music.wikisort.org - CompositionCrystals is an album by Sam Rivers released by Impulse! Records in 1974 in a stereo/quadraphonic format.
1974 studio album by Sam Rivers
Crystals |
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Released | 1974 (1974) |
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Recorded | March 4, 1974 |
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Studio | Generation Sound Studios, New York |
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Genre | Jazz |
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Length | 40:30 |
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Label | Impulse! |
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Producer | Ed Michel |
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Professional ratingsReview scores |
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Source | Rating |
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AllMusic |     [1] |
The Rolling Stone Jazz Record Guide |     [2] |
Criticism
Jazz critic Thom Jurek wrote: “Musically, this is the mature Sam Rivers speaking from the wide base of his knowledge as a composer, improviser and conceptualist.”[3]
Background
It had been over a decade since Ornette Coleman had worked with his Free Jazz Double Quartet, nine years since John Coltrane assembled his Ascension band, and six since the first Jazz Composers' Orchestra Association was formed and whose first records were issued (a couple of members of that band also performing with Rivers on this record) and the compositions for what eventually became Crystals were written between 1959 and 1972. They were finished as new elements came to him to fit them together conceptually.[4]
The album was released by Impulse! in September 1974, and was out of print after a few years. It was re-released in CD form in 2002 (with Rivers' original liner notes), and available for three years through Universal Distribution.[5]
The compositions were recorded over a period of five or six hours[6] by an ensemble sometimes reported as 14 musicians: 3 trumpets, 2 trombones, tuba, 5 reeds, bass, and 2 drummers. Other musicians listed in the vinyl liner notes were present in rehearsals (and their contributions incorporated in the final results) but not the recording.
Track listing
- "Exultation" – 8:25
- "Tranquility" – 8:58
- "Postlude" – 2:31
- "Bursts" – 6:51
- "Orb" – 9:36
- "Earth Song" – 4:09
Personnel
Including Rivers, this big band numbers 'sixty-four' musicians,[7] including:
- Sam Rivers – saxophones, conductor
- Sinclair Acey – trumpet
- Ted Daniel – trumpet
- Richard Williams – trumpet
- Charles Greenlee – trombone
- Charles Stephens – trombone
- Joe Daley – trombone, tuba
- Roland Alexander – soprano and tenor saxophone, flute
- Fred Kelly – soprano and baritone saxophone, flute
- Joe Ferguson – alto, tenor & soprano saxophones, flute
- Paul Jeffrey – tenor saxophone, flute, clarinet, oboe, bassett horn, bassoon
- Gregory Maker – acoustic & electric bass violin
- Ronnie Boykins – bass guitar
- Harold Smith – drums, percussion
- Warren Smith – drums, percussion
Credits from AllMusic include 62 musicians (not including Maker):[8]
Flugelhorn, trumpet
- Ahmed Abdullah
- Sinclair Acey
- Martin Banks
- Jothan Callins
- Teddy Daniel
- Joe Dupars
- Ronald Hampton
- Virgil Jones
- Don McIntosh
- Marvin "Hannibal" Peterson
- Michael Ridley
- Norman Spiller
- Charles Sullivan
- Clifford Thornton
- Richard Williams
- Yusef Yancey
Trombone
- Bill Campbell
- Ashley Fennell
- Charles Greenlee
- Vincent Holmes
- Grachan Moncur III
- Charles Stephens
Tuba
- Bob Stewart
- Howard Johnson
- Joe Daley
Horn
- Julius Watkins
- Richard Dunbar
Flute, saxophone
- Roland Alexander – flute, soprano and tenor saxophones
- Paul Jeffrey – flute, tenor saxophone
- Fred Kelly – flute, soprano, alto, and baritone saxophones
- Sam Rivers – flute, soprano and tenor saxophones
Woodwinds
- Bill Barron
- Hamiet Bluiett
- Anthony Braxton
- Ron Bridgewater
- Bobby Capers
- Robin Kenyatta
- Pat Patrick
- Bob Ralston
- Bill Saxton
- John Stubblefield
- James Ware
- Monty Waters
- Dave Young
Bass violin
- Ronnie Boykins
- Bob Cunningham
- Richard Davis
- Stafford James
- Hakim Jami
- Reggie Workman
Percussion
- Horace Arnold
- Art Blakey
- Roger Blank
- Sonny Brown
- Norman Connors
- Andrew Cyrille
- Steve Ellington
- Billy Hart
- Maurice McKinley
- Harold Smith
- Warren Smith – drums
- Steve Solder
Production
- Ken Druker – executive producer
- Bryan Koniarz – producer
- Ed Michel – producer
- Kevin Reeves – mastering
References
Sam Rivers |
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Years given are for the recording(s), not first release. |
As leader or co-leader | |
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With others |
- Miles in Tokyo (with Miles Davis, 1964)
- Change (with Andrew Hill, 1966)
- Conference of the Birds (with Dave Holland, 1972)
- Dialogue (with Bobby Hutcherson, 1965)
- Black Stars (with Jason Moran, 2001)
- In the Name of... (James Blood Ulmer's Music Revelation Ensemble, 1993)
- Capricorn Rising (and Don Pullen, 1975)
- The Great Concert of Cecil Taylor (with Cecil Taylor, 1969)
- Life Time (with Tony Williams, 1964)
- Spring (with Tony Williams, 1965)
- Into Somethin' (with Larry Young, 1964)
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Authority control  | |
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