Don Cherry - s/d

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another one of my favorite artists. he is the reason i started learning trumpet. one of the most chameleonic musicians i know of. he switches from fiery free, to world, to post-punk, to fusion, to pop-funk, to beautiful mellow improv with ease. here's a rundown of the albums of his i own.

Mu, First and Second Parts - my introduction to his work. beautiful duos between Cherry and Ed Blackwell. cherry plays everything from his famed pocket trumpet to piano, voice and tons of flutes from around the world. to play a full album of improv with this much melody and grace is amazing. and when he sings.... mmmmmm.

Brown Rice (aka Don Cherry) - great album with mellow fusiony, almost rare groove backing. (think Lonnie Liston Smith mixed with In a Silent Way & a tad more eastern flavor). lots of spooky whispery voices all over the place.

Hear & Now - the funk album. sounds like Eddie Hazel's playing distorto guitar on a few of the tracks. this is an album for the beat-heads and the pot heads alike. think Bobby Hutcherson, CTI records, Roy Ayers, Donald Byrd, but without all the sappy almost new age or disco those guys got into.

Brotherhood Suite - one of the albums he recorded in Stockholm with the Bernt Rosengren group. tons of high-energy, free playing. in the middle of all this craziness, is "In A Geodetic Dome," a beautiful, meditative eastern sounding solo piece on trumpet. sounds almost like Sketches of Spain if all you heard was Miles. you can hear a baby crying in the background. the reason i keep this cd - not that the rest isn't good, but this is great - gives me chills when i listen to it.

Eternal Rhythm - all you Sonny Sharrock fans, he's on here too. this is a way out album, also played with the Bernt Rosengren group. Cherry plays a lot of instruments on this one, including the Gamelan(?!). there are nine players on this one, so if you're into that whole crazy, Euro free blowing sessions, search this one out.

Home Boy - this album, from 85, could be called his pop-crossover album?? many of you should know the song "I Walk" from the first Disco not Disco album. the whole album is along those lines. funky 80s disco-funk with stiff drum machines. every song has singing and there is very little trumpet playing on the whole thing. very song oriented. i think had i not already fallen in love with the "I Walk" song, i'd probably dismiss this album immediately, but i like it. very dated, but still nice.

CoDoNa, 1, 2 & 3 - Collin Walcott, Don Cherry and Nana Vasconcelos. before i discovered these albums, i thought i'd never listen to ECM. man was i wrong. in the past Cherry had hinted at his facination with other cultures' musics. he'd played tons of different instruments from around the world and used eastern scales, but here he pulls out all the stops, mixes and matches perfectly and the results are amazing. Walcott plays sitar, tabla, sanza and dulcimer while Vasconcelos plays all sorts of Brazilian percusion. their interplay is fantastic.

Charlie Haden's "Liberation Music Orchestra" & "The Ballad of the Fallen" - two very similar albums made 13 yrs apart. one on Impulse (70) and the other on ECM (83). both, arranged by Carla Bley, are orchestrated (with bits of free playing) jazz albums with Spanish Folk melodies as themes. they are both extremely beautiful and worth searching out.

Mandingo Griot Society - this is straight up west african music from 78. the band is led by Jali Foday Musa Suso playing the Kora which is a 21-string harp from Mali. the rest of the band is made up of americans all famous in their own right these days: joseph thomas, hamid drake (back when he was still calling himself Hank), and adam rudolph. there's not much trumpet on the album, but it's still cool for the completist.

Rip Rig & Panic "God" & "I am Cold" - the english post punk, jazzy funk group from the early 80s featured Don's daughter Neneh on vocals (and i believe Ari Up from the slits at one point also?). good shit.

i surprisingly don't own any Ornette that features Cherry? i'm sure there's gonna be lotsa love for the Complete Communion with Gato, but i don't own that either.

JasonD (JasonD), Tuesday, 8 July 2003 20:14 (twenty-two years ago)

Classic for giving the world Neneh. Not so much for giving us Eagle-Eye.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Tuesday, 8 July 2003 20:15 (twenty-two years ago)

I love all the Codona records dearly. First couple Old & New Dreams records are great too.

Mr. Diamond (diamond), Tuesday, 8 July 2003 20:21 (twenty-two years ago)

Agree 100% w/ Mr. Diamond's above post - I think Nils Petter Molvaer has listened to the first Codona alb quite a bit.

Cherry's appearance on 'Escalator Over The Hill' is one of the real highlights of that alb.

Yeah, that 'Communion' reish is terrif; I also really like the 1988 'mainstream' alb 'Art Deco', which features a tenor player called James Clay, an underrecorded Texan contemporary of Ornette's, plus the classic rhythm section of Charlie Haden and Billy Higgins.

Has anybody heard that recentish BBC concert recording?

Andrew L (Andrew L), Tuesday, 8 July 2003 20:48 (twenty-two years ago)

"Brown Rice (aka Don Cherry) - great album with mellow fusiony, almost rare groove backing."
Frank Lowe's seering sax keeps it from being too mellow, though.
What about the Penderecki rec?
You don't own any Coleman/Cherry recs?

abeta, Tuesday, 8 July 2003 20:48 (twenty-two years ago)

i've heard that Penderecki record was cool. i think i couldn't find it used at the time i was obsessed with cherry and so never picked it up. what's it like?

and i always had a feeling i wouldn't like Ornette. i have no idea why, just one of those prejudices you build up from stuff you read. i'm sure if i had some, i'd totally dig it. the only Ornette record i have is "Dancing in Your Head", one of his free-funk albums, which i love with all my heart.

JasonD (JasonD), Tuesday, 8 July 2003 20:53 (twenty-two years ago)

Search: Ornette's Art of the Improvisors. Usually considered beneath This is Our Music and The Shape of Jazz to Come (I guess it's more 'straight' and less groundbreaking???) but features some amazing Don Cherry, my favorite trumpet playing on any Ornette album. The last few minutes of "The Alchemy of Scott LaFaro" is a conversation between Ornette and Cherry that gives me chills every time.

scott m (mcd), Wednesday, 9 July 2003 00:14 (twenty-two years ago)

search w/ lou reed.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Wednesday, 9 July 2003 01:39 (twenty-two years ago)

what's that about?

JasonD (JasonD), Wednesday, 9 July 2003 01:53 (twenty-two years ago)

only have both mu's on one disc and got it a sale. bargain!

thanks for these threads jason. plenty to check out.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Wednesday, 9 July 2003 10:16 (twenty-two years ago)

the penderecki record is great but it's not really a collaboration between cherry and pend.- the first half is a cherry-led group and the other is a pend.-led group.....

'brown rice' might be my don cherry OPO, and i'm a big fan. the blue note trilogy is fantastic (esp. "symphony for improvisers"), and yeah, i'll second the "escalator over the hill" nod.

'eternal now' hasn't been mentioned yet, so i'll throw it out. it's cherry and the swedes in smaller ensembles, with some piano work and wooden wind instruments. it's a strong step towards the less identifiably "jazz", more uniquely "don cherry" music.

j fail (cenotaph), Wednesday, 9 July 2003 14:02 (twenty-two years ago)

Pity about "Eagle Eye" tho, huh?

Dadaismus (Dada), Wednesday, 9 July 2003 14:06 (twenty-two years ago)

Yeah, thanks for the breakdown, I love Cherry but haven't listened to him enough. I always see Mu around, I managed to download one track from it that's really great.

You do owe it to yourself to listen to him with Ornette. I have a special fondness for his work on the Complete Science Fiction Sessions, there's some fire on that shit.

Jordan (Jordan), Wednesday, 9 July 2003 14:59 (twenty-two years ago)

Check out his music co-composed with filmmaker Alejandro Jodorowsky in Jod's cult film "The Holy Mountain", it's as wild as the movie itself (as far as I know there's no published sdtk, but the film is available).

