Bill Charlap is wonderful and accomplished pianists in the vain of Oscar Peterson and Art Tatum. He has worked with Tony Bennett, Clark Terry and Gerry Mulligan among others. There's nothing technically complicated or cerebral going on here, just a nice dose of jazz with your Sunday morning tea.
I first started listening to Charlap after seeing him at the Village Vanguard in New York many years ago. I thought he was a superb performer and his band consisting of two young veterans, Peter Washington (bass) and Kenny Washington (drums) were excellent compliments to Charlap's mastery of the standards repertoire.
Charlap has an extensive catalog crossing a couple of labels but the one album that I believe is very representative of his style and is most appealing to everyone is Written In The Stars (Blue Note). Written In The Stars features the members listed above and is absolutely perfect throughout. This album is pretty widely available so you should be able to find it fairly easily. Bill Charlap is a modern craftsman of piano and someone you might want to check out if you starting your jazz collection from scratch.
I began re-reading Jack Kerouac's On The Road recently and I have to say this novel should be listed in the top 50 of American literary stories. Kerouac's vision and storytelling was always far beyond is fellow "Beat" contemporaries. While Allen Ginsberg, Gregory Corso, William Burroughs and others were all prolific and inventive, Kerouac's writing was more appealing to the masses. Keroauc was a big jazz fan (especially of Charlie Parker) and On The Roadreads like one giant jazz opus.
The cross country trek taken by Kerouac, Ginsberg and Neal Cassidy is one of beauty, grit and a magnificent description of Americana in the late '40s. For those who don't know, Kerouac wrote On The Roadin 1947 and the final version wasn't published until 1957. There have been numerous reprints over the last 50 years with the most recent being the complete scrolls. This version is definitely worth buying but you can easily find the originally publishers version everywhere as well. The difference mainly is that in the scrolls features the real names of the characters before he changed them for the 1957 publication.
If you haven't read On The Road due yourself a favour a pick it up. Below is a classic clip from a Jack Kerouac documentary that epitomizes why he was one the best American writers we will ever see.
Charlie Parker (alto saxophone; b. 1920 - d. 1955)
Along with Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong, Charlie Parker is the reason why we love jazz. Charlie Parker was responsible for creating the foundation for many musicians (not just other saxophone players) to follow. The sheer power, beauty and swift ability of his improvisation is what everyone looks to achieve as a musician, why people go to concerts and why we buy an album. His skill was the result of years of study and hard work but he is arguably the godfather of bebop.
Born in Kansas City, Charlie Parker originally spent time playing blues and R&B before switching to jazz in his teens. After moving to New York he soon began working with Dizzy Gillespie (the partnership known to many as "Diz and Bird"). His life was filled with ups and downs all fueled by drugs (mainly heroin) and other struggles with life. But this is also what fueled his creative process and for that we have a wealth of material to be thankful for and to explore. Definitely an artist from whom everyone should at have at least one CD in their collection. If you go online or to a record store you will find a plethora of music from this legend.
This entry is really meant for those who may not have a Charlie Parker album in your collection. Let me narrow it down with a little laser sharp vision. I would recommend The Best of Savoy & Dial Studio Recordings (Savoy Jazz). This collection is pretty readily available online and in-stores. The music is literally the most essential of Charlie Parker's material and many of the tracks will be familiar even to those of you who are not jazz fans such as "Scrapple From The Apple", "Orinthology" and "Yardbird Suite". Charlie Parker's performances with Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie are well documented and can be found on a variety of other collections. The Best of Savoy & Dial Studio Recordings focuses on his material and while you listen you will realize you are in the presence of greatness.
Charlie Parker's influence can be felt on almost every artist in jazz in some form of another. And as one more point of reverence, one of Clint Eastwood's early production works was the film Bird which pays tribute to the legend. Not the greatest film but Eastwood is a big jazz aficionado so he deserves credit for trying.
