Ornette Coleman - Tomorrow Is the Question!
Facts
| Artist(s) | Ornette Coleman |
| Studio | Ojc |
| Release Date | July 1, 1991 |
| UPC Code | 025218634229 |
| Buy this item | $11.98 at Amazon.com As of Dec 1 4:01 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
About Ornette Coleman - Tomorrow Is the Question!
The last two years of the 1950s and early years of the '60s saw Ornette Coleman exert a profound influence on the future direction of jazz. It was a remarkably fertile time for him as a composer. This set amply demonstrates his composing skill. Tunes like "Tears Inside," "Turnaround," and the aching beauty of "Lorraine" are brilliant and, in a perfect world, should be standard jazz repertoire today. Coleman quickly broke through to a new freedom in jazz. He would soon find more receptive players to work alongside than on this recording; however, the playing is still of high caliber and the tunes are now justly legendary. --Michael Monhart Amazon.com
Tracks
- Tomorrow Is the Question!
- Tears Inside
- Mind and Time
- Compassion
- Giggin'
- Rejoicing
- Lorraine
- Turnabout
- Endless
Similar CDs
| Something Else!!!!:The Music of Ornette Coleman | Change of the Century | This Is Our Music | The Shape of Jazz to Come | Free Jazz |
User Reviews
Average user review:| Unsympathetic support. |
This time around though, things are worse-- liberating himself from a piano, Coleman nonethless had a rhythm section foisted upon him of either Percy Heath or Red MItchell on bass and Shelly Manne on drums. One gets the impression they wanted to get it, but just couldn't. Coleman (on alto) and to a lesser extent Don Cherry (on trumpet) attempt to bring the music out, but every time they do, the bassist and Manne seem to stay with the straight pattern. This sort of leaves the soloist hanging, with disasterous results on several pieces (most noticably "Mind and Time" and "Compassion", where it almost sounds like the horns and rhythm are playing two different songs because their playing is so dramatically different and "Rejoicing" where Coleman tries to break the structure but the Heath in particular stubbornly walks).
In fact, the only piece that really seems to work is "Tears Inside", where both Cherry and Coleman solo much further inside than they do on any of the other pieces-- Cherry's solo in particular is lovely.
But in the end, the set is a disorganized mess-- these guys may have been sympathetic to Coleman, but they weren't prepared for what they had to do to keep his music intact. In several months when in New York, Coleman and Cherry would record masterpiece "The Shape of Jazz to Come" with Charlie Haden and Billy Higgins, and the difference is astounding. This one is for completionists only. September 2, 2005
| For us timid souls, a great introduction to a revolutionary |
| Tomorrow is the Answer! |
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