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Charlie Haden|The Montreal Tapes (Live)

The Montreal Tapes (Live)

Ed Blackwell

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It's a no-brainer that a festival week honoring the music of Charlie Haden will include some kind of Ornette Coleman variation, but this trio lineup -- call it either the original Coleman quartet sans Ornette or three-quarters of Old and New Dreams -- still springs some surprises. Apart from Don Cherry's "Art Deco" and "Mopti," it's all Coleman material, but drawn from the very early (circa the Something Else! LP) and very late stages (Broken Shadows/Science Fiction LPs) of his acoustic phase rather than the famed Atlantic period. Musical bonuses quickly become apparent on the opening "The Sphinx" -- Cherry is playing a lot more pocket trumpet than usual for this late-career stage, just as Haden does a lot more turbocharged walking than his latter-day norm. The same holds on Ed Blackwell's spotlight "Happy House," the bass going double time and Cherry romping with high spirits, before the drummer delivers a model solo of polyrhythmic simplicity. "Lonely Woman" is the lone "classic" here, with applause greeting Haden's beautiful opening chord strums, Blackwell's cymbals, and Cherry's mournful muted pocket trumpet. Haden goes deep melancholy with his masterful solo, touching on his Ozark upbringing by quoting a country or folk melody. (It's probably from the public domain, but what is that tune? "John Henry?" The source for "Tom Dooley"?) For good measure, he then tosses in a taste of the riff from his "Ramblin'" solo that became the anchor of "Sex & Drugs & Rock 'n' Roll." Cherry's silliness with instrument sounds wastes a strong Haden-Blackwell effort on "Mopti," but "The Blessing" bounces back with a bopping, bluesy midtempo groove that also serves as the blueprint for the last two pieces. Muted flurries by Cherry or minimal cymbal clicks from Blackwell that generate so much rhythmic propulsion, Haden's old-school, physical walking lines -- it's the small details and quiet touches applied to the unique flavor of Coleman's concept that gives these pieces and this volume of The Montreal Tapes as a whole its value.
© Don Snowden /TiVo

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The Montreal Tapes (Live)

Charlie Haden

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1
The Sphinx (Live)
00:09:31

Ornette Coleman, ComposerLyricist - Charlie Haden, MainArtist - Don Cherry, MainArtist - Ed Blackwell, MainArtist

℗ 1994 Radio Canada

2
Art Deco (Live)
00:06:24

Charlie Haden, MainArtist - Don Cherry, MainArtist, ComposerLyricist - Ed Blackwell, MainArtist

℗ 1994 Radio Canada

3
Happy House (Live)
00:08:24

Ornette Coleman, Composer - Charlie Haden, MainArtist - Don Cherry, MainArtist - Ed Blackwell, MainArtist

℗ 1994 Radio Canada

4
Lonely Woman (Live)
00:11:41

Margo Guryan, Composer - Ornette Coleman, ComposerLyricist - Charlie Haden, MainArtist - Don Cherry, MainArtist - Ed Blackwell, MainArtist

℗ 1994 Radio Canada

5
Mopti (Live)
00:05:30

Charlie Haden, MainArtist - Don Cherry, Composer, MainArtist - Ed Blackwell, MainArtist

℗ 1994 Radio Canada

6
The Blessing (Live)
00:06:02

Ornette Coleman, ComposerLyricist - Charlie Haden, MainArtist - Don Cherry, MainArtist - Ed Blackwell, MainArtist

℗ 1994 Radio Canada

7
When Will The Blues Leave (Live)
00:04:04

Ornette Coleman, ComposerLyricist - Charlie Haden, MainArtist - Don Cherry, MainArtist - Ed Blackwell, MainArtist

℗ 1994 Radio Canada

8
Law Years (Live)
00:06:43

Ornette Coleman, Composer - Charlie Haden, MainArtist - Don Cherry, MainArtist - Ed Blackwell, MainArtist

℗ 1994 Radio Canada

Chronique

It's a no-brainer that a festival week honoring the music of Charlie Haden will include some kind of Ornette Coleman variation, but this trio lineup -- call it either the original Coleman quartet sans Ornette or three-quarters of Old and New Dreams -- still springs some surprises. Apart from Don Cherry's "Art Deco" and "Mopti," it's all Coleman material, but drawn from the very early (circa the Something Else! LP) and very late stages (Broken Shadows/Science Fiction LPs) of his acoustic phase rather than the famed Atlantic period. Musical bonuses quickly become apparent on the opening "The Sphinx" -- Cherry is playing a lot more pocket trumpet than usual for this late-career stage, just as Haden does a lot more turbocharged walking than his latter-day norm. The same holds on Ed Blackwell's spotlight "Happy House," the bass going double time and Cherry romping with high spirits, before the drummer delivers a model solo of polyrhythmic simplicity. "Lonely Woman" is the lone "classic" here, with applause greeting Haden's beautiful opening chord strums, Blackwell's cymbals, and Cherry's mournful muted pocket trumpet. Haden goes deep melancholy with his masterful solo, touching on his Ozark upbringing by quoting a country or folk melody. (It's probably from the public domain, but what is that tune? "John Henry?" The source for "Tom Dooley"?) For good measure, he then tosses in a taste of the riff from his "Ramblin'" solo that became the anchor of "Sex & Drugs & Rock 'n' Roll." Cherry's silliness with instrument sounds wastes a strong Haden-Blackwell effort on "Mopti," but "The Blessing" bounces back with a bopping, bluesy midtempo groove that also serves as the blueprint for the last two pieces. Muted flurries by Cherry or minimal cymbal clicks from Blackwell that generate so much rhythmic propulsion, Haden's old-school, physical walking lines -- it's the small details and quiet touches applied to the unique flavor of Coleman's concept that gives these pieces and this volume of The Montreal Tapes as a whole its value.
© Don Snowden /TiVo

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