Brian Turner (btwfmu), Thursday, 10 July 2003 12:20 (twenty-two years ago)

yeah, i wish that soundtrack was available. alan klein probably has the tapes and is hoarding them....

j fail (cenotaph), Thursday, 10 July 2003 13:38 (twenty-two years ago)

oh DOOD I love Don Cherry on "Coach's Corner"! His drunken analyses, like, fuckin' TOTALLY improve any "Hockey Night In Canada" broadcast.

http://users.northroute.net/~rpepper/celebs/doncherry2.jpg

wait, he plays music too, you say? THIS i gotta hear!

Kingfish (Kingfish), Thursday, 10 July 2003 14:39 (twenty-two years ago)

Use Other Jokes Please

Mr. Diamond (diamond), Thursday, 10 July 2003 14:47 (twenty-two years ago)

you post it there -- i've already typed it once...

Kingfish (Kingfish), Thursday, 10 July 2003 14:59 (twenty-two years ago)

No, I'm not trying to give you "props", I'm trying to tell you not be so fucking lame.

Mr. Diamond (diamond), Thursday, 10 July 2003 15:04 (twenty-two years ago)

oh, You're No Fun Anymore.

Kingfish (Kingfish), Thursday, 10 July 2003 15:17 (twenty-two years ago)

I second (or third) the Brown Rice LP

thee t

steve duda, Thursday, 10 July 2003 16:04 (twenty-two years ago)

Don Cherry & Ed Blackwell's El Corazón is also a good rekkid

t\'\'t (t\'\'t), Thursday, 10 July 2003 23:11 (twenty-two years ago)

Anybody heard Orient, it was re-released on CD about a year ago.

T. Weiss (Timmy), Friday, 11 July 2003 00:36 (twenty-two years ago)

yeah, i have. destroy that. it's two dates combined (i *hate* that shit) and even though i've seen han bennik and ed blackwell credited on the net bennik is only on 1/2 the album and blackwell doesn't show at all.

the two sets are trios. one is cherry, his wife mocqui on tamboura (ouch) and bennik. the other is cherry, johnny diani and okay tamiz (don't ask, i don't know).

the pieces seem compositionally similar to the "eternal rhythm" and "w/ penderecki" albums but they lack the power of those big groups and also ramble on more. can you imagine mu pts. 1+2 played w/ the E.R.O. (i can't). it doesn't help that the sound uniformly sucks and the percussion is generally pretty flat.

the one bright spot is a 20 minute improv on the "si ta ra ma" vocal chant that's mostly unaccompanied cherry. well, there's a bongo, but damned if i register anything but cherry. sounds dubious, i know, though i love it love it love it.

vahid (vahid), Friday, 11 July 2003 07:26 (twenty-two years ago)

i disagree about orient. i think it's great. but i really like cherry's piano, and i don't think his wife sounds bad on tamboura. they are a lot longer and more spacious than the stuff on 'eternal now', and bennink is just a great percussionist.

j fail (cenotaph), Friday, 11 July 2003 13:43 (twenty-two years ago)

ten months pass...
I heard 'Humus' from the split record with Penderecki on the radio last night and I thought it was amazing. This is the first time I've heard anything by Cherry, can any of you point me to any of his other records that sound anything like this, or any other artists doing this sort of thing.

rw, Monday, 17 May 2004 15:26 (twenty-one years ago)

three weeks pass...
no-one's heard this record?

rw, Thursday, 10 June 2004 18:25 (twenty-one years ago)

sir have you read the thread?

the albums most similar to humus are "eternal rhythm" and "eternal now" because they feature large ensembles. "orient" is similar in aim but it has a much smaller group of players. because it is a live album though it has similar energy. "mu 1+2" are also similar but it's a duo, and a studio recording, so it's much more meditative and less kinetic than "humus".

"humus" is very similar to pharoah sanders late 60s and early 70s work: "tauhid", "izipho zam", "karma" and "summun bukmun umyun" are definite must-haves. they are more focused and polished than cherry's work but similar in the blend of eastern and western motifs, and the energy playing, and the wild percussion, etc. also check out early alice coltrane (ptah the el daoud, world galaxy, universal consciousness) and maybe late john coltrane (crescent might be a good starting point). possibly even clifford thornton or archie shepp in morocco or even the jazzactuel 3cd reissue sampler box, that may be a good start.

these are similar to "humus" in overall sound but not in the way "humus" uses several different forms over the course of a composition - free playing giving way to funky stuff giving way to an eastern section or a ragtime or whatever. if i remember correctly, that is unique to "humus" in cherry's recordings. so for that angle, maybe check out the early 70s work of the art ensemble of chicago, sun ra, and charlie haden (particularly the liberation music orchestra recording mentioned above).

vahid (vahid), Friday, 11 June 2004 09:03 (twenty-one years ago)

if you buy all those recordings i listed then you will be a free jazz superexpert like me.

vahid (vahid), Friday, 11 June 2004 09:04 (twenty-one years ago)

Nobody had said very much about that particular record which is why I asked. Thanks for the reply, very informative. I have a few of those recommendations and will be searching for the rest.

rw, Friday, 11 June 2004 14:00 (twenty-one years ago)

What postpunk stuff did Cherry do?

sundar subramanian (sundar), Friday, 11 June 2004 23:19 (twenty-one years ago)

He fathered Nena.

nickn (nickn), Friday, 11 June 2004 23:37 (twenty-one years ago)

Home Boy - this album, from 85, could be called his pop-crossover album?? many of you should know the song "I Walk" from the first Disco not Disco album. the whole album is along those lines. funky 80s disco-funk with stiff drum machines. every song has singing and there is very little trumpet playing on the whole thing. very song oriented. i think had i not already fallen in love with the "I Walk" song, i'd probably dismiss this album immediately, but i like it. very dated, but still nice.

JaXoN (JasonD), Saturday, 12 June 2004 06:57 (twenty-one years ago)

I thought Nena was Don Cherry's stepdaughter?

Andrew L (Andrew L), Saturday, 12 June 2004 06:58 (twenty-one years ago)

Rip Rig & Panic "God" & "I am Cold" - the english post punk, jazzy funk group from the early 80s featured Don's daughter Neneh on vocals (and i believe Ari Up from the slits at one point also?). good shit.

JaXoN (JasonD), Saturday, 12 June 2004 06:58 (twenty-one years ago)

he played on one of their albums

JaXoN (JasonD), Saturday, 12 June 2004 06:59 (twenty-one years ago)

one year passes...
Organic Music Society!
http://www.cyborg.ne.jp/~akio01/cover/cherry/LP44-45.jpg

Another Allnighter (sexyDancer), Friday, 1 July 2005 14:21 (twenty years ago)

He also appeared playing with Ian Dury and the Blockheads on the BBCs Rock Goes to College on one of their new years shows.

Seeing him and his battered pocket trumpet really got me into Ornette and then Jazz in general.

timberlog (timberlog), Friday, 1 July 2005 19:34 (twenty years ago)

x-post - Jesus Christ that's gotta be one of the most amazing covers ever! Like something an exceptionally gifted 8-year old might've painted (and that is decidedly NOT a putdown.) Don't think I've ever seen that combination of colours on any other LP ever. Very 1973. Wow.

Myonga Von Bontee (Myonga Von Bontee), Friday, 1 July 2005 21:32 (twenty years ago)

hippie free love concert recorded in a dome!

Another Allnighter (sexyDancer), Friday, 1 July 2005 21:35 (twenty years ago)

it reminds me of something Mingering Mike woulda done, but more psychedelic

http://www.mingeringmike.com/images/lps09_20.jpg

http://www.mingeringmike.com/images/lps03_20.jpg

The Amazing Jaxon! (jaxon), Friday, 1 July 2005 21:48 (twenty years ago)

Cherry's Symphony for Improvisers is epic.
And, New York Eye and Ear Control (ESP) is a total freakout.

Justin Farrar (Justin Farrar), Saturday, 2 July 2005 00:13 (twenty years ago)

Looks as though Improvisers is going to be rereleased in July, so that's good news. Even better would be following it with Where Is Brooklyn?, the third and last of his Blue Notes.

