GA Russell Posted January 19, 2022 Report Share Posted January 19, 2022 ORNETTE COLEMAN BOX SET GENESIS OF GENIUS: THE CONTEMPORARY ALBUMS SET FOR RELEASE MARCH 25 Continuing Craft Recordings’ 70th Anniversary Celebration of Contemporary Records 180g 2-LP and 2-CD box sets contain newly mastered audio by Bernie Grundman of the legendary jazz saxophonist’s albums Something Else!!!! and Tomorrow Is the Question! Includes expanded booklet with archival photos and extensive new liner notes by GRAMMY® Award-winning music historian Ashley Kahn Continuing Contemporary Records’ 70th anniversary celebration, Craft Recordings is proud to announce the release of the new box set, Ornette Coleman – Genesis of Genius: The Contemporary Albums (2-LP, 2-CD and digital formats out March 25). The sets feature two seminal releases, 1958’s Something Else!!!! The Music of Ornette Coleman and 1959’s Tomorrow Is the Question! The New Music of Ornette Coleman. These albums transformed an unknown jazz visionary from the hinterlands into the talk of the New York scene. Both albums were originally recorded by legendary engineer Roy DuNann, the man responsible for the famously pristine sound quality of Contemporary albums, and have been newly mastered for this release by Bernie Grundman, who himself got his start at Contemporary, mentored by DuNann. The 180-gram vinyl set, which will be pressed at RTI, has been cut from the original analog tapes to lacquer, with the original tapes also used for new hi-res transfers and mastering by Grundman for the 2-CD and digital editions. The deluxe box sets include a 32-page booklet with archival photos and extensive new liner notes by GRAMMY® Award-winning music historian Ashley Kahn. The LP jackets also replicate the original tip-on versions. SACD versions of both albums, Something Else!!!! and Tomorrow Is the Question! will also be made available exclusively via CraftRecordings.com on the same date, March 25. Largely avoided by his colleagues on the L.A. jazz scene in the late 1950s, Coleman (March 9, 1930 – June 11, 2015) found an open door at Contemporary Records, where the label’s founder Lester Koenig was intrigued by his melodic sensibility and unorthodox approach to phrasing. After his Contemporary albums, Coleman quickly went on to New York City and turned the jazz scene on its head, but it was Koenig who provided the first glimpse of the saxophonist’s new approach to rhythm and harmony. “These two recordings are the accessible gateway to Ornette Coleman’s music,” says Nick Phillips, the producer of Genesis of Genius. “He’s expanding on the bebop vocabulary and at this point he’s using traditional forms for most compositions, 12-bar blues and AABA song form, but doing something totally different. With Ornette and Don Cherry’s trumpet in the front line, the way they play and phrase and shift rhythms together, it sounds very loose but very tight.” Featuring Coleman’s working band with Don Cherry on trumpet, pianist Walter Norris, bassist Don Payne and drummer Billy Higgins, the album Something Else!!!! sounds less radical today than strikingly individual and steeped in the blues. With nine Coleman originals, the session introduced several tunes that became standards, including “The Blessing” and “When Will the Blues Leave?” Featuring Cherry, Shelly Manne, and either Percy Heath or Red Mitchell on bass, the emphatic, pianoless follow up Tomorrow Is the Question! made it clear that Coleman’s concepts were both insistently innovative and tethered to bedrock African American idioms. Consisting entirely of Coleman originals, the album introduced several more tunes that became an essential part of the jazz canon, including “Tears Inside,” “Rejoicing” and “Turnaround.” More than a seminal improviser and composer who exponentially expanded jazz’s rhythmic and harmonic frontiers, Coleman embodied the playfully heroic duality-erasing ideal at the center of African American musical innovation. Radical and rootsy, avant-garde and populist, philosophical and visceral, genius and trickster, Coleman was born and raised in Ft. Worth, and the wailing Texas blues was woven into his sound. By the time he settled in Los Angeles in the mid-1950s he’d spent years on the road playing blues and R&B, imbuing a gutbucket sensibility that he carried with into every musical setting. L.A. beboppers often treated him with disdain, perceiving his unorthodox note choice as lack of chops, but he slowly found a brilliant cadre of musicians who embraced his musical vision, including pianist Paul Bley, drummers Billy Higgins and Eddie Blackwell, bassist Charlie Haden and Don Cherry. The Contemporary