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Ornette Coleman: An Innovator of the First Order, But Certainly No Messiah
ByCraft Recordings does its usual excellent job with 180G vinyl recordings that will allow a listener with good ears to really appreciate what Coleman was struggling to express. Weird tricks of pitch and all.
Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015

Cecil Taylor
piano1929 - 2018

Albert Ayler
saxophone, tenor1936 - 1970
Coleman is in The Harvard Concise Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2002) even if his theory of "harmolodics" is not. So, perhaps with a little more perspective, we can parse

Cannonball Adderley
saxophone1928 - 1975

Roy Eldridge
trumpet1911 - 1989

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Contemporary Records Acoustic Sounds
2023
Something Else came with the coveted imprimatur of

Nat Hentoff
producer1925 - 2017

Sonny Rollins
saxophoneb.1930
Others thought he had simply abandoned the tempered scale, either because he would not or could not play in tune.

Charles Mingus
bass, acoustic1922 - 1979

Ed Blackwell
drums1929 - 1992
While it is all too easy to get annoyed at Coleman's mannerisms, drummer

Billy Higgins
drums1936 - 2001

Curtis Amy
saxophone1927 - 2002

Dupree Bolton
trumpet1929 - 1994

!Tomorrow is the Question!
Contemporary Records Acoustic Sounds
2023
We are on somewhat familiar ground with !Tomorrow is the Question!Side One opens with the title track and then moves on to one of Coleman's tunes that has entered the standard repertoire, "Tears Inside." Dangerously different, right? So different you can buy the lead sheet on the internet. The rhythm may be a little tricky, but have you listened to Thelonius Monk lately?
At the risk of sounding partisan, "Tears Inside" is a great 12-bar blues to blow on, and listening to Don Cherry and

Percy Heath
bass, acoustic1923 - 2005
Lorraine Geller
pianob.1928
No mistake, Manne could swing as hard as anyone, but played with a subtlety that eludes most jazz drummers. He also handles the changes of tempo and syncopation behind Coleman masterfully. It is difficult to imagine anyone else doing as well. Mingus had "Goodbye Pork Pie Hat," a composition of the same vintage as "Lorraine"; it hung together better, true enough, but had much the same emotional heft of "Lorraine." It is not hard to see why Mingus clearly felt a certain sympathy for Coleman. It is, of course, true that this is all early Coleman. He continued along varied paths for another sixty five years, achieved iconic status and passed at the estimable age of 85. Ornette Coleman's opening sally continues to be worth listening to, even if it is much closer to the world of bop than one is accustomed to think in thinking of Coleman.
Craft Recordings does its usual excellent job with 180G vinyl recordings that will allow a listener with good ears to really appreciate what Coleman was struggling to express. Weird tricks of pitch and all.
Tracks and Personnel
Something ElseTracks: Invisible; The Blessing; Jayne; Chippie; The Disguise; Angel Voice; Alpha; When Will The Blues Leave?; The Sphinx. .
Personnel: Ornette Coleman, alto saxophone; Don Cherry, trumpet (pocket cornet); Walter Norris, piano; Don Payne, bass; Billy Higgins, drums.
!Tomorrow is the Question!
Tracks: Tomorrow is the Question; Tears Inside; Mind and Time; Compassion; Giggin; Rejoicing; Lorraine; Turnaround; Endless.
Personnel: Ornette Coleman, alto saxophone; Don Cherry, trumpet (pocket cornet); Percy Heath, bass; Red Mitchell, bass; Shelly Manne, drums.
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Multiple Reviews
Richard J Salvucci
Ornette Coleman
Something Else!!!
!Tomorrow is the Question!
Craft Recordings
Contemporary Records
Contemporary Records Acoustic Sounds
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