Another good'un not mentioned yet: Vibrations, possibly my favourite Albert Ayler record.

Myonga Von Bontee (Myonga Von Bontee), Saturday, 2 July 2005 10:42 (twenty years ago)

two years pass...

More?

admrl, Friday, 20 July 2007 17:42 (eighteen years ago)

i may have mentioned this on another Don Cherry thread (or a terry riley thread), but there's a tape of the two of them playing sometime in the mid-70s that is one of the greatest things I've ever heard. it's reallyreallyreally beautiful.

tylerw, Friday, 20 July 2007 17:55 (eighteen years ago)

I want that

admrl, Friday, 20 July 2007 17:58 (eighteen years ago)

http://davecook.blog-city.com/don_cherry.htm

jaxon, Friday, 20 July 2007 18:01 (eighteen years ago)

^ terry riley / don cherry

jaxon, Friday, 20 July 2007 18:01 (eighteen years ago)

I love you

admrl, Friday, 20 July 2007 18:01 (eighteen years ago)

three months pass...

Is there anything more from that session?

cos it's fucking great.

I've been told to listen to rip rig & panic by a lot of people but haven't got round to it yet.

admrl, Tuesday, 23 October 2007 16:54 (eighteen years ago)

Have you heard the album he did with Jon Appleton?

Tom D., Tuesday, 23 October 2007 16:57 (eighteen years ago)

No

admrl, Tuesday, 23 October 2007 16:58 (eighteen years ago)

is it like the terry riley thing?

admrl, Tuesday, 23 October 2007 16:58 (eighteen years ago)

Ooh, this has a good handful of things that I'd always felt trepidation about searching. I only own Brown Rice, Mu, CC and LibMus, and had always worried that his '80s stuff was gonna be butt (wasn't that when he was drying out?)

I eat cannibals, Tuesday, 23 October 2007 17:00 (eighteen years ago)

I haven't listened to it in a while: Cherry + electronics, late 60s I think, I must dig it out. You got to admire his willingness to tkae chances. I haven't heard that Terry Riley thing. (xp)

Tom D., Tuesday, 23 October 2007 17:00 (eighteen years ago)

I Love Music!

admrl, Tuesday, 23 October 2007 17:02 (eighteen years ago)

one year passes...

anyone heard his album with Latif Khan?
http://www.soundsoftheuniverse.com/releases/?id=15787

they claim it's a companion piece to Brown Rice.

(jaxon) ( .) ( .) (jaxon), Wednesday, 1 April 2009 18:03 (sixteen years ago)

Hey Jaxon, thanks for the heads-up--just gave this a listen, and there's a great short track that I'll TOTD...

Craig D., Wednesday, 1 April 2009 18:40 (sixteen years ago)

i wanna hear RELATIVITY SUITE

69, Wednesday, 1 April 2009 19:02 (sixteen years ago)

http://thebrewingluminous.blogspot.com/2007/04/don-cherry-relativity-suite.html

(jaxon) ( .) ( .) (jaxon), Wednesday, 1 April 2009 19:28 (sixteen years ago)

man, i feel like it's every other day I find out about some awesome sounding Don Cherry record. mentioned it elsewhere, but the old dreams new dreams recordings are incredible! another good one maybe not mentioned here is Blue Lake, early 70s live stuff. A lot of Don on piano. Then there's also a great Lou Reed bootleg from 1976 with Cherry sitting in. The guy got around!

tylerw, Wednesday, 1 April 2009 19:30 (sixteen years ago)

http://savagesaints.blogspot.com/2009/01/krzysztof-penderecki-don-cherry-actions.html

HI!

Zero Transfats Waller (Oilyrags), Wednesday, 1 April 2009 22:59 (sixteen years ago)

Cherry & Latif Khan is terrific. I'm pretty sure Pharaoh's Dance posted it a while back.

WARS OF ARMAGEDDON (Karaoke Version) (Sparkle Motion), Wednesday, 1 April 2009 23:54 (sixteen years ago)

http://pharaohs-dance.blogspot.com/search?q=don+cherry+latif+khan

WARS OF ARMAGEDDON (Karaoke Version) (Sparkle Motion), Thursday, 2 April 2009 02:11 (sixteen years ago)

http://inconstantsol.blogspot.com/2009/02/don-cherry-scandinavian-radio-sessions.html

including an outstanding 1970 session with Terry Riley, different than the one posted upthread

Milton Parker, Thursday, 2 April 2009 19:24 (sixteen years ago)

!!!!

tylerw, Thursday, 2 April 2009 19:25 (sixteen years ago)

three months pass...

i just got the reissue of that cherry/latif khan lp from aquarius. it's really really great.

call all destroyer, Wednesday, 29 July 2009 15:42 (sixteen years ago)

That is a great one. No idea that it had been reissued!

WARS OF ARMAGEDDON (Karaoke Version) (Sparkle Motion), Wednesday, 29 July 2009 17:04 (sixteen years ago)

yeah cd and lp available from aquarius now.

call all destroyer, Wednesday, 29 July 2009 17:05 (sixteen years ago)

he is the reason i started learning trumpet.

Fascinating jax0n facts.

ian, Wednesday, 29 July 2009 17:26 (sixteen years ago)

dudes i am still in the throes of a serious addiction here. ORGANIC MUSIC is on its way to me! also, look out for the slow-to-speak records 12" with two jams from the holy mountain soundtrack on wax for the first time!

69, Thursday, 6 August 2009 18:43 (sixteen years ago)

learning trumpet lasted 6 months. :(

jaxon, Thursday, 6 August 2009 19:04 (sixteen years ago)

was just listening to "Brown Rice" in the car just now! such a nice album. "Browwwwwn riiiice!"

tylerw, Thursday, 6 August 2009 19:04 (sixteen years ago)

yeah Brown Rice is my favorite

girlish in the worst sense of that term (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 6 August 2009 19:10 (sixteen years ago)

three weeks pass...

LOL i just realized why CODONA is called CODONA duhr

69, Monday, 31 August 2009 22:34 (sixteen years ago)

It's easy to figure out if you see it written like it is above CoDoNa.

Alex in SF, Monday, 31 August 2009 22:38 (sixteen years ago)

And the names of the bands members are right after, of course. ;)

Alex in SF, Monday, 31 August 2009 22:46 (sixteen years ago)

two months pass...

Someone mentioned it upthread, but El Corazon w/ Blackwell is worth seeking out! Was listening this morning, and it is a wonderful record. Kind of a travelogue -- from America to Spain to Africa and elsewhere ...

tylerw, Monday, 23 November 2009 17:54 (sixteen years ago)

haven't seen it mentioned, but Art Deco is really lovely, too

controlled noise pollution (outdoor_miner), Monday, 23 November 2009 18:23 (sixteen years ago)

cool! I actually don't know much past the early 80s. Is that a good one to start with?

tylerw, Monday, 23 November 2009 18:24 (sixteen years ago)

i think so. of his last few releases under his own name - i useda have multikulti and don't remember it; and dona nostra sort of bored me. wouldn't mind relistening to those, but i've always liked Art deco- there are a few Ornette tracks, and DC and James Clay really play well together

controlled noise pollution (outdoor_miner), Monday, 23 November 2009 18:33 (sixteen years ago)

just got the 2nd old and new dreams LP yesterday, and it starts with a KILLLLLER version of "lonely woman." i cannot stress how pleased ive been with the O&N dreams and codona records. i thought theyd just be cherry-lite one-offs, but they are great!