albums paved the way for Coleman’s fall 1959 triumph in New York City, with Tomorrow Is the Question! hitting stores the same month that his quartet started an extended run at the Five Spot, arguably the most consequential and controversial gig in jazz history. Alternately championed and denounced by his musical peers and critics, Coleman found a new home at Atlantic Records, where he continued expanding his gorgeous, searing, utterly human approach to music. But it was Lester Koenig who first recognized Coleman’s genius when he walked into his Melrose office at a time when the saxophonist wasn’t even welcome on most bandstands. “The Contemporary discs were the foundation of Ornette’s career and the bellwether of a new age, arriving at the close of one decade, and the onset of a brave, new one,” writes Ashley Kahn in the Genesis of Genius liner notes. “Embraced or derided, the music challenged long-held ideas of what jazz—what music—should sound like.” Genesis of Genius Players 2-LP box set LP1 - Something Else!!!!: The Music of Ornette Coleman Ornette Coleman – alto saxophone Don Cherry – trumpet Walter Norris – piano Don Payne – bass Billy Higgins – drums LP2 - Tomorrow Is the Question!: The New Music of Ornette Coleman Ornette Coleman – alto saxophone Don Cherry – trumpet Percy Heath – bass (Side 1) Red Mitchell – bass (Side 2) Shelly Manne – drums Genesis of Genius continues Craft Recordings celebration of Contemporary Records 70th anniversary, a campaign that launched in December with six digital On Contemporary compilations focusing on individual jazz giants who recorded extensively for the label: Art Pepper, Hampton Hawes, Barney Kessel, André Previn and Shelly Manne plus The Saxophonists – Various Artists, offers a tantalizing glimpse at the depth of the Contemporary catalog with an array of era-defining horn players. 2022 will see lots more to come as the label celebration continues. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kevin Bresnahan Posted January 19, 2022 Report Share Posted January 19, 2022 1 hour ago, GA Russell said: SACD versions of both albums, Something Else!!!! and Tomorrow Is the Question! will also be made available exclusively via CraftRecordings.com on the same date, March 25. This might be worth looking into. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JSngry Posted January 19, 2022 Report Share Posted January 19, 2022 If I buy new LPs of LPs I've had for 45 or so years and then play them less in my remaining years alive that I've already played the ones that I've had (and kept in good shape), is that a net gain or a net loss? The math on this one befuddles me... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bertrand Posted January 19, 2022 Report Share Posted January 19, 2022 Since I have the Fantasy CDs, I do not need these, unless there are bonus cuts. But the fact that important music currently held under the Concord umbrella is going to be reissued as is (not as a compilation) is promising. As we all know, they have held their assets close to the vest (my choice of words is deliberate). I am not sure who is behind Craft recordings, or maybe they are owned by Concord. But this is a good sign, IMHO. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
clifford_thornton Posted January 20, 2022 Report Share Posted January 20, 2022 3 hours ago, JSngry said: If I buy new LPs of LPs I've had for 45 or so years and then play them less in my remaining years alive that I've already played the ones that I've had (and kept in good shape), is that a net gain or a net loss? The math on this one befuddles me... I'm with you... these are expensive high end reissues so the market isn't necessarily for "new discoveries" but rather audiophile folks. Have and cherish my pre-Fantasy LPs, which sound great and look just fine. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
corto maltese Posted January 20, 2022 Report Share Posted January 20, 2022 6 hours ago, clifford_thornton said: I'm with you... these are expensive high end reissues so the market isn't necessarily for "new discoveries" but rather audiophile folks. Have and cherish my pre-Fantasy LPs, which sound great and look just fine. I have more or less pristine originals. I do wonder how much better those newly remastered reissues can sound. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
