Jump to content

clifford_thornton

Members
  • Posts

    19,828
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by clifford_thornton

  1. Terrible label name as well.
  2. Oh yeah, Nothing To Read - excellent.
  3. Was recently reminded of this one, which I haven't heard but I'm sure it's good.
  4. They reportedly jammed together in 1963 with Fred Lyman and others. http://www.ayler.co.uk/html/unreleased.html Interesting...thanks. Quite a few people went over to Coleman's to play during his 'retirement period'. Bill Dixon was instrumental in getting him a trumpet and proper mouthpiece, and showed him some things on the horn.
  5. Watanabe is nearly Ornette's age, so nope...
  6. Saturday. I recognized the guy in sunglasses to the right but can't place him.
  7. Bummer. His recordings at the outset of the 70s are excellent and I should really make an effort to hear more.
  8. I've never seen this Migliori LP; thought the first one to be issued was on PBR (heh) in the 70s, a funky one with Nick Martinis (Don Ellis, Paul Bley) on drums. Although I assume someone has the tapes since there's a track on Jazz In Transition...
  9. Never on CD. A friend's label was going to do an authorized version on CD (a two or three-disc set, can't remember) but the label ran out of money and the project was scuttled. Ornette had even agreed to do liner notes, if I recall correctly.
  10. He was really a wonderful guy. He was kind enough to send me a copy of Passing Through - indeed, an excellent poet.
  11. I do hear the aggression referenced above, as well as joy and sadness. It's all there.
  12. RIP and much respect; I was never able to get into Yes' music, but one can't deny their musical importance.
  13. I went. I was extremely moved.
  14. Ornette and Charles Tyler jammed together in the mid-60s, so it would stand to reason that he and Ayler did as well.
  15. Might be worth reading Ornette's comments on Garrison's adaptability in Black Music: Four Lives.
  16. Admiration, yes, but their musical worlds were quite different (especially Coltrane). Though I don't think New and Old Gospel is one of McLean's best records, the link between Ornette and Jackie is Charlie Parker, whom both were responding to and/or expanding on. It would have been interesting to hear them both playing alto on record, at least for one cut.
  17. By 'wave off' what do you mean? He must've been a real mensch. Wish I'd had the chance to meet him.
  18. Yeah, I have that Chance set, on a ROIR CD. It's excellent. Hard to choose Cherry, but other than the Togetherness suite (as recorded for Durium, with Aldo Romano and J-F Jenny-Clark), I'd single out his Swedish recordings as among the most go-to of the go-to. But that's just me, and that still covers a fair amount of ground: Eternal Now, Organic Music Society, Movement Incorporated, Live in Stockholm, and Modern Art. Would also like to hear the full session that bore La Maison Fille du Soliel (w/ Tusques, Guerin, Jenny-Clark), which is very cool but too damn short.
  19. I'm still hoping NYCJR will let me publish a review... it is a fabulous book. I learned a ton and it also made me think/engage in dialogue with the author - a good thing indeed.
  20. Ornette collaborators still living include Bobby Bradford, Denardo Coleman, Bern Nix, James "Blood" Ulmer, Jamaladeen Tacuma, Al McDowell, Tony Falanga, Geri Allen, Charles Ellerbee, Charnett Moffett, Joachim Kühn, and Pharoah Sanders. I'm sure there are others. Don Cherry's work as a Coleman front-line partner is extraordinary, and he led many incredible bands afterwards. Other than the rough session with Sanders and Scianni in '64, I can't think of too many clinkers in his sizable discography.
  21. Steve was big into "free love" and had a very timely vibe. Still does. And he could play the hell out of the bass. Spent some fine recent hours listening to master tapes of his late '60s band with Noah Howard, great stuff.
  22. Do you think for a second that I don't think we have a race problem?
  23. Yes. Many horrible acts can be - and have been - committed by other means, but the easy availability of firearms cannot be separated from this incident and comparably terrible acts.
  24. But at the end of the day, racist people with or without serious mental disorders that have no access to guns won't likely be killing people. And that gets us into the political forum...
×
×
  • Create New...