I hope everyone has a chance to buy a Charlie Parker album at some point in their lives - you will have the opportunity to experience the Greatest right in your own room. This is why we love jazz.
The Intersection is a new feature on jazzmusic24 that looks at artists that blend jazz with electronica (a tradition pioneered by none other than Miles Davis on such classic recordings as On the Corner).
This week's focus is Mocean Worker.
Mocean Worker aka Adam Dorn is one of the jazzier electronica musicians out there, and with good reason – he has it in his blood. Dorn's dad Joel was one of Atlantic Records’ top producers during the 1960s and '70s, helming sessions by John Coltrane and Charles Mingus, as well as Roberta Flack, Bette Midler and the Allman Brothers.As for Adam, he studied at the renowned Berklee College of Music and has worked with artists as varied as David Sanborn to Hal Willner to Chaka Khan. Adam and his dad also have reissued jazz albums from the defunct Muse and Landmark labels on their own 32 Records.
Mocean Worker began promisingly with the cut ‘n’ paste drum ‘n’ bass album Home Movies from the Brainforest ('98), which was released by the punk label Conscience.His appreciation of Latin rhythms and crime jazz moods is evident on “The Mission” and “Overtime” which smolders with film noir intensity. His mash-up of “Summertime” and “Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child” is among the best of its late ‘90s retro kind.
Dorn moved to Island Records’ subsidiary Palm Pictures for his strong second effort, the more polished Mixed Emotional Features ('99). By turns jazzy and cinematic, this album further demonstrates Dorn’s love of tasty samples, but also shows some significant growth in his synth and production skills. An atmosphere of intrigue and drama pervades tracks such as “Rene M” and “Heaven @ 12:07.” And the cut ‘n’ paste retro jazz workout “Counts, Dukes and Satyrs” wouldn’t have sounded out of place on his first album.
Dorn’s third album Aural & Hearty ('00) is the clubbiest of his efforts and probably the most disposable, but does offer another trip down millennial sampledelic nu-jazz in “Velvet Black Sky.”
When Mocean Worker returned four years later with Enter the MoWo! ('04), Dorn’s taste for funky beats and jazz loops (“On and On”, “Right Now”) were back at the forefront.The album also features a number of special guests including Les McCann (“That’s What’s Happenin’ Tonight”), Bill Frissell (“Salted Fatback”), Steve Bernstein of Sex Mob (“Only the Shadow Knows”), and Hal Willner (“Move”) as well as David "Fathead" Newman, Rahsaan Roland Kirk, and Nina Simone. Enter the MoWo! may be the best introduction to Mocean Worker.
For his fifth album, Dorn continued to ply the old school beat jazz vibe and Latin jazz grooveswith Cinco de MoWo! ('07). Check out the infectious sample-jacking splendor of “Shake Ya Boogie”, and the cameo appearances of Herb “Tijuana Brass” Alpert (“Changes”) and Rahsaan Roland Kirk (“Siss Boom Bah” and “Reykjavik”).While the hooks aren’t quite as infectious as Enter the MoWo!, Cinco de MoWo! effectively builds on Dorn’s jazz-inspired electronica sound.
Next Week: Compost Records' Future Sounds of Jazz series
I met Roy Hargrove many years ago before his first record. I thought then that this cat was going to have two albums and never be heard from again. Oh boy, was I an idiot.
Roy Hargrove has had a long career filled with a few minor stops and starts but he has always been true to his craft. After being lumped in with the "Young Lions" tag back in the beginning of the '90s (along with Wynton Marsalis, Branford Marsalis, Joshua Redman, and others) Roy Hargrove has paved his own path and paid his own dues to become one of the more creative and thoughtful trumpeters of his generation. The "neo-classicism" label that many of the jazz artists were given during the '90s while condescending it was a rejection of the hard boiled fusion that had overtaken jazz during the '70s and '80s.
