxophone, tenorb.1935

Woody Shaw
trumpet1944 - 1989

Hugh Lawson
piano1935 - 1997

Cecil McBee
bassb.1935
At the time of the disc's release, Brooks could not get arrested. Neither could two albums he went on to make with Roy Brooks & The Artistic TruthEthnic Expression and Black Survival (1973 and 1974, Im-Hotep). Both those titles were rereleased at the start of the 2010s. But extraordinarily, Brooks' chef d'ouvre, The Free Slave, has only been reissued once, in 1998. It is worth its weight in gold (and changes hands for almost as much).

The Almoravid
Muse, 1974

Joe Chambers
drumsb.1942

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023

Andrew Hill
piano1931 - 2007

Bobby Hutcherson
vibraphone1941 - 2016

Joe Henderson
saxophone1937 - 2001

Sam Rivers
saxophone, tenor1923 - 2011

Freddie Hubbard
trumpet1938 - 2008
Like Roy Brooks' The Free Slave, Chambers' own-name debut, The Almoravid, is a spiritual-jazz treasure from Joe Field's Muse label, which in the early to mid 1970s ploughed a similar furrow to Strata-East (which gets a Buildng a Jazz Library Top Ten here). The album title refers to the Maghrebi Berber dynasty which governed modern day Morocco and southern Spain in the eleventh century. Chambers leads a percussion-heavy band which also includes

Cedar Walton
piano1934 - 2013

Richard Davis
bass, acoustic1930 - 2023

Joe Zawinul
keyboards1932 - 2007

Harold Vick
saxophone, tenorb.1936

Pool School
Clean Feed, 2010
Remarkably, Pool School is the first album to be released under his own name by Downtown ninja of subtlety

Tom Rainey
drumsb.1957

Mary Halvorson
guitar
Ingrid Laubrock
saxophoneb.1970
The album has echoes of Laubrock's collective-improv suite, Sleepthief (Intakt, 2009), on which Rainey made up a trio with pianist

Liam Noble
piano
If You Listen Carefully The Music Is Yours
Odin, 2020
Fasten your seat belt, please. Get ready for the full tilt, barely tamed monster that is

Gard Nilssen
drumsb.1983
If You Listen Carefully The Music Is Yours was recorded live at the Molde International Jazz Festival in 2019, where Nilssen was Artist in Residence. The band's uniquely configured, all-star lineup features three drummers, three double bassists and ten horn players, most of them saxophonists.
Nilssen composed and arranged the album with

Andre Roligheten
saxophoneb.1985

Sun Ra
piano1914 - 1993

You Already Know
Impulse!, 2020

Ted Poor
drums
Shabaka Hutchings
woodwinds
Sons of Kemet
band / ensemble / orchestra
The Comet Is Coming
band / ensemble / orchestraThe entrancing You Already Know is the perfect polar opposite to Gard Nilssen's If You Listen Carefully The Music Is Yours. While Nilssen drives the epic Supersonic Orchestra, Poor is accompanied only by alto saxophonist

Andrew D'Angelo
saxophone, altoYou Already Know has its own sorts of grandeur and abandon, however, but it is a simpler and more intimate affair. Each of the nine tracks, which clock in at an average four-and-a-bit minutes apiece, plays with a rhythmic motif and a melodic one in mostly linear fashion. Some tracks are upbeat and urgent, others more reflective. It is the sort of album which gives minimalist jazz a good name.

Dark Matter
Exodus, 2020
As half of the ferocious semi-free duo

Binker and Moses
band / ensemble / orchestra
Binker Golding
saxophone, tenor
Moses Boyd
drums
Zara McFarlane
vocalsBoyd and his contemporaries are enriching British jazz with styles such as Afrobeat, reggae, dub andBoyd's specialitygrime. His first commercial success was the dance single "Rye Lane Shuffle" in 2016, and the breathtakingly inventive and politically savvy Dark Matter builds on its eclectic blueprint. The album features fellow London luminaries including tenor saxophonist

Nubya Garcia
saxophoneJoe Armon-Jones
piano
Theon Cross
tubaIn years to come we may point to Dark Matter as the start of Boyd's emergence as a kind of new

Quincy Jones
arranger1933 - 2024
Photo: Moses Boyd.
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