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Bassist Ahmed Abdul-Malik played with pianists Randy Weston and Thelonious Monk in the 1950s before going on to make a handful of dates that helped forge a path for the fusion of jazz with world music. “American jazz is dull,” he told Metronome in 1958. “‘The Man I Love’ things have all been said before… now is the time to transfuse new blood–foreign scales, foreign melodic lines, the Oriental flavor.” His ensuing albums such as East Meets West, Jazz Sahara, and The Music Of Ahmed Abdul-Malik and Sounds of Africa (combined on the CD reissue Jazz Sounds of Africa) employed both ethnic musicians and hardbop greats like Johnny Griffin and Lee Morgan, opening a way that artists such as Don Cherry and Ornette Coleman would later follow in the 1970s.

"East Meets West: Ahmed Abdul-Malik" airs tonight at 11:05 p.m. EST on WFIU and at 9 p.m. Central Time on WNIN-Evansville. It also airs Sunday evening at 10 EST on Michigan's Blue Lake Public Radio. The program will be posted for permanent online listening Monday morning in the Night Lights archives.

You can watch Malik playing bass with Thelonious Monk on this episode's home page.

Next week: "Side Monk."

Posted (edited)

Looking forward to this show!

Me too! (I'll have to catch it from the archives.)

I have all three of what I think are the most "world"-oriented of his leader dates (forget the titles, but isn't it 3 out of like 5 albums total?). Not every cut is 'out of the park', but quite a number on all three albums are REALLY interesting. WELL worth seeking out, IMHO.

Edited by Rooster_Ties
Posted

Ghost, were you able to dig up those 2 obscure LPs by AAM?

Thought there was only one, but no, unfortunately I couldn't track it down. Hoping to find it some day for a possible sequel.

I'll post the archive link tomorrow morning.

  • 3 years later...

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