Ornette Coleman and Harmolodics

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The thesis examines Ornette Coleman's musical innovations and influence, focusing on his theory of Harmolodics which challenged conventional music theory.

The thesis aims to show where Coleman's innovations came from, how his music functions, and how it impacted other innovators. It delves into the more controversial aspects of his music and analyzes specific compositions.

Coleman developed a musical theory that he called Harmolodics, which was derived from Charlie Parker's music and aimed to provide direct links between music, nature, and humanity by challenging Western music theory.

Ornette Coleman and Harmolodics

by

Matt Lavelle

A Thesis submitted to the

Graduate School-Newark

Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey

in partial fulfillment of the requirements

for the degree

of Master of Arts

Graduate Program in Jazz History and Research

Written and approved under the direction of Dr. Henry Martin

________________________

Newark, New Jersey

May 2019
© 2019

Matt Lavelle

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED


ABSTRACT

Ornette Coleman stands as one of the most significant innovators in jazz

history. The purpose of my thesis is to show where his innovations came from,

how his music functions, and how it impacted other innovators around him. I also

delved into the more controversial aspects of his music. At the core of his process

was a very personal philosophical and musical theory he invented which he called

Harmolodics. Harmolodics was derived from the music of Charlie Parker and

Coleman’s need to challenge conventional Western music theory in pursuit of

providing direct links between music, nature, and humanity. To build a foundation

I research Coleman’s development prior to his famous debut at the Five Spot,

focusing on evidence of a direct connection to Charlie Parker. I examine his use of

instruments he played other than his primary use of the alto saxophone. His

relationships with the piano, guitar, and the musicians that played them are then

examined. I then research his use of the bass and drums, and the musicians that

played them, so vital to his music. I follow with documentation of the string

quartets, woodwind ensembles, and symphonic work, much of which was never

recorded. I conclude with an examination of Coleman’s impact on other masters

and a discussion of Harmolodics itself, followed by musical analysis.

Having studied with Coleman personally, I hope to bring some clarity to the

actual function of his music. I have interviewed Dave Bryant, Denardo Coleman,

ii
and Kenny Wessel. In addition, for five years, I was in the band of guitarist Bern

Nix (1947-2017) who played with Coleman from 1975-1987. Though a formal

interview with Nix was scheduled before his death in 2017, I had discussed

Coleman with Nix many times. My musical analysis includes investigation of

Coleman’s composition titled “Kathelin Gray,” and in Section 1 part 3, my analysis

of his improvisation on a Charlie Parker piece titled “Klactoveedsedstene.” I hope

to show that Coleman’s music, while radical at the time, was steeped in a unique

logic with the goal of opening doors to deeper levels of human expression, inside

the context of seeking a deeper understanding of humanity overall

iii
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Photographer John Rogers introduced me to Ornette Coleman in 2005 and

my first acknowledgement must go to him. Like many others, I was instantly

diagnosed upon my arrival as someone who would benefit from Harmolodics. I

have been using Coleman’s tools ever since. The late Bern Nix was essential to this

process. Through countless hours of playing, Nix allowed me a safe space to

develop my playing through actual Harmolodic practice, and I will forever be

indebted to him. Coleman’s son Denardo was especially generous, granting me an

extensive interview. Prime Time members David Bryant and Kenny Wessel were

willing to take me deeper inside Coleman’s process. I would like to thank Dr.

Henry Martin and Dr. Lewis Porter at Rutgers University for their openness to my

researching what many consider an abstract concept, and their aid in deciphering

the truth. As Coleman would say, “They’re on the case.” Finally, I must thank

Ornette himself for having such an open door, an open mind, and an open heart.

The greatest gift he gave me and so many others is a pathway to our own music.

iv
CONTENTS

Abstract ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ii

Acknowledgements----------------------------------------------------------------- iv

SECTION I: BACKGROUND --------------------------------------------------------1

1. The Environment ----------------------------------------------------------------1

2. Red Connors ------------------------------------------------------------------- 10

3. Ornette and Charlie Parker -------------------------------------------------- 15

SECTION II: ORNETTE CREATES -----------------------------------------------28

4. Tenor----------------------------------------------------------------------------28

5. Trumpet ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 35

6. Violin --------------------------------------------------------------------------- 50

7. Piano ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 57

8. Guitar --------------------------------------------------------------------------- 71

9. Bass ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 84

10. Drums-------------------------------------------------------------------------104

11. Chamber and Orchestral Works ------------------------------------------- 116

SECTION III: THEORY ----------------------------------------------------------- 127

12. Other Masters ---------------------------------------------------------------- 127

13. Harmolodics------------------------------------------------------------------ 139


SECTION V: INTERVIEWS ------------------------------------------------------- 150

14. Denardo Coleman ----------------------------------------------------------- 150

15: Kenny Wessel ---------------------------------------------------------------- 177

Transcriptions and Analysis ------------------------------------------------------ 187

16. Kathelin Gray ---------------------------------------------------------------- 187

Kathelin Gray Lead Sheet from Coleman from David Bryant ---------- 192

Kathelin Gray A -------------------------------------------------------------- 193

Kathelin Gray B ---------------------------------------------------------------194

Kathelin Gray C -------------------------------------------------------------- 195

Kathelin Gray D --------------------------------------------------------------196

Klactoveedsedstene------------------------------------------------------------ 197

Bibliography ----------------------------------------------------------------------- 206

Jazzinstitut Darmstadt Bibliography -------------------------------------------- 217

