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  • 4 weeks later...
Posted

Gotta say, while I'm mildly interested in what made the cut (and am also guilty of being a collector of absurdly expensive free jazz records), I'm not sure what the purpose of a book like this is other than as a "flex." The title deems these as 100 "essential" recordings, but the majority are almost certainly going to be prohibitively expensive, collector-chased items and not anything practical for someone interested in the actual history of the music. I can see some argument for it being a NWW-list-type guide for future enthusiasts who don't care about acquiring OG copies of things, but at the end of the day this feels more like boast from the authors than anything truly in service of the music.

(And if you actually are a collector and don't already own these records, prepare for it to stay that way...🤑)

Posted

I'm looking forward to this. Mats and Thurston are both massive record nerds whose enthusiasm I find infectious (I'm less familiar with the work of Byron Coley). Based on the sample pages both the record picks and writing style are accessible. I think it's going to be a fun book to flick through.

I'm seeing Mats and Thurston play tomorrow and kind of hoping there might be copies on the merch table.

  • 1 month later...
Posted

I got mine. Nice selection, fun reading, with some rare records for chase collectors. A lot of european free jazz and also some japanese. I have 9 OG, 32 vinyl reissues and 18 CD reissues.

Posted
On 11/14/2025 at 10:17 PM, clifford_thornton said:

Judging from the labels on the verso, I see only a few that are super expensive, and all of those have been reissued (Ra, Pullen-Graves, Black Unity Trio, and Cairo Free Jazz Ensemble). Cautiously hoping that it won’t be all flexing… 

You are included in the book a couple of times, quoting interviews you did.

Posted
On 12/29/2025 at 5:05 PM, clifford_thornton said:

huh!

ordered one the other day...

Quoted by Thurston Moore, author of the best-documented articles, generally with biographical profile and mention of other prominent albums.

Posted

Arrived. Handsomely assembled and an interesting array of recordings. I was a little taken aback that certain acetates and test pressings were included as "essential" but I guess the music in question has largely been issued in some form. It is cool to see the original Axiom LP, for example, even if it was made in an edition of.. 2.

Wish I had not sold my copy of Heliopolis.

  • 2 weeks later...
  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Still plan to pick up a copy of the book, but here's a list of the recordings therein. More surprises than I might have thought, especially near the end-- love seeing the Schweizer/Carl/Moholo, Gunter Christmann and LaDonna Smith/Davey Williams records on there, and Nuba is an inspired choice. A couple titles I wasn't familiar with either, like the Gaslini and Percussive Unity albums. Only occasionally would I say their fetishism gets the best of them-- Akisakila is great, but at least in my book it's hard to argue that it compares in stature to records like Salty Swift, Brewing Luminous, and the Fondation Maeght or New World recordings (much less the Blue Notes, but I dig that those are well-trodden). Similarly like the Marion Brown LP but find albums like Porto Novo, Gesprächsfetzen, and In Sommerhausen to be superior, and the Ware LP on Palm, while nice, is not a patch on the Hat Hut album from the period. And there are a lot more Lacy recordings that seem to fit the mold of this project better than the ESP, but ultimately these are all personal quibbles. I look forward to reading this.

It would be a blessing if this book spurred on some reissues of titles like Origination, The Third World, Alabama Feeling, The Sun is Coming Up, and Orangatang! and I hope that it inspires some newer listeners to look beyond the currently dominant "Spiritual" canon.

I have 68 of the 109 recordings mentioned filed, and several more that I sold off over the years. I was hoping that number would be higher, so I've got some work to do!

 

