Product Details

Ornette Coleman – Free Jazz (Black Vinyl)

$18.99

Description

‚Free Jazz: A Collective Improvisation‘ is the sixth album by jazz saxophonist and composer Ornette Coleman, released in 1961. Its title named the then-nascent free jazz movement. The music is a continuous free improvisation with no overdubbing or editing. The album features what Coleman called a “double quartet,” – two self-contained jazz quartets: each with a reed instrument, trumpet, bass, and drums. The two quartets play simultaneously, with the two rhythm sections providing a dense rhythmic foundation over which the wind players either solo or provide freeform commentaries, interspersed with pre-composed passages. The composed thematic material can be considered a series of brief, dissonant fanfares for the horns which serve as interludes between solos. Free Jazz was the first album-length improvisation at thirty-seven minutes, unheard of at the time. AllMusic critic Steve Huey described it in his five-star retrospective review as “a staggering achievement” which “practically defies superlatives in its historical importance.” It served as the blueprint for later large-ensemble free jazz recordings such as Ascension by John Coltrane and Machine Gun by Peter Brötzmann.

Item Tracks

# Track Title
Side A Track # 1 Free Jazz – Part 1
Side B Track # 1 Free Jazz – Part 2

Additional Information

Attributes Values
Artist Ornette Coleman
Publisher SECOND RECORDS
Format Vinyl
Edition Live
Side A Track # 1 Free Jazz – Part 1
Side B Track # 1 Free Jazz – Part 2

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