Discography: Commercial Albums --------------------------------------------- 279


1

SECTION I: BACKGROUND

1. The Environment

“You can transcribe a solo, but you can’t transcribe an


environment.” -Ornette Coleman

Ornette Coleman was born at 5am in Fort Worth, Texas at on March 9th,

1930.1 He was one of four children. Allen Coleman died in the 1940’s, and Vera

Coleman was killed by a cattle truck when she was seventeen. Truvenza Coleman,

also known as Trudy, was a trombonist, vocalist, and sometimes manager for

Coleman’s earliest jobs in music, such as his first band the Jam Jivers, or backing

up the great blues singer Joe Turner for several months when he came through

Fort Worth.2 She recorded, and one song is available to be heard online today,

“Come home, baby,” released on the Manco label in 1962 as a 45.3 Coleman’s

parents were Rosa Rhodes, a seamstress, and Randolph, a mechanic.4 Coleman was

close to his mother and he respected her perspectives on life. In his earliest days he

was supporting the family playing rhythm and blues, but he became unhinged at

1
Taylor, Art. Notes and Tones: Musician-to-musician Interviews. New York: Da Capo Press,
1993. 347.

2
Litweiler, John. Ornette Coleman: A Harmolodic Life. New York: Da Capo Press, 1994. 21.

3
Glendoras. "Trudy Coleman - Come Home, Baby." YouTube. January 22, 2015. Accessed
September 24, 2018. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8rNla9Jo-vk&t=2s.

4
Spellman, A. B. Four Lives in the Bebop Business. New York: Limelight Editions, 1994. 83.
2

the violence he encountered in the clubs. He came home and told his mother that

he thought that his music was influencing violence and she responded, “You want

these people to pay you for your soul?”5 Coleman grew up during this moment

and told the story throughout his life. Another story he told was that as a child he

was always telling his mother who he was, telling her “I’m Ornette.” She told him

that he didn’t have to worry, she knew who he was. She heard his music in the

sixties, but it remains unclear what her personal thoughts were about it. Not much

is known about Randolph Coleman. Ornette saw a picture of him playing baseball.

Rosa said that Randolph could sing and did so around Fort Worth.6 Coleman

didn’t sing like his father and sister, but he did possess a very vocal sound on alto.

Coleman also had a cousin named James Jordan, that he called Jordan. After

Coleman died, Jordan wrote about their earliest days together learning saxophone

in the first grade. Even then, Coleman felt a strong enough attraction to the horn

that he would practice constantly, asking Jordan to practice with him twice in one

day. Truvenza gave them a room to play and when it was late, Coleman would wait

until the nearby train came through town that would drown out the saxophone.

Coleman would be practicing past midnight on a regular basis. By the time he and

Jordan left the fifth grade, they were playing as well as the kids in high school.

There they formed a band with a trumpet player and a drummer and got work,

5 Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 32.

6 Spellman, Four Lives in the Bebop Business, 32.


3

earning money. According to Jordan, Coleman already had, and was developing his

own approach to music. In the sixties, Jordan left Texas to be Coleman’s manager

and during his six years he produced Skies of America.7 Denardo Coleman,

Coleman’s son born in 1956 is featured in an interview with the author later in the

thesis.

The environment Coleman grew up in was very poor and segregated. He

spoke of two experiences with white people that defined the times. On one

occasion around 1948, playing in a white establishment lead by his mentor Red

Connors, a white patron told him: “It’s an honor to shake your hand because you’re

really a great saxophone player-but you’re still a nigger to me.” Coleman was

forced to remain silent in the exchange, for fear of his life. In a second life

threatening incident, a white woman cornered him in the kitchen during an

intermission and raised her dress above her head. If a white man were to see them,

once again the penalty could have been death.8 Coleman experienced the deepest

levels of racism when he joined a minstrel troupe in 1949 called “Silas Green from

New Orleans.” Coleman toured the deep south with what he described as Uncle-

Tom type minstrels playing tunes such as “Nacky Sacky.” He was fired for teaching

7
Coleman, Ornette, performer. Celebrate Ornette. Recorded 2016. Denardo Coleman, 2016,
Vinyl recording.

8
Spellman, A. B., Four Lives in the Bebop Business, 94.
4

the other tenor saxophone player bebop.9 Coleman spoke openly about the reality

of his environment.

People in Texas, they’re so wealthy, it’s still like slavery. You had to be a
servant. You had to be serving somebody to make some money. When I
finished high school, all the kids I knew who’d been to college and came
back, they had porter jobs. What’s the reason of going to college? That’s the
reason I didn’t go. You got to try and get a job in the colored school system,
or that’s it. People been teaching there for fifty years, you have to wait for
them to die. I didn’t come a poor family, I came from a po’ family. Poorer
than poor.10

After being fired by Green in Natchez Mississippi, Coleman was able to join

blues singer Clarence Samuels who needed a tenor player. On a tour of the deep

south during autumn of 1949 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, he had an experience that

most musicians never have, the kind of experience that would make most people

give up playing music. At a dancehall with a tough crowd, he played some of his

own ideas during a blues solo, which stopped the dance. After he was tricked to

step outside by a woman, a group of six or seven men delivered a severe beating to

Coleman and destroyed his horn. It was so severe that Coleman said they were

beating him to death, adding that at the police station afterwards the police told

9
Ibid. 95.

10
Goldberg, Joe. Jazz Masters of the Fifties. New York (N.Y.): Da Capo Press, 1983. 233.
5

him that “if those other niggers didn’t finish him off, they were going to.”11

Coleman had additional experiences with the police, being jailed for having long

hair.12 In Los Angeles he would be stopped by cops in white neighborhoods and

told to assemble his horn and play it to prove he was a musician.13 He recorded a

song called “Police People” on the album Song X in 1986, but ironically the song

swings with a country type positive feeling, feeding off the syncopation provided

by Charlie Haden on bass.

After the beating, Coleman ended up in New Orleans playing with his

friend, trumpet player Melvin Lastie. He received a draft notice but was rejected

due to a collar-bone injury that didn’t heal right. This old injury saved him from

him from the Korean War, which could have prevented his eventual innovations in

jazz from ever taking place.14 Coleman headed back to Fort Worth around this

time in the mid 1950’s. Red Connors then hired Coleman to head to Los Angeles

with bluesman Pee Wee Crayton. Crayton dispelled the myth that he paid

Coleman not to play, insisting that Coleman was a great blues player, and he

insisted he play blues, as that’s what he was hired to do. After the band broke up,

11
Berry, Jason, Jonathan Foose, and Tad Jones. Up from the Cradle of Jazz: New Orleans
Music since World War II. Lafayette: University of Louisiana at Lafayette Press, 2009.

