New York Is Now

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New York Is Now album cover
Album Information
  • Artist: Ornette Coleman (See All Albums by Ornette Coleman)
  • Date Released: Jan 15, 1990

  • Genre: Jazz, Style: Traditional

  • Label: BLUE NOTE

Total Tracks: 6   Total Length: 47:11

eMusic Features

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It used to be easier to pretend that an album was its own perfectly self-contained artifact. The great records certainly feel that way. But albums are more permeable than solid, their motivations, executions and inspirations informed by, and often stolen from, their peers and forbearers. It all sounds awfully formal, but it's not. It's the very nature of music — of art, even. The Six Degrees features examine the relationships between classic records and five… more »

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By Kevin Whitehead, eMusic Contributor

Don Cherry began to make his mark with his first recording session, on February 10, 1958, as foil for freebopping alto saxophonist Ornette Coleman on music recorded for Something Else! Their bebop forebears Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker favored rough-sounding unison melodies, a departure from the swing era's smooth blends, but the Coleman-Cherry mix was scrappier still. As soloist, Don took cues from how Ornette's solos didn't track a tune's harmonies too closely. They didn't… more »

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By Britt Robson, eMusic Contributor

You can count the people who changed the language of jazz on one hand: Louis Armstrong, Charlie Parker, (some would include Dizzy Gillespie here) and last, but not least, Ornette Coleman. As happened when Parker, Gillespie, Monk and others broke through with bebop in the 1940s, Coleman's then-revolutionary music at the close of the 1950s polarized listeners by challenging them to listen to jazz with fewer preconceptions. Derided as noise by many and defended under the… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Recorded during the same session that resulted in the Love Call album (in late April and early May of 1968), New York Is Now is one of the true curiosity pieces in Ornette’s catalog. With a rhythm section comprised of ex-Coltrane sidemen Jimmy Garrison and Elvin Jones as well as tenorist Dewey Redman, Ornette is, in some sense, at odds with himself here. This particular rhythm section is a lot more modally than harmonically propelled — especially Jones, who sounds here like he doesn’t know what to do with himself in the restrictive tempos — and creates a complex set of issues for Coleman and Redman to contend with. That said, on “The Garden of Souls,” which opens the album, Coleman makes the most of this sprightly, energetic rhythm team and moves through quotations of “Moon River,” “Danny Boy,” and even Paul Muriat’s “Love Is Blue” during his solo, before shifting the harmonics around and anchoring them somewhere between E flat 7 and E major. On “Broadway Blues,” Coleman uses Monk liberally in his melodic conception, and he and Redman have a go at turning a seven-note vamp into all sorts of knotty material for soloing — and you can almost feel Jones smile as the tempo reaches triple time as the saxophonists race each other through it. And while this date is of only marginal interest on some level (for true hardcore Ornette-ophiles), it is pleasant and amusing if not amazing — with the exception of “For a Commercial,” which features Ornette’s “fine” violin playing above the rest of the band in the mix (what a downer). – Thom Jurek

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