Roy Hargrove has done small quartet/quintet recordings, big band and hip hop; all to varying degrees but all with integrity. I have seen him live quite a few times over the last twenty years and he continues to impress me. He is not the new Miles Davis or Dizzy Gillespie but he is rising to the occasion with every record. Many of his earlier albums are not available anymore but if you see the compilation The Collected Roy Hargrove (Novus/RCA) I would highly recommend picking it up. It does a fine job of covering his first five albums.
Of his newer material I would recommend two of his most recent albums, the big band effort Emergence (Emarcy) which feels like an artist who has finally found his voice again and last years Earfood (Emarcy) which is a small group recording. Both are excellent examples of his entire career and you can begin to work backwards from there.
Check these two videos; the first is before his first record even came out and the second is from the Earfood release. Wow, if I had known that night I first met him how much of a fan would be now...
African rhythms and jazz have always been a great combination, but doing it well isn't always easy. Outhouse, a new collective from London, seem to be doing it with justice, integrity and invention. On their self titled debut, Outhouse (Babel Records) from 2008, settles right in with the aesthetics of European jazz (ethereal with sprinkles of experimentation). Their use of two tenor saxophonists and the influence of African drums makes their music more interesting than some of the more Miles Davis inspired acts coming out of Norway and Sweden at the moment. The second album from Outhouse entitled Outhouse Ruhabi (Loop) explores their African influences further with collaboration from Gambian drum outfit Ruhabi (hence the album title). Outhouse Ruhabi is fantastic concoction of European and African motifs that if you are fan of world music you are bound to enjoy. Both albums are a fascinating listens and definitely put Outhouse in the shop window as a band to look out for over the next couple of years.
Benny Goodman The Famous 1938 Carnegie Hall Jazz Concert (Columbia Records) Benny Goodman (clarinet, b. 1909 - d. 1986)
While some may associate Benny Goodman with the swing/WWII era, he was also a serious performer and band leader with a much wider vision for jazz (large ensembles as well as in small quartets). Goodman was also groundbreaking for employing and work with many African American artists at a time when it was highly dangerous to White performers careers. Goodman gave those critics a big "F.U."
The classic and historic Carnegie Hall Jazz Concert (Columbia Records) concert is one of those moments like when Bob Dylan went electric at the Newport Folk Festival in '65. The Carnegie Hall concert was important because it was the moment when Swing finally arrived to the masses. They (the audience) finally accepted the pulsating beat of Gene Krupa, the driving sensation of Buck Clayton's trumpet, Johnny Hodges on saxophone, the smooth rhythmic melodies of Teddy Wilson on piano and Lionel Hampton on vibes (as well as the rest of the orchestra).
This performance is absolutely smokin'. Forget everything you've ever thought about when it comes to swing and listen to this album as killer live jazz show. The Carnegie Hall Jazz Concert has always been criticized because the sound quality isn't great but this was an era before tape masters and the fact that this historic moment was recorded in its entirety is amazing.
You will feel completely different after listening to it on the first spin; A great live recording and probably one the most important in all of recorded music. Bob Dylan stunned the crowd at Newport and change everything for folk. Benny Goodman stunned the audience at Carnegie Hall and changed everything for Swing and Jazz. For more proof of the power of Benny Goodman's Orchestra take a look at the video for "Sing, Sing, Sing"--Gene Krupa (drums) is a madman!
John Coltrane Live At Birdland (Impulse) Jimmy Garrison (bass) Elvin Jones (drums) McCoy Tyner (piano) John Coltrane (sax)
Live At Birdland (Impulse) probably isn't the first choice for most jazz critics. And I'm not a critic. So my choice is a wonderful and moving performance from one of the most famous venues in the world, Birdland. This date was recorded during the rise of the civil rights movement in the early '60s and the emotion can be felt when listening this to record. The experience of being there was probably even greater.