12
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 42.

13 Ibid. 45.

14
Ibid. 29.
6

Coleman lived in a skid-row hotel called the Morris.15 Coleman met drummer Ed

Blackwell and they starved together, surviving on canned food sent from Rosa in

Fort Worth. A low moment for Coleman occurred when Rosa sent him a birthday

cake and the other musicians at the Morris not only seized it, they consumed it

while Coleman was forced to watch.16 Coleman ended up renting out the back part

of a garage with no heat in exchange for taking care of kids at a nursery. After he

wired her for help, Rosa sent him money to return to Fort Worth where he would

rejoin Red Connors for the last time. In 1953 Coleman and Blackwell teamed up

against poverty again and gave Los Angeles another chance, finding a house in

Watts. The key word of this period for Coleman was rejection. He and Blackwell

couldn’t find paying work. Dexter Gordan ordered him off stage when he started

playing with his rhythm section when he was late. Coleman went to a jam session

at Eric Dolphy’s house with Clifford Brown, the same age as Coleman. Coleman

threw them off by playing “Donna Lee” but then soloing without the chord

changes. Coleman had by this point started believing in his own approach. Dolphy

didn’t know how to respond to Coleman at first, as they were all studying bebop.17

Roach and Brown disrespected him further by letting him sit in at a jam session

last, then leaving the club when he started playing. The rhythm section then left

15
Ibid. 42.

16
Ibid. 42.

17
Feather, Leonard. “Interview Ornette Coleman.” Downbeat, July 1981, pp. 16–93.
7

the stand offering a final humiliation.18 It would not be the last time Roach would

react to Coleman in a negative way.

Coleman did make attempts to make sense of his outsider relationship with

the world. He married Jayne Cortez, and they had a son, Denardo Coleman. Cortez

was a poet who like Coleman, made her own clothes. After Denardo was born,

Ornette was baptized as a Jehovah Witnesses. (He had been baptized as Methodist

in his childhood) Coleman resonated with some of their beliefs, such as that no

person shall do what they don’t want to do forever. The strength of the religion

was soon shattered when he was told to go to a colored Jehovah Witness Hall. He

was quoted on this experience saying, “I found out that the church needs God just

like the people.”19 He stayed with them until he had the fascinating experience of

going door to door with the Bible, and when the person opened the door, they

were playing one of his records. In that moment, his music became his religion, for

better or for worse.20 During this period Coleman famously took a job as an

elevator operator at Bullock’s department store for two and half years where he

could secretly study music theory when there were no riders.21 By mid-1958, Cortez

and Coleman were separated. Coleman told Nat Hentoff that Cortez told him that

18
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 46.

19
Ibid. 51.

20
Ulmer, James Blood. Celebrate Ornette. Recorded 2016. Vinyl recording.

21
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 51.
8

people were saying he was crazy, and it sounded like she might think they were

right.22 After recording two albums for Atlantic that would become future classics,

The Shape of Jazz to come in May 1959 and Change of the Century in October 1959,

Coleman received an advance from Atlantic and also borrowed money from his

loyal bandmates at the time, Don Cherry, Charlie Haden, and Billy Higgins, and

made the move to New York City for his legendary debut at the Five Spot where he

was heralded as both a genius and a charlatan. After four more albums for Atlantic

that would be future classics, This Is Our Music in July 1960, Free Jazz in December

1960, Ornette! in January 1961 and Ornette On Tenor in March 1961, Coleman chose

to stop performing, at odds with the business side of jazz.23 In February 1963, on a

continued self-imposed exile, he was evicted from his apartment. All of his meager

possessions, even horns, were not only placed on the street but were removed by

the department of sanitation. He slept in a friend’s pottery studio at night and

roamed art museums by day. In 1964 he got by the entire year on five hundred

dollars, working on a book explaining his music and learning the violin with one

he acquired from a pawn shop for fifteen dollars. He referred to this two-year

period as “hard and hungry.” In an article in Time magazine in January 1965 he

spoke about the eviction and added: “There’s a lot of insanity in loneliness. I’ve got

to get sane again. If you mop your wounds, it takes away from the depth of your

22
Ibid. 60.

23
Ibid. 99.
9

playing.”24 Coleman did eventually find some stability, receiving a Guggenheim

fellowship.25 The blues come from life experience, and Coleman spent the

formative years of his life on an intimate basis with them. When you’re so broke

that you can’t eat, the experience makes an imprint on your soul that never really

leaves. Louis Armstrong never forgot about pushing his coal cart all day long and

going through the trash for food in his early days in New Orleans. Coleman never

forgot the environment of starving, racism, eviction, violence, and widescale

rejection of his music. He survived it all on his quest to become himself.

24
"Back from Exile." Time, January 22, 1965, 43. Author unknown

25
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 123.
10

2. Red Connors

The tradition of mentorship in jazz was still very much in place in the

1940’s, even for an iconoclast like Coleman. By his own accounts, while he had a

different way to relate to music seemingly from his very first notes on alto, he still

had a lot to learn about music in his early days. While working as a rhythm and

blues tenor saxophonist, and having been not yet been exposed to jazz, he was still

a serious student, listing several players he studied to John Litweiler.26 Bobby

Bradford witnessed Coleman playing Rhythm and Blues tenor and said he was

screaming and lying on his back, as was the standard practice.27 Coleman listened

to Lynn Hope who played blues for dancing with titles like “Shocking.” On this

number, Hope plays the traditional fat low Bb honks bouncing to escalatory

extreme high register screams that are the trademarks of the rhythm and blues

tenor saxophone style.28 Hope also scored a hit with “Tenderly” in 1950 playing the

melody straight, with no improvisation, but a huge sound.29 Arnett Cobb was more

26
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life,31.

27
Ibid. 44.

28
Paultunesmarsh. "Lynn Hope Shocking." YouTube. February 10, 2013. Accessed October
06, 2018. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pcJNJy1XnQg.