69, Monday, 23 November 2009 18:37 (sixteen years ago)

yeah, it might be blasphemy, but I've been digging that O&N "Lonely Woman" more than Ornette's original ... I put it on repeat for about an hour a few months ago.

tylerw, Monday, 23 November 2009 18:42 (sixteen years ago)

i mean theyre both great teams

69, Monday, 23 November 2009 18:43 (sixteen years ago)

Classic for giving the world Neneh.

he did not. he is just her step-father and helped raise her basically from birth on.

alex in mainhattan, Monday, 23 November 2009 18:47 (sixteen years ago)

"just"

69, Monday, 23 November 2009 18:55 (sixteen years ago)

i'm sure having Don Cherry as your second cousin would be kinda influential ...

tylerw, Monday, 23 November 2009 18:56 (sixteen years ago)

two weeks pass...

dude the tape-effects noise (i think?) at the end of "degi-degi" is definitely one of my favorite moments of recorded music

69, Wednesday, 9 December 2009 22:20 (sixteen years ago)

ten months pass...

another brown rice-related revive. one of my favorite favorite records, so beautiful.

naked human hands and a foam rubber head (contenderizer), Monday, 18 October 2010 03:37 (fifteen years ago)

no one's mentioned New York Eye & Ear Control on this thread? Fucking all star line-up: Cherry, Ayler, Roswell Rudd, Sonny Murray ...

sarahel, Monday, 18 October 2010 03:52 (fifteen years ago)

once got into a heated convo with a disgruntled co-worker about what does or (pointedly) DOES NOT constitute "music" upon the playing of that album

naked human hands and a foam rubber head (contenderizer), Monday, 18 October 2010 03:56 (fifteen years ago)

Been loving Old & New Dreams Playing. "MOPTI" especially.

andrew m., Monday, 18 October 2010 15:04 (fifteen years ago)

picked up that cherry & latif khan thing today, on the rec of whoever compared it to brown rice. listening now, and it's glorious. simpler and much rawer in terms of production, but lovely playing and songs, def very similar in vibe. curious now to hear the holy mountain soundtrack stuff.

naked human hands and a foam rubber head (contenderizer), Tuesday, 19 October 2010 05:27 (fifteen years ago)

four months pass...

wtf at this audience picking up on the rhythm of "humus"

bamcquern, Wednesday, 16 March 2011 05:53 (fourteen years ago)

http://i05.s2.imagehosting.ws/2010-06-05/300255/000e030f_medium.jpeg
Here's that album cover again, just 'cause I loved it so much and you can't see it anymore

Myonga Vön Bontee, Thursday, 17 March 2011 01:21 (fourteen years ago)

i listened to codona 3 this morning

jaxon, Thursday, 17 March 2011 02:08 (fourteen years ago)

apparently i just listened to the second side of codona 3 on 45 w/o knowing

jaxon, Thursday, 17 March 2011 04:12 (fourteen years ago)

one month passes...

I'm immersing myself in Hear and Now a lot in the last few weeks. The loose, funky, hippy grooves are so great. A real summer album. The Psychemagik mix re-alerted me to it. Anyway, the review hear and and the comment made me lol; http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=35491

mmmm, Tuesday, 26 April 2011 20:57 (fourteen years ago)

The album is a truly gross example of Walden's schtick: bombastic cock-rock lead guitars, lumbering bass ostinatos, leaden drums, warbling background vocals, a faddish veneer of exotic mysticism and a sub-Wagnerian taste for dramatic shifts in dynamics.

uh, sign me up. these are the reasons i love it!

jaxon, Tuesday, 26 April 2011 21:25 (fourteen years ago)

I know! Serious jazz critics, eh. A review on Amazon mocks Cherry's attire on the cover, I would love an outfit like that. ..a faddish veneer of exotic mysticism..

mmmm, Tuesday, 26 April 2011 22:30 (fourteen years ago)

two months pass...

paging pete sm1th

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a8Ht-ySDMGA&sns=fb

jaxon, Tuesday, 12 July 2011 20:08 (fourteen years ago)

whoa wtf definitely watching this when i get back from the post office.

69, Wednesday, 13 July 2011 21:12 (fourteen years ago)

it's hella @_@

jaxon, Wednesday, 13 July 2011 21:26 (fourteen years ago)

cool. feels like a half-baked hippie student film project, but the music is lovely.

Little GTFO (contenderizer), Wednesday, 13 July 2011 21:38 (fourteen years ago)

really digging on Relativity Suite lately. here's a more recent link to it: http://flashstrap.blogspot.com/2011/02/spiriyual-jazz-obsession-don-cherry.html

great cover art, too.

dronestreet, Wednesday, 13 July 2011 21:41 (fourteen years ago)

don is high as shit in that forest scene

69, Wednesday, 13 July 2011 21:57 (fourteen years ago)

if you like relativity suite, and u havent already heard eternal now, YOU MUST

69, Wednesday, 13 July 2011 21:58 (fourteen years ago)

i wish don would come back and hang w me in a chicken coop :(

69, Wednesday, 13 July 2011 22:04 (fourteen years ago)

three months pass...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DTUwpExgtAs&feature=player_embedded#!

Trip Maker, Thursday, 27 October 2011 15:15 (fourteen years ago)

shoot
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DTUwpExgtAs

Trip Maker, Thursday, 27 October 2011 15:17 (fourteen years ago)

"hear & now" are STINKAH!
"human music" are P Dick's "martian time slip"
"orinet" an "blue lake" is very good pleasure

iglu ferrignu, Thursday, 27 October 2011 19:45 (fourteen years ago)

welcome aboard, iglu ferrignu

runaway (Matt P), Thursday, 27 October 2011 19:58 (fourteen years ago)

blue lake IS a good pleasure. that's a good way to put it. love his vocalizing on that one.

tylerw, Thursday, 27 October 2011 20:00 (fourteen years ago)

one year passes...

just posted a pretty wonderful Codona live performance over here: http://doomandgloomfromthetomb.tumblr.com/post/34711278070/new-light-you-could-waste-a-lot-of-time-trying-to
what a cool band.

tylerw, Wednesday, 31 October 2012 18:29 (thirteen years ago)

one year passes...

wow I never knew Cherry played on the Audio Leter album!! Sue Ann Harkey is the best.

http://www.discogs.com/Audio-Letter-It-Is-This-It-Is-Not-This-Neti-Neti/release/1694821

sleeve, Friday, 10 January 2014 18:09 (eleven years ago)

I saw Don Cherry live, solo, some time in the second half of the 80s. I liked it but I don't remember much a this point, except that he played lots of different instruments and it was fairly laid back.

_Rudipherous_, Friday, 10 January 2014 18:23 (eleven years ago)

six months pass...

does anybody have the credits to the holy mountain soundtrack?

the late great, Monday, 28 July 2014 21:27 (eleven years ago)

I have it at home somewhere in the DVD box (I only have El Topo on my ipod)

Οὖτις, Monday, 28 July 2014 21:33 (eleven years ago)

i listened to Brown Rice over the weekend and my almost-five-year-old daughter thought it was hilaaaaarious. "what is this guy doing?!"

tylerw, Monday, 28 July 2014 21:33 (eleven years ago)

Sorry if already mentioned, but leave us not forget Mr. C's input re The Bells and Between Thought and Expression. Also here (get it while you can):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A2GQQ6OelDo

and here (Wiki say DC co-wrote)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uvkeqXFtiKw

dow, Monday, 28 July 2014 22:42 (eleven years ago)

Also, Neneh Cherry & The Thing's The Cherry Thing is a fave of recent years; think Don would have dug it.

dow, Monday, 28 July 2014 22:45 (eleven years ago)

i listened to Brown Rice over the weekend and my almost-five-year-old daughter thought it was hilaaaaarious. "what is this guy doing?!"

lol

daughter otm also great album

Οὖτις, Monday, 28 July 2014 23:02 (eleven years ago)

four years pass...

