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Don Cherry - Relativity Suite (1973) [Free Jazz]; FLAC (tracks+.cue)

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Mike1985
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Don Cherry - Relativity Suite (1973) [Free Jazz]; FLAC (tracks+.cue)

Unread postby Mike1985 » 15 Feb 2017, 07:24


Artist: Don Cherry
Album: Relativity Suite
Genre: Free Jazz
Label: JCOA Records/Trio Records Japan
Released: 1973
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue)
Tracklist:
  1. Tantra (7:58)
  2. Mali Doussn'gouni (5:37)
  3. Desireless (1:25)
  4. The Queen Of Tung-Ting Lake (4:32)
  5. Trans-Love Airways (6:48)
  6. Infinite Gentleness (3:24)
  7. March Of The Hobbits (3:37)

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    Personnel:
  • Don Cherry - composer, conductor, trumpet, conch, voice, percussion
  • Charles Brackeen – soprano saxophone, alto saxophone, voice
  • Carlos Ward – alto saxophone, voice
  • Frank Lowe – tenor sax, voice
  • Dewey Redman – tenor sax, voice
  • Sharon Freeman – French horn
  • Brian Trentham – trombone
  • Jack Jeffers – tuba
  • Leroy Jenkins – violin
  • Joan Kalisch – viola
  • Nan Newton – viola
  • Pat Dixon – cello
  • Jane Robertson – cello
  • Charlie Haden – bass
  • Carla Bley – piano
  • Ed Blackwell – drums
  • Paul Motian - percussion
  • Moki Cherry – tambura
  • Selene Fung – ching

One of Don Cherry's most spiritual, far-reaching projects – a wonderful record that builds both on his key avant work of the 60s, and some of the globally-inspired sounds he was cutting overseas! This date was done in close collaboration with the New York underground of the time – and the large group features work from a rich array of great musicians – including Charles Brackeen on soprano and alto sax, Carlos Ward on alto, Frank Lowe and Dewey Redman on tenors, Charlie Haden on bass, Carla Bley on piano, and Ed Blackwell on drums – working with additional string and percussion players in a sound that's completely sublime! There's a great ear here for unusual sonic twists and turns, yet these are mixed with some deeper organic tones, and some freer jazz passages – all to really ignite a great fire as the set rolls on.

Don Cherry appeared on the first two releases by JCOA, albums under the leadership of label founders Carla Bley and Michael Mantler, so their decision to commission him for the third album seemed a wise move, as indeed it was. Using many of the same musicians who contributed to those records and were then established as the loose collective called the Jazz Composer's Orchestra, Cherry molded into a suite a string of the pieces he'd been composing and performing in the previous few years. Under the tutelage of Pandit Pran Nath, Cherry had been studying and increasingly using Indian karnatic singing in his recordings and concerts; he begins this album with a similarly derived chant. As the energy heats up, the orchestra launches into the captivating "Mali Doussn'gouni," featuring a raging tenor solo by Frank Lowe and delightful vocal acrobatics by Cherry. When it slowly dissolves into his achingly beautiful "Desireless," the first half of the album comes to an extremely satisfying conclusion. The remainder of the session is somewhat more of a mixed bag, succeeding off and on. Highlights include Selene Fung's lovely work on the ching, a Chinese koto-like instrument, and Ed Blackwell's exuberant New Orleans marching patterns on the concluding number. While not as breathtaking or cohesive as his Eternal Rhythm, Relativity Suite almost matches that release in its first half and contains many a worthwhile joy.

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