29 RAJintheUK. "Lynn Hope Quintet Tenderly 1950." YouTube. July 02, 2012. Accessed
October 06, 2018. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X3NcArw6VjY.
11

into improvisation inside of a blues context. In 1947 his “Arnett blows for 1300”30 is

a good example of music that contains a similar drive to Coleman’s music in the

early 50’s at times, as well as a good example of why Cobb was known as the Wild

Man of the Tenor Sax. Big Jay McNeely impressed Coleman with the power of one-

note riffing and crowd pleasing techniques such as heard on “Nervous Man

Nervous” in 1953.31 The whole rhythm and blues tenor saxophone style had been

created by Illinois Jacquet when he was nineteen in Lionel Hampton’s band, and

brought the house down with his solo on “Flying Home,” the first time anyone had

honked on record.32 Coleman was making good money for his family playing this

style and backing up lots of blues singers when he started to spend time with a

tenor and alto man based in Fort Worth named Red Connors. Throughout his life

he referred to Connors as a pivotal influence.

Coleman told Art Taylor in the later part of the 1960’s that he first heard

Red Connors in 1943, before bebop, when he was thirteen. Why he was called Red

remains unknown. I could not locate any pictures or recordings of Connors.

Coleman spoke about him with a reverence, calling him the greatest sax player he

ever heard in his life. At Connors house the usual method was Connors playing

30
OnlyJazzHQ. "Arnett Cobb - Arnett Blows for 1300." YouTube. January 04, 2013. Accessed
October 06, 2018. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3WxyItz5Hwk.

31
"Big Jay McNeely - Nervous Man Nervous - Federal 1953." YouTube. August 02, 2015.
Accessed October 06, 2018. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rlrFy6epHTs.

32
Biography of Illinois Jacquet. Accessed October 06, 2018.
https://illinoisjacquetfoundation.org/ijf_biography/.
12

bop records for Coleman stressing the serious nature of the music as a path away

from rock and roll.33 Coleman was quoted in Esquire saying Connors was Sonny

Rollins before Sonny Rollins. He added that Connors came from a holy church,

and when he went to visit him at his house that became his church.34 Coleman

went further in deepening the legend, telling A.B. Spellman that Connors was

playing was like 1960’s Coltrane, but in a gutbucket style.35 Even further, Coleman

witnessed what he believed was Connors cutting Lester Young. While passing

through Fort Worth, Young encountered Connors on jam session, and instead of

constructing ideas on a blues, Young chose to play the same note for forty or fifty

bars, and Connors destroyed him.36 Connors may have been local but was known

to consume stars. King Curtis, on his way to becoming very popular had reason to

fear Connors. Connors would tell him to get off the bandstand, as the heavy guys

were coming on.37 Two of Coleman’s friends in Fort Worth continued the

accolades for Connors. Saxophonist Prince Lasha called him the greatest

inspiration in the Southwest. Saxophonist Dewey Redman furthered the Coltrane

33
Taylor, Notes and Tones, 349.

34
Warren, Mark. "Ornette Coleman: What I've Learned." Esquire. October 09, 2017.
Accessed October 09, 2018. https://www.esquire.com/entertainment/interviews/a6766/ornette-
coleman-interview-0110/.

35
Spellman, Four Lives in the Bebop Business, 90.

36
Ibid. 91.

37
Wilmer, Valerie. As Serious as Your Life: John Coltrane and beyond. London: Serpents
Tail, 1992.
13

comparison calling him the John Coltrane of the time. Redman described his tone

as a Gene Ammons, Wardell Gray, Dexter Gordon type sound. Drummer Charles

Moffett played trumpet with Connors. Coleman also mentions a saxophonist

named Weldon Haggen that he heard who he believed to be Red’s mentor.38

What happened between Coleman and Connors? It seems that this was a

rare occasion in Coleman’s early days where he was supported by an older

musician. Connors was four or five years older than him. When they met, bebop

was just becoming popular, and Connors often worked with a band geared towards

white audiences. In time, Connors developed a strong bebop fluency and

repertoire and introduced Coleman to the music. Coleman said Connors book had

every bebop song recorded between 1943-1950, and whenever possible he played

with him. Connors was also the first musician to get Coleman to consider the

legitimacy of writing music down.39 One of Coleman and Connors meeting places

to work on bebop and tenor playing was a jam session held at the Jim Hotel and

whorehouse in Fort Worth. It was a during a job with Connors playing “Stardust”

for a white audience that Coleman had a breakthrough moment, not unlike the

one Charlie Parker had, with however, a far different result.40

38 Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 27.

39 Spellman, Four Lives in the Bebop Business, 90.

40
"His Blues to Be Somebody: Charlie Parker's Early Years." The Critical Flame. January 19,
2014. Accessed March 12, 2019. http://criticalflame.org/his-blues-to-be-somebody-charlie-parkers-
early-years/.
14

In that situation, it’s like having to know the results of all the changes
before you even play them, compacting them all in your mind. So, once I did that,
I just literally removed it all and just played.41

Seventeen-year-old Coleman was fired by the venue for having this

experience, despite pleas of “Give em’ vanilla!” The dance stopped as people were

drawn to listen instead. Connors did not fire Coleman, who continued to work

with him whenever possible, through all of 1949. Connors hired Coleman in 1950 as

previously mentioned when Bluesman Pee Wee Crayton needed an alto player for

a pickup band. After struggling in Los Angeles, Coleman ended up back in Fort

Worth where he would play with Connors for the last time. What happened to Red

Connors after this period remains unknown, as he joins the ranks of the greats

whose sound we may never hear such as Buddy Bolden.

41
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 33.
15

3. Ornette and Charlie Parker

Charlie Parker and Ornette Coleman will forever be linked in the history of

jazz. Parker as the progenitor and architect of bebop and modern jazz, as well as

being the consummate master at improvising within the idiom he co-created.