Really enjoying the "See You in a Minute: Memories of Don Cherry" CD (2006)
by Berger Knutsson Spering trio and guests including Nenah and Eagle-Eye on a couple vocals.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wz9zTzbNwjo

nicky lo-fi, Tuesday, 22 January 2019 14:02 (six years ago)

Begnt Berger's Bitter Funeral Beer with Cherry has been in my heavy rotation this past year, really wonderful hybrid of Eurojazz and African traditional. The concert footage transcends the LOL 80s garments (or maybe it's enhanced by it) tho' Cherry himself cuts a sharp profile:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ALp9N_lS_b8

eva logorrhea (bendy), Tuesday, 22 January 2019 14:28 (six years ago)

nine months pass...

came here to post a track from the "bitter funeral beer" record ... yeah, it's good !

budo jeru, Saturday, 16 November 2019 17:48 (six years ago)

can't believed i missed picking up a copy of this 2xLP

just classic classic cherry with the dollar brand / carlos ward line-up that's also on "the third world-underground" recorded only a week apart in nov. '72

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bvFRTZLyASg

"why don't you try brown rice?"

love to hear him sing

budo jeru, Thursday, 28 November 2019 15:41 (six years ago)

two weeks pass...

Well, for one thing, it's that it's actually not my music, because it's a combination of different experiences, and different cultures, and different composers, that involves the music that we play together, or that I'm playing when I'm playing alone.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7M6U7gZ0np4

budo jeru, Monday, 16 December 2019 01:39 (six years ago)

one month passes...

linked to upthread but now long-gone:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n4ox2IAo3g0
Don Cherry & Terry Riley ‎– Tambourinen Session, Copenhagen, 1970

budo jeru, Monday, 27 January 2020 22:53 (five years ago)

i somehow only recently learned that Sandy Bull played with Don Cherry at various points. Where are the tapes!???

tylerw, Monday, 27 January 2020 22:54 (five years ago)

hmm i wonder if billy higgins was the link there

budo jeru, Monday, 27 January 2020 22:57 (five years ago)

anyway, learning this just now ! very intriguing

budo jeru, Monday, 27 January 2020 22:58 (five years ago)

here you can find william parker talking about playing with don cherry and sandy bull:

http://archive.soundamerican.org/sa_archive/sa14/sa14-the-interviews.html

sandy bull discussion comes in c. 7min

JC: How big was the group that he invited you to play with?

WP: Well, we had Ed Blackwell, we had Billy Higgins, we had Frank Lowe [...] Sandy Bull was playing oud. So it was a big group. And I had been playing with Frank Lowe already [...] and this materializes as tapes of this concert now. Which I have somewhere, someone gave me a CD of it.

somebody call william parker !!!

budo jeru, Monday, 27 January 2020 23:22 (five years ago)

heyo!

tylerw, Monday, 27 January 2020 23:39 (five years ago)

William Parker: You see, Don could play with anybody. He could go to Turkey and play with the Turkish musicians. Go to Africa, go to Egypt, go to India. He could play with Lou Reed, he could play with Muddy Waters. And then you could say, "Oh wow, that's Don." He would never lose his identity no matter what kind of music he was playing, but he could always feel comfortable in playing any kind of music.

[...]

In Don's world, it was that everything is music. You know, the melody, the rhythm, the folk, the electronics, 'cause he's done stuff with electronic music. So he had no fear of any kind of music. Which shows you that it's not the style of music, and it's not the content of the music. It's the soul and spirit of the music that makes it work.

^ highly recommend listening to the whole interview

budo jeru, Monday, 27 January 2020 23:40 (five years ago)

nice thanks ... seems like there's definitely a recording.

http://www.bb10k.com/PARKER.disc.html

June, 1975 / The Five Spot, New York City

—The Cherry Quintet was at the Five Spot from the 3rd through the 8th. No exact date on this, but it does not match 75.06.07.
1. unknown title [33:17]  (incomplete, cuts in at beginning, out at end)
"Just heard snippet of ‘Butterfly Friend,’ one of my favorite songs..." —Steven Joerg

"Frank Lowe said it was Sandy Bull in an interview he did at WKCR-FM [during] a Don Cherry festival..." —Ras Moshe

"...I met Don Cherry. He invited me to play at the Five Spot with him in '75 for a week, my first gig at a major jazz club."
—William Parker interview/article by Steve Holtje, WIRE #152 October 1996 p.24

Don Cherry (tp, el-p, voc), Frank Lowe (ts), Sandy Bull (g, oud?, perc?), William Parker (b), Roger Blank (dr)
{WP Archive CD-R; New York Magazine June 9, 1975 p.25; Steven Joerg 03.08.28; Ras Moshe 03.02.04}

tylerw, Monday, 27 January 2020 23:44 (five years ago)

wonder how one gets a hold of that ..

WP would have been around 23 at the time

budo jeru, Monday, 27 January 2020 23:50 (five years ago)

dang!

The Squalls Of Hate (sleeve), Monday, 27 January 2020 23:54 (five years ago)

one month passes...

“benny banana on trumpet, benny banana !”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IaQrKnnxsz0

(@3:31)

you just love to hear him sing

budo jeru, Sunday, 22 March 2020 07:18 (five years ago)

this is a perfect song

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O-mrsRDTs-E

budo jeru, Wednesday, 1 April 2020 03:25 (five years ago)

^ not sure if this worked, sorry

budo jeru, Sunday, 5 April 2020 20:28 (five years ago)

two months pass...

posted this in the dollar brand thread, posting here for the cherryheads who might have missed it:

https://soundcloud.com/purediamond/dc-cw-db-berlin-72

"third world underground" lineup; same year, different city

budo jeru, Thursday, 11 June 2020 16:05 (five years ago)

also here's that moki / neneh photo

https://i.imgur.com/JSgbGXe.jpg

budo jeru, Thursday, 11 June 2020 16:06 (five years ago)

amazing pic!

is that berlin show the same as this one? https://www.discogs.com/Don-Cherry-Carlos-Ward-Dollar-Brand-Universal-Silence/release/13545963

tylerw, Thursday, 11 June 2020 16:15 (five years ago)

yes

budo jeru, Thursday, 11 June 2020 16:25 (five years ago)

it's literally a vinyl rip of the 2xLP

budo jeru, Thursday, 11 June 2020 16:26 (five years ago)

From a recent Rolling Reissues post, pasted from Record Store Day list:
PENDERECKI/DON CHERRY & THE NEW ETERNAL RHYTHM
Actions
DON CHERRY
Cherry Jam

For more info, check this list and click on artists/titles:
https://recordstoreday.com/NewsItem/9003

dow, Thursday, 11 June 2020 17:12 (five years ago)

yes !

i pre-ordered my copy from soundohm, who still have copies in stock:

https://www.soundohm.com/product/actions-lp

budo jeru, Thursday, 11 June 2020 17:15 (five years ago)

From Sounds of the Universe, Soul Jazz Records' store---retitled, with new cover:
https://soundsoftheuniverse.com/img/WExVVUt1TXJib0xzamI4SDA3aTJ2QT09/tibet-1981-don-cherry.jpg

New LP PICD3515£12.99
In stockADD TO BAG
1. Gamla Stan - The Old Town By Night
2. Love Train
3. Bass Figure For Ballatune
4. Moving Pictures For The Ear
5. Tibet
Originally released in 1974 as Eternal Now (Sonet SNTF 653) with different sleeve artwork. Deep world rhythms and music from the don.

dow, Thursday, 11 June 2020 17:19 (five years ago)

that goes back to a US reissue from 1981 that altered the title / artwork. ETERNAL NOW is a 10000% better name and cover art:

https://img.discogs.com/1uDvymR3T8yOBQWJ3OSl-ehziEI=/fit-in/600x594/filters:strip_icc():format(jpeg):mode_rgb():quality(90)/discogs-images/R-791728-1483632006-9779.mpo.jpg

between that and the recent reissue of BROWN RICE as DON CHERRY and without moki's original art, just smdh

budo jeru, Thursday, 11 June 2020 17:22 (five years ago)

Oh yeah, that is better! But this might be more findable.
They've got several others, got this one back in:
https://soundsoftheuniverse.com/img/Z1YyMS9iemJ4WVhKcDY2dXRSSGt0dz09/c6qyfg-waaun0hj.jpg

LP 18CACKLP£16.99
In stockADD TO BAG
1. Music, Wisdom, Love
2. Music, Wisdom, Love (Film Edit With Poetry)
Another essential release from Finders Keepers!