The two opening tracks "Afro-Blue" and "I Want To Talk About You" are heavy, intense and spiritual as I listen to them again this evening. At this point in his career (1963) Coltrane was already in a peak performance and would soon go on the explore the more spiritual side as heard in his following recordings such as the benchmark A Love Supreme (Impulse) and it's follow up Crescent (Impulse). His quartet at this time was one of consistentency and invention. To me it symbolized what the African American experience was during the sixties and how far reaching it could go in the future.
The album also includes two studio recordings including one of my personal favourites "Alabama" which has become a standard in the jazz repertoire. Not necessarily your average live date but more of a introspective journey--Live At Birdland is definitely one of the great live albums in my book. And a nice slice of history.
Miles Davis Live In Stockholm 1960 (Dragon Records) Miles Davis (trumpet) Wynton Kelly (piano) Jimmy Cobb (drums) Paul Chambers (bass) John Coltrane (sax; March 22, 1960) Sonny Stitt (sax; October 13, 1960)
Live In Stockholm 1960 is an "unofficial/official" live album that has been released under various titles (Miles Davis in Stockholm Complete, ...with John Coltrane and Sonny Stitt in Stockholm Complete are usually the other widely seen titles). It can be found as a 4 disc or two separate 2 disc sets. The reason for this was that one concert recorded in March of 1960 included John Coltrane and a second concert in October 1960 featuring Sonny Stitt (both on saxophone). This tour took place just a few months after Miles recorded Kind Of Blue and during the time he would record Sketches of Spain.
Live In Stockholm 1960 is one of my favourite CDs of all time. Originally recorded for Swedish Radio it is of very high quality. The concert with Coltrane is fascinating on two levels. One, you can feel the pounding tension (in the best possible way) of two giants ripping through chords at breakneck speed. It's bop at its finest. Second, if you are lucky with the version you purchase there is an interview with John Coltrane between sets. Coltrane talks of what it is like to be in Miles's band, his admiration for fellow saxophonist Sonny Rollins and his own future plans. The Sonny Stitt date is a real pleasure; not just in comparing how these two saxophone players shape Miles' material but also how Stitt interacts with fellow band members, Paul Chambers, Jimmy Cobb and Wynton Kelly. Stitt was not as adventurous as Coltrane but he was just fierce on the sax, so the date becomes a wonderful companion piece as well as a historical document.
This may be a very difficult set to find and it can be pricey if you do manage to discover it, but I guarantee you Live In Stockholm 1960 is worth whatever you pay for it. I have enjoyed listening to this album (first on vinyl and then CD) for almost 20 years and it never stops sounding anything short of spectacular.
The Intersection is a new feature on jazzmusic24 that looks at artists that blend jazz with electronica (a tradition pioneered by none other than Miles Davis on such classic recordings as On The Corner).
This week's focus is Jaga Jazzist.
Norwegian nu jazz fusionists, Jaga Jazzist, scored an underground hit in Scandenavia with their full-length debut, A Livingroom Hush (2001). This 10-piece band is as unique sounding as anything in jazz or electronica today. By combining trumpets, bass clarinets, trombone, guitar, bass, tuba, Fender Rhodes, vibraphone and drum 'n' bass-style programming, Jaga Jazzist (or simply Jaga) create a dense, complicated, melodic balance of man and machine. Stand-out tracks include the single "Animal Chin," the spacious "Cinematic," the hypnotic "Airborne," the uplifting "Lithuania," and the infectious "Made for Radio."
Jaga's follow up, The Stix (2003), continues along the same lines, but ratchets up the electronic element, which adds interest to most tracks ("Kitty Wu," "Toxic Dart," "Day") while overwhelming others ("The Stix," "Doppleganger").
The e.p. release that followed, entitled Magazine (2004), is actually a reissue of the band's early work, and it's more like A Livingroom Hush than The Stix. The quality of the material is excellent and the musicianship exemplary. Stand-out tracks include the invigorating "Jaga ist Zu Hause" and the gorgeous "Plym".