Coleman as the man who invented a pathway away from Parker’s evolution, that

has been accepted as either the final step in jazz where the music became itself,

versus the heretical work of a charlatan not to be taken seriously. Today in 2019,

Coleman has been accepted and even presented as the “proper Avant-Garde,” or in

other words, he has been given permission to be a part of jazz history by the

establishment attempting to define and own the narrative of jazz history. At the

start of a tribute to Coleman at Lincoln Center, saxophonist and arranger Ted

Nash called Coleman “both primitive and sophisticated.” Wynton Marsalis

sanctioned Coleman by saying that his improvisations were based on the blues and

is quick to mention that his father Ellis played with Coleman. When Coleman was

asked by Nash what he thought of the Jazz at Lincoln Center arrangements of his

music he responded, “You can transcribe a solo, but you can’t transcribe an

environment.”42 The deeper reality is that Coleman’s music began with a

42
As told to the author
16

foundation based on bebop methodology. Coleman revered Parker and told me

himself that before he could invent Harmolodics, he had to master Parker’s music.

The first place to look at the connection between Parker and Coleman is

through their compositional practices. On Coleman’s first record Something Else, a

cautious debut tempered by working with two musicians grounded in tradition,

Walter Norris on piano and Don Payne on bass, he played an original composition

titled “Jayne,” that is a contrafact of the standard “Out Of Nowhere.” In the liner

notes Coleman told Nat Hentoff that he felt that Charlie Parker had the best

diatonic ear in jazz, and Thelonious Monk had the most complete harmonic ear.

Coleman may have been referring to Parker’s ability to improvise melodically and

his uncanny ability to always play notes from the chord at the perfect time and

place, even at fast tempos. “Out Of Nowhere” was written by Johnny Green and

recorded by Bing Crosby in 1931, and the harmonic progression was popular with

jazz musicians such as Fats Navarro and Gigi Gryce. “Jayne” has the same thirty-

two bar structure and key as “Out Of Nowhere,” as well as the same key, G Major.

Coleman switches between eight bars of Latin and Swing with a syncopated, bebop

type melody. The piece was a portrait and dedication to Coleman’s wife Jayne

Cortez and was written five or six years before the recording. Charlie Parker

recorded “Out Of Nowhere” in November of 1947 for Dial records as a ballad.

Parker briefly engages the melody while focusing on incredible double time runs in

one full chorus, before young Miles Davis plays a chorus using the cup mute.

Parker gently improvises on the melody on the final eight bars and they end with
17

Davis holding the note A a minor third above an F-Sharp held out by Parker. The

use of a minor third between an alto and trumpet is something Coleman was

interested in. On “Jayne,” Walter Norris and Don Payne make some alterations of

the original changes that work better with Coleman’s melody. In measure 3 Bb 7

becomes a D7 flat 9 over G to accommodate the melody. In measure seven B-7

becomes Ab major 7 flat 5, though the B-7 would have worked. In measures 13-16

and 24-29 additional chords are added that are implied by the melodic line. During

Coleman’s solo on “Jayne” it is clear that he was both aware of the changes and

used them as the underlying foundation of his solo.

Compositionally both Parker and Coleman were fond of using the blues

form. They were both adept and writing and soloing on music that stemmed from

the blues. In Dr. Henry Martin’s forthcoming book on the compositions of Charlie

Parker he has identified that, including unrecorded pieces, forty-nine of Parker’s

eighty-four pieces were blues, a staggering amount of fifty-eight percent! Dr. Lewis

Porter has identified sixteen pieces that Coleman recorded that contain what he

called blues Connotations, which in fact is the title of one of Coleman’s greatest

recorded blues compositions and solos. Parker could play blues from virtually

every perspective. From the slow “Funky Blues” where he follows a Johnny Hodges

solo with folk-like preacher blues that morph into classic Parker double time but

still with blues expression, to “Blues for Alice” where despite all the substitute

chords he retains the blues feeling. Folk like preacher blues expression is a

trademark that seems to seep into all of Coleman’s music. Porter has identified
18

several instances that bear out the Parker-Coleman connection. At a Carnegie Hall

concert in 1947, on the last A section of Parker’s first chorus of “A Night In

Tunisia,” Parker releases what could be a Coleman field cry on alto saxophone.

Coleman plays a Parker-like solo on “When Will The Blues Leave?” from his first

recording Something Else without playing any Parker licks. On “Giggin” from

Coleman’s recording Tomorrow Is The Question! Coleman begins the third chorus

with a direct Parker line played through the Coleman lens. Coleman would

eventually move past Parker’s influence where he would climb into raw vocal blues

expression such as what we hear on his tune “Ramblin” and the fore mentioned

“Blues Connotations.”43

In early 1958, Coleman was captured live at the Hillcrest Club in October of

1958 before he recorded Tomorrow Is the Question in early 1959. At the Hillcrest,

Billy Higgins on drums and Don Cherry on pocket trumpet were present from the

first Contemporary session, though Charlie Haden wouldn’t formally record with

Coleman playing bass until Shape of Jazz to Come, recorded in May of 1959 on

Atlantic in Hollywood. Of important significance at the Hillcrest, is the presence of

pianist Paul Bley. According to the Tom Lord Jazz Discography, the Hillcrest

recording was even issued at one point as the The Fabulous Paul Bley Quintet.” At

43
Porter, Lewis. "The "Blues Connotation" In Ornette Coleman’s Music - And Some General
Thoughts On The Relation Of Blues To Jazz." Annual Review Of Jazz Studies 1994-95 7 (March 01,
1996): 75-97.
19

the Hillcrest Coleman played a standard recorded by Parker, “How Deep Is The

Ocean,” composed by Irving Berlin, as well as a Parker original mysteriously titled

“Klactoveedsedstene.”

On “How Deep Is The Ocean” Coleman does not solo, as the piece features

Don Cherry, but he does write an introduction as Parker was known to do such as

the famous beginning to Parker’s “Ko-Ko.” Parker recorded “How Deep Is The

Ocean” for Dial records in 1947 on December 17th with the classic quintet of Miles

Davis, Duke Jordan on piano, Tommy Potter on bass, with the addition of J.J.

