Showing posts with label Jazz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jazz. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Geoff Dyer / Torrential, Gut-Bucket Jazz

 


Ornette Coleman.jpg
Bob Parent/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
Ornette Coleman with Don Cherry at the 5 Spot Cafe, New York City, November 17, 1959

Torrential, Gut-Bucket Jazz


Geoff Dyer
June 20, 2015


It happened that on the day the great saxophonist and composer Ornette Coleman died I was watching a preview of a recently salvaged film by Sydney Pollack of the making of Aretha Franklin’s Amazing Grace. The album was recorded live at the New Temple Missionary Baptist Church in Los Angeles, the city where, in the late 1950s, Ornette and his collaborators, Charlie Haden (bass), Don Cherry (trumpet), and Ed Blackwell or Billy Higgins (drums) had formed the quartet that would soon declare the shape of jazz to come. The idea for Amazing Grace was that Aretha would record an album of the gospel music she’d grown up hearing and singing in her father’s church in Detroit. This was in 1972. John Coltrane had died in 1967, Albert Ayler—the tenor saxophonist who, along with Ornette, had played at Coltrane’s funeral—in 1970. Martin Luther King, Jr. had been dead for four years. The unifying grace of the civil rights era had given way to the fractured militancy of Black Power and revolutionary struggle.