Reaching a near-mythical status amongst fans of free jazz’s most worldly intrepid explorer, these seldom heard Paris soundtrack sessions known as ‘Music, Wisdom, Love’ have evaded collectors’ grasps and confused historians for exactly 50 years. Instigated in Paris in 1967 and filmed during Don’s downtime on a visit to the Chat qui Pêche nightclub in March 1967 (where he played with Karl Berger, Henri Texier and Jacques Thollot), the bulk of this cinematic portrait was filmed on the streets of Paris under the direction of creative all-rounders Jean-Noël Delamarre and Nathalie Perrey who, as their careers bloomed, would become pivotal figures in underground French cinema - straddling La Nouvelle Vague, adult entertainment and cinema fantastique in what can only be described as speedball cinema.

Available for the first time ever and licensed from producer and director Jean-Noel Delamarre himself.

dow, Thursday, 11 June 2020 17:24 (five years ago)

All the others they list have orig titles and covers, looks like.

dow, Thursday, 11 June 2020 17:27 (five years ago)

"universal silence" now available on CD:

https://www.soundohm.com/product/universal-silence

budo jeru, Thursday, 18 June 2020 04:34 (five years ago)

two weeks pass...

the 1976 organic music society performance for italian television is now being made available on CD / vinyl and can be streamed here:

https://blacksweat.bandcamp.com/album/om-shanti-om

https://f4.bcbits.com/img/a3387948865_16.jpg
(cool cover art, too)

i'm still trying to work out if it's the same set that's been available on youtube, just re-arranged or differently-excerpted. either way the sound quality of this new release is much, much better.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iu3OLnQvl-g

budo jeru, Wednesday, 8 July 2020 17:23 (five years ago)

Thanks budo, and what a label!!!! Also they have the aforementioned Bitter Beer---all tracks streaming here:
https://blacksweat.bandcamp.com/album/live-in-frankfurt-82

dow, Wednesday, 8 July 2020 23:26 (five years ago)

six months pass...

two new releases of previously-unreleased recordings coming this summer via blank forms, great artwork too:

https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0011/0588/7297/products/BF-024SummerHouseSessionscover_550x825.jpg
https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0011/0588/7297/products/BF-023Chateauvalloncover_550x825.jpg

Avant-garde jazz trumpeter Don Cherry and textile artist Moki Cherry (née Karlsson) met in Sweden in the late sixties. They soon began to live and perform together, dubbing their mix of communal art, social and environmentalist activism, children’s education, and pan-ethnic expression “Organic Music.”

We have a robust program dedicated to this woefully under-examined period of the couple’s visionary collaborative practice planned for this spring, including an art exhibition at our Clinton Hill space, a special issue of our anthology, two archival records, and—with luck—a performance program.

In anticipation of this season-long series, we are now taking pre-orders for our Organic Music Societies anthology as well as two albums of newly unearthed music by Don Cherry.

https://blankforms.org/publications/new-and-upcoming/

budo jeru, Friday, 22 January 2021 02:45 (four years ago)

whoa

Überschadenfreude (sleeve), Friday, 22 January 2021 03:10 (four years ago)

Niiiice. I need to hear last year's Om Shanti Om as well.

pomenitul, Friday, 22 January 2021 03:13 (four years ago)

it's incredible! and free on youtube iirc

budo jeru, Friday, 22 January 2021 03:29 (four years ago)

ja

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=52vRcMbYf-0

budo jeru, Friday, 22 January 2021 03:29 (four years ago)

cool! Om Shanti Om is 10/10.

stirmonster, Friday, 22 January 2021 04:08 (four years ago)

this...was not the don cherry i was thinking of

Punster McPunisher, Saturday, 23 January 2021 06:17 (four years ago)

one month passes...

a one-off, daylong radio show via blank forms –– tune in sunday!

https://blankforms.org/events/the-great-trip-rare-and-unheard-music-from-don-cherry/

The Great Trip: Rare and Unheard Music from Don Cherry

Sunday, March 7th, 2021
9:00 AM EST | 2:00 PM GMT | 3:00 PM CET

In anticipation of the “Organic Music Societies” exhibition, Blank Forms will be presenting a daylong radio show dedicated to Don and Moki Cherry’s life in Sweden and beyond on Sunday, March 7th starting at 9 a.m. EST. Key recordings from the early ’60s through late ’80s, including rare and private music, will be diffused by hosts Lawrence Kumpf and Adrian Rew, as well as international guests Mats Gustafsson and Magnus Nygren. The show will additionally include live interviews with Neneh Cherry, Naima Karlsson, Famoudou Don Moye, and Bengt “Beche” Berger, as well as a performance by Christer Bothén. The program will be livestreamed exclusively, with no archive to follow, so tuning in is the only way to hear this material. A full schedule with more details is forthcoming.

budo jeru, Wednesday, 3 March 2021 15:12 (four years ago)

somebody Audio Hijack that shit plz

I like signing up to dead sites (sleeve), Wednesday, 3 March 2021 19:40 (four years ago)

From bigozine2's roio stash ---haven't had time to listen yet, but this lloks promising; get it while you can (gotta download it track by track)

Disc 1
Track 101. Allah-o-Akbar/Waya-wa-Egoli/Blues For America/Kalahari 21:35
Track 102. Ntsikana’s Bell/Good News (false start)/Don (flute solo) 9:53
Track 103. Good News/Don (trumpet solo)/Little Boy 7:32
Track 104. African Sun 5:51
Track 105. The Stride/The Pilgrim, part 1 27:55
73 mins

Disc 2
Track 201. O Berimbau (Nana’s solo) 14:16
Track 202. The Pilgrim, part 2/unknown/Bra Joe From Kilimanjaro 19:04
Track 203. Cherry/unknown/Waya-wa-Egoli 23:52
Track 204. unknown/Blues For America 10:46
Track 205. Cherry (incomplete) 2:07
71 mins

Lineup:
Don Cherry - trumpet and more
Dollar Brand - piano
Nana Vasconcelos - percussion
Johnny Dyani - bass

http://bigozine2.com/roio/?p=4857&__cf_chl_jschl_tk__=faa4c6474dec1ceddc5b428a1af0fbbd0d8a0efe-1614992030-0-AVPGvRvqJDdvQTM7C5fMDLLpAic4N7EyaOzSCu66EVvV2Y0Lqlzqu-lOI0hRLN6Vgab99YD_OilEoPanVhOpXjhJ7UAreQfKRogm4_MIsiARIWjKwv4frNt4k5zvw3jdfmYkbamzeFQNKnrSc0XsKNtR_lG_64a9KcikFM1C-u5WUhEBufmVJPjHe-yN6sj86X1hzd8WEtJELk5kTngCNbzhuf2xEm0xGvNuG8ZzDN5Ikon7seuTOm2pue4TNf6ROMM_uhDaM6JMenrU90Mw_s8WES7Kx58okIFOQta1Xoj33P384yvfyP5TWi9TStUqsb9-tdMo-qCP8Wo_hDPvyrA

dow, Saturday, 6 March 2021 01:00 (four years ago)

thank you so much

I like signing up to dead sites (sleeve), Saturday, 6 March 2021 15:46 (four years ago)

Yeah, listened to some of that last night; it's really good.

but also fuck you (unperson), Saturday, 6 March 2021 18:07 (four years ago)

two months pass...