Johnson on trombone. Parker plays the piece as a ballad and virtually ignores the

melody. Coleman’s introduction is approximately ten bars. Although “How Deep Is

The Ocean” was written in Eb major and shifts between different major and minor

centers, Coleman’s introduction is mostly in F Melodic minor. The focus is a

dramatic use of an ascending flat five that occurs twice at the end of a phrase in

measures three and eight. I once walked in on Coleman composing at a desk with

only a piece of paper and a pencil, dressed like he was going to perform. He was

surprised to see me and declared “Start on the flat five!”

Charlie Parker recorded “Embraceable You” by George Gershwin again in

1947 for Dial with the classic quintet. In his famous version, he improvises straight

though one chorus before handing it over to Miles Davis with the cup mute. In a

three-bar arranged ending Parker harmonizes a reference to the melody with he

and Davis playing apart by major and minor thirds and ending on a sustained

minor third of E and G. Coleman recorded “Embraceable You” in 1960 for Atlantic
20

on the album This Is Our Music. He composed a dramatic, almost regal seven-bar

introduction with Don Cherry playing the trumpet written above the alto as Davis

was above Parker, though without the mute. Coleman and Cherry are an octave

apart for the first three bars. Bars four and five contain Cherry embellishment

while Coleman sustains a C and then a B for four beats. The next four beats

Coleman and Cherry are separated by a minor third, a minor third, a major third, a

minor third, and then end on half notes separated by a flat five and ending on a

flat six. The introduction is repeated at the end of the piece, but Coleman plays his

part an octave higher, above the trumpet creating another flat five and ending on a

major third. In the beginning Cherry starts the introduction on the tonic of the

original recording, G, and Coleman ends on it. Coleman enjoyed disguising who

was playing lead and who was playing harmony. During the improvisation

Coleman does reference the original melody, but like Parker it is only touched on

briefly. Charlie Haden does play the changes at first before they shift into more

open interpretation. Coleman is patient and bluesy for the most part, not pursing

the endless invention of Parker. Coleman’s version contains both similarity and

contrast with the Parker version. In the liner notes to This Is Our Music Coleman

said that he played “Embraceable You” as a standard, the way standards are played.

He also called Charlie Parker the great seer of Modern Jazz.44 It is notable that

three of these pieces that Parker played and then Coleman played were recorded

44
Coleman, Ornette, Something Else!!! the Music of Ornette Coleman, Contemporary, 1958.
21

by Parker in 1947 when Coleman was seventeen and studying bebop, while Parker

was in top form at twenty-seven years old. In addition, two of the songs that

Coleman claimed defined Bebop were contrafacts. “Donna Lee” based on

“Indiana,” and “Little Willie Leaps,” based on “All Gods Chillun Got Rhythm.”

“Donna Lee” and “Little Willie Leaps” were both composed by Miles Davis,

Coleman giving him far more influence within the movement as a composer rather

than just as a participant as Parker’s student. Coleman also considered pianist Bud

Powell quintessential within bebop and claimed that Powell’s piece “John’s Abbey”

to be the best example of a bebop bridge.45

Parker recorded “Klactoveedsedstene” on November 4th, 1947 for Ross

Russell’s Dial label. In Russell’s book “Bird Lives!” he explains that Parker wrote the

title on the back of a minimum charge card and offered no clues as to its meaning.

Dean Benedetti suggested to Russell that it was sound.46 Parker recorded the piece

with Miles Davis on trumpet, Duke Jordan on piano, Tommy Potter on bass, and

Max Roach on drums. Parker based “Klactoveedsedstene” on the changes to Juan

Tizol’s “Perdido” in the A section and the bridge appears to be a variation of the

bridge of George Gershwin’s “Lady Be Good,” also in Bb, which Parker played

famously in 1946 at Jazz at the Philharmonic. The piece begins with an

45
Coleman told keyboardist David Bryant (interviewed by the author) about the three
pieces and why he felt they defined bebop.

46
Russell, Ross. Bird Lives! The High Life and Hard times of Charlie (Yardbird) Parker. New
York: Da Capo Press, 1996.
22

introduction that deserves more attention. Parker harmonized the alto a minor

third below Davis cup muted trumpet. Fred Parcell’s transcription uses chords

apparently based on the bass line. The bass is the only thing that saves the intro

from harmonic ambiguity as in the famous “Ko-Ko.” The melody is played in

unison and is more about the Parker syncopation than eighth notes. Parker only

takes one solo chorus using his own rhythmic devices that he may have extracted

as a reaction to Tizol’s original motif, with the tempo increased, bending the piece

to his will. During Parker’s solo flat fives are casually added in measures 9, 11, 24,

and 31. Flat 9’s are stitched in on measures 3, 7, 23, 27, 31, and 33. As per his usual

method, the notes connect his lines to the notes that define the harmony. Parker

uses a Db on a Bb major chord three times before he reaches the bridge. In

measure 26, two of Thomas Owens-discovered Parker devices are used.

Looking at Coleman’s solo on the same piece at the Hillcrest (see page 197)

Coleman and Cherry play the introduction and the melody straight, though Bley is

mostly Inaudible. Haden is muffled but he seems to be aware of the form but

already following Coleman as his prime directive. Reaching the bridge on the

melody at measure 24, Coleman plays phrases as if the changes were taking place,

but no harmony is suggested by him or Bley. On the last measure of the bridge, 31,

Coleman plays a phrase that Parker would never play and offers no resolution or

signpost to the form. At measure 40 Coleman begins the solo suggesting the sound

of Parker but without using his devices. In measure 43 he does outline a D minor

chord in ascending root position exactly where it should be if he were playing the
23

piece totally straight. At the first pass through the bridge both Coleman and Bley

suggest the form transition and play phrases in time as if changes were taking

place, but do not play any actual changes. The key of the piece seems to be more

relevant. At D, Coleman suggests Parker using a high long tone during a

turnaround. At measure 113 he continues the motif, but changes the pitch, a

function of Coleman’s language, and not Parker’s. Measure 144 sounds like Parker

again without a direct reference. During measures 152-159, where a bridge should

be, Coleman strings together eighth notes and triplets like Parker but with no

implication of harmony. By the time we reach G Coleman doesn’t abandon the key

of the piece but is now truly concerned with his own ideas more than anything

else. At measure 168 we hear a phrase played 4 times that is pure Coleman.