When Jaga returned with new material on What We Must (2005) they sounded a bit more prog than before with greater emphasis on keyboards and guitars. Emotionally resonant melodies meet virtuouso ensemble performances on tracks such as "All I Know is Tonight," "Stardust Hotel" and "Oslo Skyline." While the material and performances are impressive, some of the charm of the earlier work is lost. Still, all of these releases are highly recommended.
Jaga Jazzist is the answer for anyone who thinks the mix of electronica and jazz is limited to the downtempo grooves that feature a jazzy breakbeat (like Mr. Scruff's catchy "Get a Move On" or St. Germain's "Rose Rouge," which was used in a luxury car commercial). Jaga Jazzist is way beyond jazz posing -- they've got serious chops, melodic gifts and an eagerness to push the electronic jazz genre to new heights. They actually create music worthy of the label, but in their case, the label hardly does them justice.
Woody Shaw for me was a logical successor to Miles Davis. At one point Miles Davis and Woody Shaw were both signed to Columbia Records. Shaw's career never really scaled the same heights as Miles Davis, Lee Morgan or even Donald Byrd (fellow trumpet contemporaries). Woody Shaw had the same distractions as many other musicians during the 60's and early '70s. He also suffered from a retinal disease that restricted his eye sight.
Shaw's clear cut focus on post bop may have cost him a wider audience even after incorporating swathes of innovative fusion for a string of albums during the mid-seventies. But it's that same precision and dedication that kept each of his records sounding rich, vibrant and still surpass a large majority of the records of the 70's and 80's. Woody Shaw would go on to influence another set of up and coming musicians such as Tony Reedus (drums), Mulgrew Miller (piano) and Steve Turre (trombone) whom would play in his band shortly before his death. Woody Shaw would die in the hospital after a tragic NYC Subway accident.
Most of Woody Shaw's catalouge is now unavailable (there are a few you can download) but there is an excellent series of CD's entitled Woody Shaw Live Vol. I - IV (High Note Records) that can serve as a wonderful primer if you interested in hearing a truly underrated musician like Woody Shaw. If you see any of his albums at a record store or online I would highly recommend buying them.
Woody Shaw built a huge body of work in just a short amount of time ('65 - '87) and his legacy will continue through these CD's and the artists he has influenced including Wynton Marsalis, Anthony Braxton and one of my favorites Dave Douglas. I hope that more people will come to appreciate and regard Woody Shaw with the legendary status as time passes. Check out the commentary from Anthony Braxton on Woody Shaw below.
Is there a cure for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS)? If we go by the current medical paradigm then we are more likely to wind up with another symptom suppressant, i.e. a drug that allows the sufferers to “live with it”. Conventional or allopathic medicine is not really much dedicated to “cures” as such, since they reduce the customer base.
Our point here is not aimed specifically at CFS, but is aimed at using this as an example of how more and more chronic and acute conditions are having their root cause associated with one or more pathogens, e.g. viruses, bacteria, etc. Even with conditions like some mental illnesses, arthritis and autism, etc., it is being discovered that micro organisms of a pathogenic nature and even some newly discovered stealth viruses are either causing or aggravating the disease. There are alternative and experimental, politically suppressed therapies, that are extremely successful in killing these germs. Keep reading:
“Earlier this month, a study published in the journal Science answered a question that medical scientists had been asking since 2006, when they learned of a novel virus found in prostate tumors called xenotropic murine leukemia virus-related virus, or XMRV: Was it a human infection?
“The new study provided overwhelming evidence that XMRV is a human gammaretrovirus — the third human retrovirus (after H.I.V. and human lymphotropic viruses, which cause leukemia and lymphoma). Infection is permanent and, yes, it can spread from person to person (though it is not yet known how the virus is transmitted).
“That would have been news enough, but there was more. XMRV had been discovered in people suffering from chronic fatigue syndrome, a malady whose very existence has been a subject of debate for 25 years. For sufferers of this disease, the news has offered enormous hope. Being seriously ill for years, even decades, is nightmarish enough, but patients are also the targets of ridicule and hostility that stem from the perception that it is all in their heads. In the study, 67 percent of the 101 patients with the disease were found to have XMRV in their cells.
