"My purpose was simple: to catch the feel, the pulse of rock, as I had lived through it. What I was after was guts, and flash, and energy, and speed" - NIK COHN -
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "When the music was new and had no rules" -LUNA C
Tuesday, October 4, 2022
Original Chaosist
Beggars belief that he didn't release this in the Nineties.
After many years of listening to his ECM output, I've only recently discovered his so-called American Quartet, which was operative from about '71 to '77. Features Ornette alumni Dewey Redman and Charlie Haden, and Paul Motion. I remember you once said about Can's "Soon Over Babaluma" that you wondered why you listened to anything else. I feel the same about this stuff. In fact, I'm kicking myself because I could've been listening to it decades ago instead of having discovered it in the last year or so. "Shades" and Mysteries" might be the best entry point LPs. Also, "Keith Jarrett and Gary Burton" from '71 is great. It's like American meta-music: an amalgam of rock, funk, country, Latin.
Re Jarrett, I would add "Spirits" - a double album of solo vignettes on various instruments created by Jarrett when he was recovering from chronic fatigue syndrome and attempting to teach himself to play again. my own gateway to Jarrett was hearing his Joni Mitchell cover of "All I Want" on "Mourning of a Star."
Damn, this is so good. And I say that as someone who otherwise listens to Keith Jarrett and not much else these days.
ReplyDeleteWhat would you recommend as entry point to Keith Jarrett? I've never been able to get into him.
ReplyDeleteAfter many years of listening to his ECM output, I've only recently discovered his so-called American Quartet, which was operative from about '71 to '77. Features Ornette alumni Dewey Redman and Charlie Haden, and Paul Motion. I remember you once said about Can's "Soon Over Babaluma" that you wondered why you listened to anything else. I feel the same about this stuff. In fact, I'm kicking myself because I could've been listening to it decades ago instead of having discovered it in the last year or so. "Shades" and Mysteries" might be the best entry point LPs. Also, "Keith Jarrett and Gary Burton" from '71 is great. It's like American meta-music: an amalgam of rock, funk, country, Latin.
ReplyDeleteRe Jarrett, I would add "Spirits" - a double album of solo vignettes on various instruments created by Jarrett when he was recovering from chronic fatigue syndrome and attempting to teach himself to play again. my own gateway to Jarrett was hearing his Joni Mitchell cover of "All I Want" on "Mourning of a Star."
ReplyDeletecheers for the Jarrett tips!
ReplyDelete