Measure 184 contains improvisation that could be related to “Donna Lee.” From G

to H Coleman may have broken free from changes and form entirely. In measure

235 Coleman plays a phrase and then repeats it a whole step up that is not related

to any clear harmony. At letter I we hear Coleman modulate through where the

bridge used to be using minor thirds as his focus suggesting an entirely new way of

thinking. During measures 287-293 at letter J, the note D is the foundation as

Coleman seems to explore just how many ways, he can play off one note. In a bold

finishing move, Coleman and Cherry play an original transition in unison to set up

Paul Bley’s solo. Higgins slows to repeat the figure at 8 bars, but Coleman and

Cherry miss it, playing it afterwards. Bley suggests movement through a bridge but

also uses Coleman’s transitional figure as a source of improvisation. The band


24

eventually lays out giving Bley a solo all by himself. Haden and Higgins try to bring

form back to an extent to set up Cherry. Haden is far more aggressive in using the

form and changes behind Cherry, but Bley lays out and Cherry seems to suggest

playing through a bridge at random times and is mostly playing free. Cherry could

play changes but chose not to. Haden follows with a solo continuing to walk in

time. His sound and style are present. Coleman returns with more improvisation

playing free until Cherry brings back the melody where he thinks it should be but

it’s clear that Coleman could have continued. Higgins takes the bridge, the melody

is restated, and finally the intro is played as a coda with a short free vamp.

Coleman played ideas with beginnings and endings and resolved them melodically.

He may have mastered Parker’s style as he claimed,47 but by this period he had

already moved quite far into his own concept, though he was still wrestling with a

piano being present. Coleman simply related to music differently than Parker.

Parker had a genius level ability to play fluidly through harmonic progressions

with incredible accuracy. Coleman did not possess this gift, but rather the ability

to construct ideas free of the harmony. Both Parker and Coleman were adept at

constructing ideas on their own terms in the environment of fast and very fast

tempos. Parker was a master at every tempo he ever encountered.

Coleman also assimilated Charlie Parker to an extent by direct use of

Parker’s unique rhythm and syncopation, most obvious in Parkers compositions.

47
As told to the author
25

The clearest example is his composition “Bird Food” from the album Change of the

Century recorded in Hollywood in 1959. In this piece Coleman overtly uses Parkers

eighth rest, quarter note, eighth note rhythm most famous as Parkers core

rhythmic motif from “Moose the Mooch,” also recorded in California in 1946 for

Dial by Parker. Coleman was able to capture the sound of Parker’s music though

the composition, based on rhythm changes. The bridge and solo are completely

improvised free of changes and any reference to Parker.

Incredibly, the idea of playing free of harmony was presented to Charlie

Parker by John T. Fitch in an interview in 1953. Fitch asks if playing without

changes is possible using Lennie Tristano as a reference point.

Parker: Those are mostly improvisations, and if you listen closely enough
you can find the melody traveling along with any chord structure. Rather than
make the melody predominant in the music, with Lennie it’s more or less heard or
felt.
Fitch: On “Intuition” they start off with no key or changes.

Parker: There must be a buildup to the key signature and the chords that
create the melody.48

Parker was open to all music, but the concept of playing free seems to be

one he never considered. Coleman attempted to sit in with and meet Parker to

show him what he was doing, as revealed in an interview with Leonard Feather in

48
Woideck, Carl. The Charlie Parker Companion: Six Decades of Commentary. New York:
Schirmer Books, 1998.
26

Downbeat in 1981. He did hear Parker play in person but attempts to play with him

never resulted in them getting to play together.

Coleman: I didn’t want him (Parker) to hear how I play, I wanted him to
hear what I was trying to play, because I figured he would understand.49

In the end we have evidence that Coleman took bebop seriously, as his

mentor Red Connors instructed him to. Before Coleman sought to invent a path to

what he believed would set himself free, he sought to understand where he and

jazz were at. He practiced the bebop methodology of using contrafacts as we have

seen with his piece “Jayne.” He studied Charlie Parker’s writing and solo style,

being influenced by both in his own compositions and improvisation. Perhaps the

most striking similarity between Parker and Coleman can be found within their

unique gifts within their environments. Within an environment that he himself

had an enormous part in creating, Parker possessed a fluidity and dexterity in his

improvisations that is almost superhuman in ability. He remains the consummate

master of bebop improvisation at all tempos, thriving where most musicians

simply cannot venture. Coleman, like Parker, virtually created the environment

that he was the master of. Coleman had a deep belief in spontaneous invention, an

almost urgent need to create something profound with himself as the primary

source. It is here in this self-created realm, that he felt most at home. Coleman’s

49
Feather, Leonard. "Interview Ornette Coleman." Downbeat, July 1981, 16.
27

legacy is not only how he effected the entire perception of the music, but his

ability to do it through composition and improvisation. Both Parker and Coleman

practiced the tradition in jazz of studying and learning from those that proceeded

them. They were both African-American. They were both master alto saxophonists

who at times played tenor saxophone. They were both masters at playing the

blues. They were both no strangers to adversity. They both had little to no

relationship with their fathers. They were both two of the most significant

innovators in jazz. Charlie Parker and Ornette Coleman forever linked.


28

SECTION II: ORNETTE CREATES

4. Tenor

“You’ll attract some strange women with that horn.” -


Ornette Coleman to David Murray

I asked Ornette in 2005 if he would ever play the tenor saxophone again. I

didn’t see one in his music room. He said that it was over and didn’t elaborate.

We’ve discussed his early years playing rhythm and blues on the horn, and his

mentor Red Connors mostly playing tenor. Coleman spoke about the tenor to Joe

Goldberg.

