The Shape Of Jazz To Come

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (101 ratings)
The Shape Of Jazz To Come album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 6   Total Length: 38:11

Write a Review 3 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Mainstream

Caponsacchi

The music sounds practically tame after half a century, adhering to traditional progressions, 4/4 walking bass patterns, and acoustic instruments throughout. Compared to the deafening roar that Coltrane would unleash following the departure of McCoy and Elvin, this is cocktail music. Nor does it have the angry, violent, political overtones of what I had to endure from Pharaoh Sanders circa 1968--those were non-musical "happenings" (Coltrane's last 2 years were of a more spiritual order, a rapturous quest that ended, ended, ultimately on the bloody thorns of life). Ornette's command of his horn is the only thing that remains controversial about his playing. Not only was he no Bird: he was no Jimmy Dorsey (for that matter, few were; Dorsey could play with the most polished and pyrotechnical ligit musicians when he chose).

user avatar

contemporary fusion?

jjay1015

a great proto-free jazz album ,Emusic once again needs to do some house cleaning, either site wide, or those who are in charge. this is not a fusion album, look at all the classic jazz albums being listed as fusion, I have had trouble finding other genres as well that have been categorized wrong. also if a 1960 album per say is remastered in 2005, you list it under 2005 in stead of original release, this makes no sense. and lets not forget the 2 bands with the same name being listed together, even though the style of music can be polar opposite. drives me crazy. these problems need taken care of.

user avatar

gorgeous

BelgianDean

Lonely Woman gives me the shivers every time I hear it. But all of it is great music, truly original and musical

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

They Say All Music Guide

Ornette Coleman’s Atlantic debut, The Shape of Jazz to Come, was a watershed event in the genesis of avant-garde jazz, profoundly steering its future course and throwing down a gauntlet that some still haven’t come to grips with. The record shattered traditional concepts of harmony in jazz, getting rid of not only the piano player but the whole idea of concretely outlined chord changes. The pieces here follow almost no predetermined harmonic structure, which allows Coleman and partner Don Cherry an unprecedented freedom to take the melodies of their solo lines wherever they felt like going in the moment, regardless of what the piece’s tonal center had seemed to be. Plus, this was the first time Coleman recorded with a rhythm section — bassist Charlie Haden and drummer Billy Higgins — that was loose and open-eared enough to follow his already controversial conception. Coleman’s ideals of freedom in jazz made him a feared radical in some quarters; there was much carping about his music flying off in all directions, with little direct relation to the original theme statements. If only those critics could have known how far out things would get in just a few short years; in hindsight, it’s hard to see just what the fuss was about, since this is an accessible, frequently swinging record. It’s true that Coleman’s piercing, wailing alto squeals and vocalized effects weren’t much beholden to conventional technique, and that his themes often followed unpredictable courses, and that the group’s improvisations were very free-associative. But at this point, Coleman’s desire for freedom was directly related to his sense of melody — which was free-flowing, yes, but still very melodic. Of the individual pieces, the haunting “Lonely Woman” is a stone-cold classic, and “Congeniality” and “Peace” aren’t far behind. Any understanding of jazz’s avant-garde should begin here. – Steve Huey

more »