“Many people don’t realize how severe this illness can be. It is marked by memory and cognition problems, and physical collapse after any mental or physical exertion. The various co-infections that occur only make matters worse. Many patients are bedridden. And recovery is rare. A significant number of patients have been ill for more than two decades.” See Article and Dr. Mercola’s comments: DR. MERCOLA’S COMMENTS
Many conditions are no doubt caused or made worse by diet and the multitude of chemicals that we ingest routinely, but knowing that germs are part of the cause makes a solution more probable.
Two alternative therapies that have demonstrated amazing success in defeating pathogens of all types are ozone therapy and rife therapy (see below for links), both of which are not recognized by the US FDA and AMA. Both of these therapies have been shown to kill all types of pathogens without any harm to normal tissue! Of course, this research has been suppressed in the US by the vested interests that profit by our continued ill health and dependency on drugs, surgery and other invasive and destructive forms of treatment. In panning these two very effective modes of treatment as used in Germany, Russia, and Mexico etc. by physicians for more than 50 years in some cases, they have denied effective treatment to US citizens who are not able or avail themselves of these alternative therapies.
Most people are not wealthy or healthy enough to travel to these exotic places to get the enormously expensive treatments from these foreign clinics. However, many independent and industrious people can find these treatments right in the USA either through an alternative practitioner or by procuring and using the equipment themselves. We have known many such people who have gotten very good results treating themselves at a fraction of the cost of going to one of these clinics either here or abroad.
Still, this necessitates a great amount of determination and emotional independence in order to neutralize the scare tactics that are employed by modern medicine, e.g. witness the H1N1 flu scare campaign that is unfolding currently. The truth has been high-jacked and propagandized by a government spurred on by big pharmaceutical interests---greed---to produce one of the most insidious and dangerous assaults on our health through mass marketed and unnecessary vaccination. The proof of this is overwhelming and is right there in the govermentment reports, (CDC and others) to read. Yet, we are a country of increasingly sheepish mentality, and we are accepting the corrupted message of the spin doctors instead of looking at the facts for ourselves. PLEASE WATCH THIS AND READ THIS---IT IS A MATTER OF LIFE AND DEATH!
There may be a cure for CFS, just as there may be cures for many so-called “incurable” diseases. We are not doctors and so cannot give medical advice. We recommend you consult a good alternative M.D. to assist you. However, as long as we are a free people, and this may not be for long if we do not wake up and realize that “freedom is not free”, we have the right to experiment and choose the therapy that we believe will help us the most. When this “right” goes, as it seems to be doing, we are indeed in trouble. We recommend you research this further and we have supplied what we believe are the two very best sources for information and self help, practical means to achieve your goal of health and wellness.
I have written about David S. Ware before. He is one the few musicians I believe is pushing jazz forward. Today I wanted to share with everyone some terrific news to my heart. As some of you may know David has been severely ill with kidney failure for the last few years. This limited his touring but not so much his recording. Currently David S. Ware is back on the scene and looks to vibrant as ever. But here's something I really wanted to pass along with everyone from NBC Nightly News Online. A rare national interview with this jazz iconoclast. I hope it touches you as much as he has me. This is why we love jazz.
Soweto Kinch is a young British alto sax player with hip hop influences. Resembling the Roots and Guru's Jazzmatazz in session with Sonny Rollins, Courtney Pine and Branford Marsalis, Soweto creates an atmosphere while not original it is definitely honest and heartwarming. Unlike most hip hop jazz hybrids Soweto manages to meld the two with great affect. It also helps that Soweto is a good lyricists. His two albums Conversations With The Unseen (Dune Records) and The Life in The Day of B19 (Dune Records) both explore the journey of a jazz musician in a hardcore urban environment.