colinmce Posted January 20, 2022 Report Share Posted January 20, 2022 At $55 for the two SACDs, I think I'm good with my OJCs. Am I the only one who thinks Tomorrow Is The Question is by far the drabbest Coleman LP? I've never felt like the music comes together; Heath, Mitchell, and Manne do an admirable job but it doesn't work for me. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dub Modal Posted January 20, 2022 Report Share Posted January 20, 2022 5 hours ago, corto maltese said: I have more or less pristine originals. I do wonder how much better those newly remastered reissues can sound. The percentage of folks that could listen blindly and pick out the correct versions without guessing is probably minute to nil. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
clifford_thornton Posted January 20, 2022 Report Share Posted January 20, 2022 yeah, I'd rather spend the time and my remaining ear functionality listening to things I haven't heard before. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kevin Bresnahan Posted January 20, 2022 Report Share Posted January 20, 2022 I am a bit surprised that 78 year old Bernie Grundman is still being called on to master these audiophile releases. I'm not even 60 and I know my hearing ain't what it used to be. If he still has great hearing, he might truly have been born with "golden ears". Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jazzbo Posted January 20, 2022 Report Share Posted January 20, 2022 I think he is still doing pretty good work. Many younger engineers are doing worse. It's all relative due to producers, labels et al. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
david weiss Posted January 20, 2022 Report Share Posted January 20, 2022 5 hours ago, bresna said: I am a bit surprised that 78 year old Bernie Grundman is still being called on to master these audiophile releases. I'm not even 60 and I know my hearing ain't what it used to be. If he still has great hearing, he might truly have been born with "golden ears". I worked with Bernie recently and thought he did a great job. Granted, it wasn't an audiophile release (it was the Blakey live in Japan release) but he did great work improving the overall sound of these tapes. He also has a great staff around him who would keep everything in check if there ever was an issue.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bertrand Posted January 21, 2022 Report Share Posted January 21, 2022 The Blakey set sounds great! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guy Berger Posted January 21, 2022 Report Share Posted January 21, 2022 Would be nicer if they released a nice version of the Paul Bley Hillcrest recordings Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JSngry Posted January 21, 2022 Report Share Posted January 21, 2022 1 hour ago, Guy Berger said: Would be nicer if they released a nice version of the Paul Bley Hillcrest recordings This. If they could. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
colinmce Posted January 21, 2022 Report Share Posted January 21, 2022 I'd be down for that, but I also like listening to the boots. They sound like Charlie Parker airshots, which always feels apt. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GA Russell Posted March 26, 2022 Author Report Share Posted March 26, 2022 ORNETTE COLEMAN BOX SET GENESIS OF GENIUS: THE CONTEMPORARY ALBUMS AVAILABLE NOW ON 2-CD AND DIGITAL FORMATS AND ON VINYL APRIL 22 Continuing Craft Recordings’ 70th Anniversary Celebration of Contemporary Records 180g 2-LP and 2-CD box sets contain newly mastered audio by Bernie Grundman of the legendary jazz saxophonist’s albums Something Else!!!! and Tomorrow Is the Question! Includes expanded booklet with archival photos and extensive new liner notes by GRAMMY® Award-winning music historian Ashley Kahn Click here for Online Media Kit Click here for unboxing video Artist Title Time Ornette Coleman Invisible 04:12 Ornette Coleman The Blessing 04:43 Ornette Coleman Jayne 07:17 Ornette Coleman Chippie 05:36 Ornette Coleman The Disguise 02:47 Ornette Coleman Angel Voice 04:18 Ornette Coleman Alpha 04:10 Ornette Coleman When Will The Blues Leave? 04:57 Ornette Coleman The Sphinx 04:15 Ornette Coleman Tomorrow Is The Question! 03:08 Ornette Coleman Tears Inside 04:59 Ornette Coleman Mind And Time 03:07 Ornette Coleman Compassion 04:35 Ornette Coleman Giggin' 03:18 Ornette Coleman Rejoicing 04:00 Ornette Coleman Lorraine 05:54 Ornette Coleman Turnaround 07:53 Ornette Coleman Endless 05:16 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sgcim Posted April 7, 2022 Report Share Posted April 7, 2022 This was reviewed today by Kevin Blank- I mean Whitehead on Fresh Air. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Holy Ghost Posted April 11, 2022 Report Share Posted April 11, 2022 I like the packaging and the restored cover for "Something Else." Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.