I don't really know much about jazz but I heard Om Shanti Om and I love it. Does anyone have any recommendations for similar albums?

paolo, Friday, 21 May 2021 07:45 (four years ago)

There's a rich world of stuff that inhabits a similar universe to this period of Cherry's life. There will be others on here with a more in-depth knowledge, but I'd go for Cherry's Organic Music Society album (any of their albums, really) the archival stuff he did with Terry Riley and Thembi by Pharoah Sanders. Then you're onto Herbie Hancock's Mwandishi collective and you're away...

https://www.discogs.com/Don-Cherry-Organic-Music-Society/master/199510
https://www.discogs.com/Terry-Riley-Don-Cherry-Karl-Berger-K%C3%B6ln-February-23-1975/release/8692739
https://www.discogs.com/Pharoah-Sanders-Thembi/release/932779

Vanishing Point (Chinaski), Friday, 21 May 2021 13:52 (four years ago)

Eternal Rhythm

Left, Friday, 21 May 2021 14:19 (four years ago)

Thanks folks! That Terry Riley and Don Cherry one is my favourite of those

paolo, Saturday, 22 May 2021 12:48 (four years ago)

if you haven't already there's also the complete discography of alice coltrane. 70s stuff is more "jazz" if that matters

Left, Saturday, 22 May 2021 15:32 (four years ago)

I have heard some Alice Coltrane, I like her less jazzy material the best

paolo, Saturday, 22 May 2021 17:45 (four years ago)

you might also like pharoah sanders (try Pharoah 1977) or the Codona Albums that Cherry recorded with Colin Walcott and Nana Vasconcelos

plax (ico), Saturday, 22 May 2021 17:51 (four years ago)

Malinye is my favourite track by them (off '2')

plax (ico), Saturday, 22 May 2021 17:52 (four years ago)

anyway i am no expert

plax (ico), Saturday, 22 May 2021 17:52 (four years ago)

Yes to the Codona lps, my faves are 1 and 3.
Of course, Brown Rice
Also: https://www.discogs.com/Don-Cherry-Latif-Khan-Music-Sangam/release/1670148

nerve_pylon, Saturday, 22 May 2021 22:38 (four years ago)

the Bengt Berger album Bitter Funeral Beer w/ Don Cherry is a essential, too

Judi Dench's Human Hand (methanietanner), Saturday, 22 May 2021 22:43 (four years ago)

YES

nerve_pylon, Saturday, 22 May 2021 23:00 (four years ago)

Good calls! Those Codona albums are my fave. I'm basically looking for jazz that's actually more world music than actual jazz.

paolo, Monday, 24 May 2021 12:56 (four years ago)

(I don't like the term 'world music' but can't think of a better one, maybe fourth world?)

paolo, Monday, 24 May 2021 12:57 (four years ago)

I really liked the first track on Pharaoh 1977

paolo, Monday, 24 May 2021 12:58 (four years ago)

If you know Codona, then you may already know Oregon? I'm only know their debut album Music of Another Present Era, but it seems to fit your description.

Halfway there but for you, Monday, 24 May 2021 13:50 (four years ago)

I'd suggest checking out Sanders' albums Village of the Pharoahs and Wisdom through Music too.

Other ideas: The Art Ensemble of Chicago's Bap-Tizum and Phil Cohran's On the Beach

rob, Monday, 24 May 2021 13:53 (four years ago)

This might sound weird, but coming at Om Shanti Om from another angle: Baden Powell & Vinícius De Moraes Os Afro Sambas and this compilation: https://analogafrica.bandcamp.com/album/jamb-e-os-m-ticos-sons-da-amaz-nia/

rob, Monday, 24 May 2021 13:57 (four years ago)

I'm basically looking for jazz that's actually more world music than actual jazz.

It's a different soundworld insofar as it specifically draws upon Middle Eastern folk music, but you may also enjoy Anouar Brahem. Barzakh and Astrakan Café are very much worth everyone's time.

pomenitul, Monday, 24 May 2021 14:06 (four years ago)

In the appendix to his jazz book But Beautiful, Geoff Dyer identifies this sub-genre as one of the most promising routes for jazz to take, and he mentions numerous records that could qualify in his discography.

Halfway there but for you, Monday, 24 May 2021 17:01 (four years ago)

I'm basically looking for jazz that's actually more world music than actual jazz.

Some late 60s Art Ensemble of Chicago stuff might do it for you, like People in Sorrow and Reese and the Smooth Ones. Also try Sunny Murray's Homage to Africa.

but also fuck you (unperson), Monday, 24 May 2021 17:02 (four years ago)

Arooj Aftab

dow, Monday, 24 May 2021 17:22 (four years ago)

Listening to James Brandon Lewis's The Jesup Wagon before reading unperson's Stereogum review,(which is here: https://www.stereogum.com/2148394/the-month-in-jazz-may-2021/columns/ugly-beauty/), I was thinking, as he did, of Cherry-Coleman re the Red Lily Quartet's interactivity: the cornet/sax conversations there reminding me of these, generating a track that's been playing my head for quite a while
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h2n6e0FMWUE

dow, Monday, 24 May 2021 17:47 (four years ago)

Thanks for all the recommendations folks! I've only just got round to listening to all of these

paolo, Tuesday, 1 June 2021 12:35 (four years ago)

two weeks pass...

So, I finally thought of looking for ESP-Disk on bandcamp, and yep they've got a big ol' page of releases from the the past 50-60s years, incl. three linked sep volumes of DC's Live at Cafe Montmarte, from 1966---think I might start w Vol. 3, based on what it says here:

Live At Café Montmartre, Vol. 3
by Don Cherry


1.Complete Communion 26:10

2.Remembrance 24:45

After he left Ornette Coleman's quartet, trumpeter Don Cherry worked with a variety of collaborators and traveled more widely. He met Leandro "Gato" Barbieri in Italy years before the Argentinian saxophonist became a superstar; back then he was still heavily influenced by Albert Ayler. Cherry and Barbieri quickly bonded and began working together, with Cherry's Blue Note album Complete Communion, recorded with Barbieri (using a different rhythm section) on Christmas Eve of 1965, their first studio collaboration. They worked together in Europe so often that they had a regular quintet with German vibraphonist Karl Berger, French bassist Jean Francois Jenny Clark, and Italian drummer Aldo Romano. Clark, however, could not make the band's month-long residency at Copenhagen's most famous jazz club, so young American bassist Cameron Brown was called to replace him -- but he's not the bassist here. These performances were recorded for radio broadcast, and Danish radio rules said at least one native had to be in the band. Thus Bo Steif slid into the group for these recordings -- and stayed after Brown's musical commitments took him elsewhere.
All three volumes of ESP-Disk's series of concert recordings from this group's 1966 feature performances of Cherry's suite Complete Communion from the album of the same name, none more thoroughly than this one (actually the first concert by this group), because "Remembrance" is actually the closing movement of the suite on the Blue Note album. Thematically, they range much more widely than the studio recording, making this volume an especially interesting insight into Cherry's approach.

Personnel:
Don Cherry: trumpet
Gato Barbieri: tenor saxophone
Karl Berger: vibraphone
Bo Steif: bass
Aldo Romano: drums

Recorded on March 3rd, 1966
https://doncherry.bandcamp.com/

dow, Monday, 21 June 2021 20:35 (four years ago)

Currently on a bit of Steve Lacy kick and the other day I was listening to 'Evidence' (1961) [Steve Lacy, Don Cherry, Carl Brown, Billy Higgins] - a selection of Monk and Duke tunes - reading around I didn't realise they were tight and it was Don that really introduced Lacy to a more improv/free way of playing:

Cherry's arrival in New York with Ornette in 1959 bowled [Steve Lacy] over.

"To me, he was the vanguard of the vanguard - the freest edge of the free thing they had going then. We got to be fast friends and sort of brothers, and we spent a lot of time playing together in my house in New York.

"He'd say 'Well - let's play', and I'd say 'OK - what do you want to play?' - and he'd say, 'No, let's just play'. This was revolutionary to me at the time because I was into Monk tunes, and thought you had to have a tune, a structure and chord changes, the whole thing. He didn't have any problem that way. He'd just play, and when he played it was really alive.

"This started me thinking a lot, and it took me over five years before I reached that point myself, and a lot of hard work and struggle to break the shackles. His way of going into the beyond and just taking off - to not worry about where you were coming from, but just to go - I wanted to be able to do that myself. It had something to do with my own concepts of life and death and music."

I can only see a couple more recordings with the two of them together - the recently released 'New York Total Music Co Frankfurt 1968' [Steve Lacy, Don Cherry, Kent Carter, Karl Berger, Jacques Thollot] and Masahiko Togashi's 'Bura Bura' (1986) [Masahiko Togashi, Dave Holland, Steve Lacy, Don Cherry]. Need to check both out.