Don't be put off by the hip hop tilted of these records, Soweto Kinch is a true jazz musician. He has laid the ground work for serious growth over his next few albums. Soweto Kinch is one of those artists to truly look out for in the future. If are a fan of groups like the Roots, Massive Attack, Jurassic Five and the fusion of jazz and hip hop than you should take a spin with Soweto Kinch and hear what the future of jazz can be.
Wynton Kelly is most remembered for his lush, melodic, hard bop performance on Miles Davis' "Freddy Freeloader" from the Kind Of Blue album. But I feel he was much more a significant player than just that one shinning (and I do mean "shinning" moment). His career was not long ('51 - '68) and his recordings were what some may call "middle of road" but if you listen much more closely you will hear all the signatures of a great giant emerging onto the scene. Miles knew this. Unfortunately Wynton Kelly didn't have the opportunity to expand on the ideas he was creating as a leader.
His most constant trio (Paul Chambers (bass), Jimmy Cobb (drums) performed with Wes Montgomery on the classic Live At The Half Note and with Joe Henderson on two fantastic albums for Verve. (Four! and Straight No Chaser). Wynton Kelly's style laid right in the middle of the hard bop scene. He was definitely more powerful than his contemporary, Bill Evans (whom he replaced in Miles Davis' quartet) and had a rhythmic excellence that blended perfectly with his fellow musicians on every record. He could go from a straight ahead hard bop standard to his own more bluesy driven ballad with ease.
Wynton Kelly is that missing link in the Miles discography that everyone should investigate. Most of his albums are surprisingly still available. If you have the opportunity you should check out two import collections which combine a number of albums on to two discs (The Vee Jay Recordings (Lone Hill Jazz) and The Complete Blue Note Trio Sessions (Jazz Factory)). These collections cover a lot of ground and along with Live At The Half Note (Lone Hill Jazz) and Complete Joe Henderson Recordings (Lone Hill Jazz) would give you about 85% of the Wynton Kelly you would need. And that's still good.
For those you looking to download try Kelly The Great and Kelly At Midnight both on Vee Jay Recordings.
Anthony Braxton (saxophone, clarinet, flute; b. 1945)
Anthony Braxton is considered a major influencer in the Free Jazz/Avant Garde Jazz movement. Recently I had to rethink how I had to approach this future jazz legend. I have always been apprehensive about diving into the catalog of Anthony Braxton (alto and soprano saxophone) due to a vast array of releases he has recorded. But I believe there is an album for everyone--from the well versed to the newcomer.
Braxton has a magnificent ability to shift between a wild inner cacophony of his solo compositions and beautiful collaborative efforts with quartets, quintets and large ensembles unlike many of his contemporaries. His music can resemble the best classical composer such as Cage, Schoenberg or Stockhausen as well as jazz legends John Coltrane, Ornette Coleman or Wayne Marsh to name a few.
One album that I feel can have appeal to both the experimentalist and the average jazz listener would be the two disc set entitled What's New In The Tradition (SteepleChase). This two disc set features Braxton and his quartet (featuring piano great Tete Montoliu) performing standards from Charles Mingus to John Coltrane. Many critics have mixed opinions about this date, mostly mentioning that due to the focus on standards the recording is too slow paced. I think this is true only if you are a diehard Braxton fan used to his more avant garde recordings. If you are just checking him out this is definitely the best and affordable entry point. It gives you great way to experience his playing and insight on how he deconstructs some classics. In addition, it's a perfect starting point to explore some of his more "out there" recordings.
If you are interested in some of Anthony Braxton's avant garde recordings I would look to the classics live recordings from his 1985 European tour with his most famous and adventurous quartet which included Marilyn Crispell (piano), Gerry Hemingway (drums) and Mark Dresser (bass). There were three albums all titled by the city in which they performed (London, Coventry and Birmingham (Leo Records)). After revisiting these albums just a few weeks ago it felt like a whole new discovery of a jazz great.
If you have ever wondered where to start and your interests lie on either side of the jazz fence you should start with these albums. It's more than just Jazz 101--get started.