Great “New Thing” Albums
Submitted by Jazz Note SDP

One of the things I have been thinking about lately are those great albums produced as the “new thing” blossomed in jazz in the late fifties and early sixties. The reach for freedom from earlier musical constraints gave rise to some very challenging but very rewarding recordings. Most of the major jazzmen felt it necessary to make their contributions. Wayne Shorter’s All Seeing Eye, and Etcetera, are good examples.
But there are a number of essential recordings that mark this event. Here is a quick list off the top of my head:
1. Cecil Taylor/Jazz Advance
2. Andrew Hill/Point of Departure
3. Eric Dolphey/Out to Lunch
4. Jackie McLean/Let Freedom Ring
Those four should surely be included in any best hundred, or best fifty, and maybe even best twenty jazz recordings. Several years ago I took a long drive and made up a mixer CD for the trip. I put the Hill recording on the playlist, but I had only listened to in once before. When it started playing I was taken aback by the compelling invention of the music. What the Hell is this? I had to pull over and grab the print off that I had with me. Each of these recordings had that power.
Right now though I am listening to McLean’s magnum opus. It is clearly page four jazz. The circuit of melody is replaced by a moving point of intense and unpredictable exploration. It carries you along moment to moment with a Zen-like disregard for where you are going. The only restraint is the number of keys on the horn, that, and Jackie’s warble. Here is a sample from this essential album:
McLean’s alto is backed by Walter Davis Jr. on piano, Herbie Lewis on bass, and Billy Higgins on drums.
I am wondering what else to put on this list. If you have any ideas, please leave a post.
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