'Old and New Dreams' are Don Cherry, Dewey Redman, Charlie Haden and Ed Blackwell; a quartet comprised of Ornette Coleman alumni.
As bassist Charlie Haden explained:
"We feel that everything we experienced together playing with Ornette shouldn't stop. That improvised acoustic music doesn't happen now, not that way. We're not duplicating 20-year-old songs, but playing from Ornette´s harmelodic concept which each of us grew up in, playing on the feeling rather than the chord structure or melody."
Confusingly, Old and New Dreams made two self-titled albums, the first was for the Black Saint label in 1976, and the second for ECM Records in 1979, which is today's freeload.
To my ears the highlights of this recording are an extended performance of the classic "Lonely Woman" on which bass player Charlie Haden really shines. The two African-influenced originals, "Togo" by drummer Ed Blackwell, which is based on a Ghanese traditional folk song and "Guinea" by trumpeter/pianist Don Cherry. And then there's Charlie Haden’s "Song for the Whales" on which Charlie said "It was written with respect for all species of whales, in the hope that they will soon be protected by international law." Well, Charlie got his wish fulfilled [though one can argue about just how effective the International Whaling Convention actually is - Ed.]. I once read somewhere that the song of the humpback whale spans eight octaves. From the way this track sounds, Charlie's bass can span eight octaves.
This is Free Jazz, but accessibly so.
Tracks:
- Lonely Woman
- Guinea
- Open Or Close
- Orbit Of La-Ba
- Song For The Whales
Don Cherry - trumpet, piano
Dewey Redman - Tenor saxophone and Musette (suona)
(The instrument, Suona, is a Han Chinese oboe, also called Laba, and is credited as a "Musette" on this release)
Charlie Haden - Bass
Ed Blackwell - Drums
Produced by Manfred Eicher
Recorded in August 1979 at Talent Studio, Oslo
This is a vinyl rip of Original German pressing from 1979
For the freeload, tell us what your favorite non-domesticated wild animal is.


Well, at the risk of disqualifying myself from the freeload. Here is an article and picture of my favourite semi domesticated wild animal. When I were a lad, Mr Walton lived just over the field from us and was regularly to be seen taking his lion or tiger for a walk. He had to keep them on a lead of course, especially when he took them to the bank. Hard to think that this was accepted in 1960's England!
ReplyDeletehttps://www.martinsbank.co.uk/11-72-21%20Chester-le-Street.htm
Unbelievable! Thanks for the link, Nobby.
DeleteNo chance of him losing his spot at the bar but what did he do when he needed the restroom?
DeleteThe penguin, a very snazzy dresser.
ReplyDeleteThe living embodiment of bespoke.
DeleteThe three-toed sloth is a fine member of any forest community...
ReplyDeleteD in California
El Tigre tops the list but as someone has knabbed it already I've always thought a Duck Billed Platypus was always kinda cool
ReplyDeleteThe marmots I met hiking in the Rockies seem were very charming at first. Extroverted and inquisitive and fearless. They scurried around and into our packs presumably looking for food after a hard hibernation. Too late I learned they were really after wallets. Just the credit cards as they had no use for cash. I'm still trying to straighten it out with Target. BASTARD MUTANT SQUIRRELS!
ReplyDeleteThe truth about marmots
Deletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K0YR6wNco5k
Klaus Kinski
ReplyDeleteWell played.
Deletethe Elephant
ReplyDeleteI recognize or, better, resonate to, the archetypal intersection of strength and the feminine discoverable in the encounter with the elephants whether it is face-to-face—for me at the Cleveland zoo—or in dreams or on the screen or in mysterious inchoate ciphers.
When the elephant appears in my art it is always then in an important and personal piece.
The armadillo.
ReplyDeleteBeavers. They're brilliant engineers who around here are renewing our wetlands as dams are decommissioned and removed.
ReplyDeleteThe Panda Bear. Docile, goofy and downright silly creatures.
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ReplyDeletehttps://we.tl/t-STEdyvcguz
The Lord of the Grass, the Capybara!
ReplyDeleteTigers. Beautiful, fierce, supple, strong and loyal. Oh, and my high school and college mascot.
ReplyDeletehedgehogs over wombats over marmots.
ReplyDeleteThailand's national animal is the elephant, but they're just too big for me. Tigers are awesome! Non-related perhaps, but ECM is another great label!
ReplyDeleteI like birds, especially ravens and particularly owls, especially snowy owls (symbol of fornication and wisdom - what a strange combination 😁).
ReplyDeleteNew Link
ReplyDeletehttps://we.tl/t-K9NeS9rhO7
Thank you very much. It's not that easy to find this record.
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