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Jackie McLean meets Tony Williams


Michael Weiss

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  • 2 weeks later...

Excellent point. I wonder if he played trumpet at gigs? The first recorded examples weren't until the mid sixties (i.e. Golden Circle) and he had Cherry with him for pretty much all the Atlantic dates, I just wonder when he started playing it in general. 

Either way, I'm sure you're right. 

Edited by Scott Dolan
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According to this article Ornette taught himself trumpet and violin during the first three or four years of the 'sixties.

https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fcobr

And according to this one it was '63 and '64.

http://www.versobooks.com/blogs/2034-ornette-coleman-barry-witherden-s-the-wire-primer

Edited by jazzbo
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http://www.forghieri.net/jazz/blind/Davis_3.html

June 1964, perhaps the most famous of Miles' BFTs, Miles says he likes Don Cherry, but can't stand either Eric Dolphy or Cecil Taylor. The admission of a liking of Cherry remained constant through Miles' life afaik.

At some earlier point Miles said of Ornette himself “Hell, I just listen to what he writes and how he plays. If you’re talking psychologically, the man is all screwed up inside.” -- Miles Davis, reported to Joe Goldberg, “Jazz Masters of the ‘50s”

 

 

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just as an aside, I've always thought that Cherry, on the Hillcrest recordings, shows a very strong Clifford Brown influence.

but the odd thing about Williams, to me, is that in the years just prior to his death he was a different player; to my ears, much more generic. I never understood why this happened.

.

Edited by AllenLowe
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I like his playing with his quintet because it's his band and his material. That's how he thought is should have gone. By then, I think he was looking at it more as a composer playing a part than he was a drummer jamming out.

That's pretty much how I like the entirety of that band, actually. Other than Mulgrew Miller, no really "distinctive" soloists in there. But the material, it works. The lack of stronger soloists keeps me from "fully enjoying" those records, but how I do enjoy them is as the output of Tony Williams, composer. And from that view, it's a pretty prodigious output, really.

But those drums, they sure were yellow!

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