They do the Shug a loo, do the Shy Tuna, do the Kemba Walker (fionnland), Monday, 21 June 2021 21:49 (four years ago)

Brian Case interview extract from 1979 btw

They do the Shug a loo, do the Shy Tuna, do the Kemba Walker (fionnland), Monday, 21 June 2021 21:50 (four years ago)

Thanks,I did not know about that! Always assumed that Lacy was always free. Reminds me of another one via the ESP-Disk bandcamp (if you've heard the original !967 release, and thought the sound was off, Bernard Stollman says here that he subnitted it for remastering in '92, whereupon the engineer observed that it was "out of phase," and corrected that--did Stollman not ever listen to it? Claimed Lacy's price for the master was "exorbitant," but maybe Stollman didn't actually pay enough to listen, or maybe he couldn't tell the diff)

"Broken into two thematic extrapolations, the work functions in a similar manner as Don Cherry's Complete Communion (Blue Note, 1965) effort from a year earlier..."(Henry Smith, All Abot Jazz)
eleased January 2, 1967

Enrico Rava: trumpet
Steve Lacy: soprano saxophone
Johnny Dyani: bass
Louis T. Moholo: drums

Recorded in concert, October 8, 1966 at Institute di Tella, Buenos Aires, Argentina.

dow, Monday, 21 June 2021 22:58 (four years ago)

three months pass...

Nobody had told me about death metal drumming on Malkauns !
It's probably high time I get into his discography past Eternal rhythm / Mu

Nabozo, Tuesday, 5 October 2021 09:15 (four years ago)

And since I see the name of Enrico Rava just up from my post, I'll say that I really enjoyed The Pilgrim and the Stars, and was wondering if any other ECM jazz is in that vein.

Nabozo, Tuesday, 5 October 2021 09:17 (four years ago)

The Pilgrim and the Stars doesn't seem too different from some of the Terje Rypdal records from the same period, of course Rypdal plays guitar on the Rava album.

Halfway there but for you, Tuesday, 5 October 2021 17:59 (four years ago)

one year passes...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=95yHWVVwBJg

budo jeru, Sunday, 25 December 2022 05:11 (two years ago)

two months pass...

https://i.discogs.com/uHjJPpuj9kui121Q7o0ORioQ-zqrip7iXozwdsL1l5g/rs:fit/g:sm/q:90/h:600/w:592/czM6Ly9kaXNjb2dz/LWRhdGFiYXNlLWlt/YWdlcy9SLTI1OTM0/OTY4LTE2NzYwNjE3/NTYtNTYwMC5qcGVn.jpeg

Here's a new disc from Transversales featuring synth from French sound collage guy Jean Schwarz. Recorded in 1977. Roughly in the same universe as other recent archival releases like 2014's MODERN ART, 2020's OM SHANTI OM, and 2021's ORGANIC MUSIC THEATRE. The biggest difference being that I would describe this as being more on the sparse / arty end of things, as opposed to deep and groovy. But it does have plenty of literal bells and includes Don's tunes BROWN RICE and HOPE (aka ORIENT). I think the real star here is double bassist J-F Jenny-Clark (who of course was on one of Don's earliest records as leader back in '66). His bass really comes through on this recording and sounds so very rich and full. My feeling upon first listen is that the music feels exploratory and hesitant and unfortunately they never really seem to get down to business. Maybe that'll change with repeated listening.

budo jeru, Sunday, 26 February 2023 01:37 (two years ago)

^ this is my blurb, in case it wasn't clear. an ILM exclusive!

budo jeru, Sunday, 26 February 2023 01:39 (two years ago)

two months pass...

here's a profile of don i found in an old issue of DOWNBEAT (oct. 1975):

https://i.imgur.com/iiuPDmN.png

budo jeru, Tuesday, 16 May 2023 03:34 (two years ago)

https://i.imgur.com/GRrduJx.png
https://i.imgur.com/AjCQN7K.png

budo jeru, Tuesday, 16 May 2023 03:35 (two years ago)

Thanks to the death of Swedish saxophonist Bernt Rosengren, who worked a lot with Cherry in the early 70s, I've been revisiting Eternal Rhythm today and checking out two other albums I wasn't that familiar with, Brotherhood Suite (recordings from 1968-74, released in 1997) and The Summer House Sessions (recordings from 1972-74, released in 2021).

but also fuck you (unperson), Tuesday, 16 May 2023 04:22 (two years ago)

RIP Bernt!

i have always intended to track down a copy of BROTHERHOOD SUITE! will report back.

budo jeru, Tuesday, 16 May 2023 15:09 (two years ago)

that article is awesome, thank you for sharing it ...

tylerw, Tuesday, 16 May 2023 15:18 (two years ago)

It doesn't look like Don ever recorded with the Mellotron that he wanted, although Eagle-Eye used a Chamberlin once.

The mention of heroin in that article, as a youthful "phase" outgrown after a few years, reminds me of something I read, probably in one of the books about Ornette Coleman. It said something about how Ornette despaired of Don Cherry ever escaping from addiction in the last decades of his life. I haven't read anywhere else of his addiction being an ongoing struggle or problem, though, so I wonder where the truth lies.

Halfway there but for you, Thursday, 18 May 2023 01:18 (two years ago)

In one of her memoirs Viv Albertine talks about touring with Don Cherry in the 1970s and upsetting him by saying "I hate junkies", not knowing that Cherry was himself an addict (Cherry apparently replied, "I hate hate"). So I certainly think his addiction was more than a youthful phase, sadly.

Ward Fowler, Thursday, 18 May 2023 08:03 (two years ago)

three months pass...

this right here's the stuff, featuring the cherry/dyani/temiz line-up:

https://www.strandedrecords.com/cdn/shop/files/don-cherry-trio-the-ortf-recordings-paris-1971-lp_1024x1024.jpg
Don Cherry Trio - The ORTF Recordings Paris 1971 LP

https://www.strandedrecords.com/collections/newsletter/products/don-cherry-trio-the-ortf-recordings-paris-1971-lp

budo jeru, Friday, 8 September 2023 01:13 (two years ago)

two months pass...

don cherry at sandy bull's wedding

https://i.imgur.com/yDj15NG.png

budo jeru, Thursday, 7 December 2023 05:09 (two years ago)

In one of her memoirs Viv Albertine talks about touring with Don Cherry in the 1970s…

Slight derail: with the first memoir I really liked or admired who I thought she was, the second memoir I cooled on that considerably.

Dr Drudge (Bob Six), Thursday, 7 December 2023 09:10 (two years ago)

two months pass...

nice roundup from last year over at the free jazz blog, focusing on don cherry reissues and related material:

https://www.freejazzblog.org/2023/09/don-cherry-archives-tributes-and-re.html

budo jeru, Sunday, 3 March 2024 21:23 (one year ago)

nine months pass...

this looks interesting.

In 1970, Turkish theater owner Engin Cezzar produced James Baldwin's groundbreaking play about gay relationships in a 1970s Istanbul prison setting. In 1969, jazz musician Don Cherry, visiting Istanbul with Okay Temiz to record an album, reunited with Baldwin and contributed music to the production. The recording session followed extensive discussions and featured performances by Cherry and Temiz, heightening the play's tension.

https://cazplak.bandcamp.com/album/music-for-turkish-theater

budo jeru, Thursday, 5 December 2024 13:24 (one year ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wUBTHb3jGoU
DON CHERRY / HERBIE HANCOCK / RON CARTER / BILLY HIGGINS - Bemsha Swing, 1986

budo jeru, Friday, 13 December 2024 14:24 (one year ago)

ten months pass...

Billy Bang w/ Don Cherry, Wilber Morris, Dennis Charles
Untitled Gift (Anima, 1982)
Track: Echovamp 1678

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mdMPgXm7UXQ

budo jeru, Sunday, 19 October 2025 04:37 (two months ago)


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