Mary Lou Williams Signs of the Zodiac Vol. I
Mary Lou Williams Signs of the Zodiac Vol. II
Stan Kenton City of Glass
Charles Mingus & Spaulding Givens Strings & Keys
Lennie Tristano Classics In Jazz: The Capitol Session
Le Sun-Ra and His Arkistra "Saturn"/"Call For All Demons"
Cecil Taylor Jazz Advance
Albert Ayler Spiritual Unity
Eric Dolphy & Ron Carter Esoteric Sound Studios Acetate
Ornette Coleman Double Quartet Free Jazz
Jimmy Giufffre Free Fall
Giorgio Gaslini Oltre
Prince Lasha/Sonny Simmons/Clifford Jordan/Don Cherry It Is Revealed
Tom Prehn Qvartet Axiom
Sonny Rollins Our Man In Jazz
New York Contemporary Five Recorded 'Live' At Jazzhus Montmartre Vol. 1
New York Contemporary Five Recorded 'Live' At Jazzhus Montmartre Vol. 2
Bengt Nordstrom  Natural Music
Paul Bley Quintet Barrage
The Contemporary Jazz Quintet Action
Sunny Murray Sonny's Time Now
New York Art Quartet New York Art Quartet
François Tusques Free Jazz
John Coltrane Meditations
Sun Ra and His Myth Arkestra When Angels Speak of Love
Roscoe Mitchell Sound
Don Pullen & Milford Graves In Concert At Yale University
Hugh Steinmetz Nu!
Patty Waters College Tour
Barney Wilen Zodiac
Don Cherry  Where Is Brooklyn?
Gato Barbieri In Search of the Mystery
Steve Lacy The Forest and the Zoo
Alexander Von Schlippenbach Globe Unity
Charles Tyler Eastern Man Alone
Clifford Thornton New Art Ensemble Freedom & Unity
Han Bennink & Willem Breuker New Acoustic Swing Duo
Lester Bowie Numbers 1 & 2
Peter Brötzmann Octet Machine Gun
The Jazz Composer's Orchestra The Jazz Composer's Orchestra
Han Bennink/Misha Mengelberg/John Tchicai Instant Composer's Pool
Spontaneous Music Ensemble Karyobin
Marzette Watts The Marzette Watts Ensemble
Black Unity Trio Al-Fatihah
Marion Brown Le Temps Fou
Dave Burrell Echo
Togashi Masahiko Quartet We Now Create: Music For Strings, Winds, and Percussions
Joe McPhee Quartet Underground Railroad
Michel Portal Our Meanings and Our Feelings
Sonny Sharrock Black Woman
Archie Shepp Blasé
Alan Shorter Orgasm
Horace Tapscott Quintet The Giant Is Awakened
John Tchicai & Cadentia Nova Danica Afrodisiaca
Yosuke Yamashita Trio Dancing
GL Unit Orangatang!
Jimmy Lyons Other Afternoons
Friendship Next of Kin Facets of the Universe
Cairo Free Jazz Ensemble Heliopolis
Ric Colbeck Quartet The Sun Is Coming Up
Full Moon Ensemble Crowded With Loneliness
Jan Garbarek Quartet Afric Pepperbird
Masayuki Takayanagi/Kaoru Abe 解体的交感 Kaitai Teki Kōkan
Tony Oxley 4 Compositions For Sextet
Evan Parker/Derek Bailey/Han Bennink Topography of the Lungs
Mario Schiano Trio If Not Ecstatic We Refund
Edward Vesala Trio Nana
Abdul Hannan The Third World
Art Ensemble of Chicago Phase One
Anthony Braxton For Alto
Alan Silva and the Celestrial Communications Orchestra Seasons
Masahiko Togashi & Mototeru Takagi Isolation
Masahiko Sato Trio In Berlin - Penetration
London Jazz Composer's Orchestra Ode
Julius Hemphill Dogon A.D.
Noah Howard The Black Ark
The J.R. Mitchell/Byard Lancaster Experience Live At Manchester College
Evan Parker & Paul Lytton Collective Calls (Urban) (Two Microphones)
Peter Kowald Quintet Peter Kowald Quintet
Kaoru Abe 1972 Winter
Frank Wright Quartet Church Number Nine
Rashied Ali & Frank Lowe Duo Exchange
Black Artists Group In Paris, Aries 1973
Rudiger Carl King Alcohol (New Version)
Emergency Homage To Peace
Dewey Redman The Ear of the Behearer
Ray Russell Secret Asylum
Alexander Von Schlippenbach Trio Pakistani Pomade
Cecil Taylor Unit Akisakila
The Phil Musra Group Creator Spaces
Howard Riley Synopsis
Jeanne Lee Conspiracy
Mount Everest Trio Waves For Albert Ayler
Toshiyuki Tsuchitori & Mototeru Takagi Origination
Schweizer/Carl/Moholo Messer
Milford Graves Babi
Ensemble Muntu First Feeding
Percussive Unity Only Change Is Unchanging - Percussive Unity Live
Arthur Doyle Plus 4 Alabama Feeling
Louis Moholo Octet Spirits Rejoice!
David S. Ware From Silence To Music
Polly Bradfield Solo Violin Improvisations
Andrew Cyrille/Jeanne Lee/Jimmy Lyons Nuba
Feminist Improvising Group Feminist Improvising Group
Borbetomagus Borbetomagus
Lokomotiv Konkret Lokomotiv Konkret
LaDonna Smith & Davey Williams Direct Waves
Vario II Vario II
John Zorn Pool
Posted

Thanks for this!  Quick count, I believe I own 46 of them plus burns of the Lasha and Colbert, which I would buy legit CD's/downloads of in a heartbeat.  Lots of room to debate the selections, of course, but there are some wonderful recordings on there.

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