The tenor is a rhythm instrument, and the best statements negroes have
made about what their soul is have been on tenor. The tenor has that thing, that
honk, and you can get to people with it. Sometimes you can be playing tenor, and
I’m telling you, the people want to jump across the rail. Especially the Db blues,
you can really reach their souls with a Db blues.50

Coleman was playing mostly tenor in his early years, when he was getting

more extreme reactions and playing more extreme environments. The tenor seems

to turn up the volume and raise the intensity of emotions and sexual desire.

Perhaps Stanley Crouch said it best.

50
Goldberg, Jazz Masters of the Fifties, 231-232.
29

The tenor contains a subtle identity that can be as low down as the killing
floor of sweet and erotic facts as it can be altissimo lofty and clean as an
archangel’s underwear.51

In March of 1961, Coleman recorded his last album for Atlantic, and one of

his most well-known, Ornette on Tenor. Don Cherry played pocket trumpet, Ed

Blackwell was on drums, and Jimmy Garrison played bass. I examine Garrison

more closely later in the thesis. The alto, trumpet, and violin are not present. At no

other time did Coleman draw attention to his work on one specific instrument.

Atlantic may have asked Coleman to play tenor so they could sell the concept, but

that remains unknown. Coleman did make the creative decision to play tenor

explicitly this one time. He may have been pursuing a resolution of sorts, by using

a horn he played in his early days with his updated and far-reaching conception.

After this recording, the bebop front line of saxophone and trumpet would no

longer be a primary focus for him. Charlie Parker played tenor when the job called

for it, or when it was the only horn available to him, but never made a record as a

leader only playing it.

The album begins with “Cross Breeding.” Coleman experiments with silence

between stating the fast bop line and taking an immediate, completely alone solo

for over a full minute. Garrison and Blackwell enter in a very conversational

manner before playing time at three minutes. Coleman solos aggressively all the

51
Crouch, Stanley. “Tale of the Tenor.” The Village Voice, 16 Apr. 1986, p. 63.
30

way to seven minutes and twenty seconds. His playing contains grit and blues and

he ends with a boppish figure. Cherry stands his ground for two minutes, and

after a short drum solo they both solo. Throughout his solo Coleman still has the

urgency and yearning, almost pleading that you associate with the alto. The final

bop line to close lasts a mere twenty seconds. “Mapa” is next and always looking

for a new path, Coleman’s arrangement calls for a ninety percent four-way

independent group improvisation. With all four members playing separately

together, the cohesion occurs in that they all agree to hold their own space.

Coleman’s tenor is not that different from the alto here. “Enfant” is more

traditional in Coleman’s world as after the short head, Blackwell and Garrison start

walking. Garrison is aggressive with his rubbery sounding swing, seemingly going

his own way and very strong in the mix. Coleman plays in time for the most part.

Blackwell is very aggressive, seeking and getting interaction with Coleman. As with

most of Coleman’s bass players, Garrison comes more in to support Don Cherry,

who was easier to follow harmonically. Coleman returns for more improvisation

before the head returns, based on interaction with Blackwell. “EOS” is next, and on

this one you can really hear the pots boil. The opening melody lasts all of fifteen

seconds. Coleman is more relaxed and, in the pocket, and he’s hooked up more

with Garrison. At the opening Coleman cycles through a one, three, four, (or five,

seven, one) ascending motif that is infectious. Moving through harmony like this,

it could be three different keys or chords, and imbued with blues feeling, this is

classic Coleman. In this moment, the tenor comes alive as a unique entity in
31

Coleman’s musical world as he exploits the sound of the instrument. At 1:03

Coleman escapes a pattern with genuine blues tenor expression but without

crossing the line into rhythm and blues. Throughout, he and Blackwell have a

shared telepathy. At 2:28 Coleman leaves space and Garrison sets up a vamp that

he releases at 2:40 creating group interaction that continues a fully realized three-

way conversation. Coleman doubles down on blues phrases and Blackwell finishes

them. Coleman ends the solo in a perfect transition to Cherry who then leaves off

in another direction, but by first picking up right where Coleman left off. “Ecars”

continues the success of “EOS” with more speed, and more urgency. Coleman

plays strong blues phrases without dropping the tempo. He uses this effect to

culminate a group interaction such as at 1:40. “Ecars” is the full realization of the

group, the last recorded piece on the record. “Harlem’s Manhattan” was an out

take from this band and the Ornette on Tenor recording that surfaced on Art of the

Improvisors from Atlantic in 1970, without Coleman’s permission. Cherry uses a

cup mute. The piece sounds like the other pieces on the original and picks up after

“Ecars” with another notch up in speed and urgency. The cup mute is an odd

choice in this fiery environment and Cherry plays a short solo. Garrison follows

with a thirty second solo that foreshadows his work with Coltrane, displaying that

his sound and style were already intact.

Drummer Ronald Shannon Jackson told guitarist Jack DeSalvo that

throughout the early seventies Coleman played tenor saxophone during long

Prime Time rehearsals but simply didn’t want to carry the extra horn to
32

performances.52 Prime Time with Coleman on tenor may have been a different

energy entirely that we will never hear unless future unknown recordings surface.

Coleman would not return to the tenor again on recordings until 1977 on a duo

album titled Soapsuds, Soapsuds for John Snyder’s label Artists House. Coleman

took a break from his electric band Prime Time to make a series of acoustic duets

with Charlie Haden. On Haden’s piece “Human Being” Coleman plays the tenor

with all of his alto technique, and the special connection he shared with Haden is

on full display. Coleman reaches up into the tenor range as if he was hearing alto.

“Sex Spy” is a Coleman ballad, and you can hear the alto inside the tenor. By this

point Coleman’s horns were simply him, regardless of tuning, range, and sound

properties that draw out a particular human response. The music here is all about

the relationship of Coleman and Haden. The one difference is how Coleman sings

on the closing melody revealing a tenor voice that wasn’t heard previously in any

of his recorded work. It remains a door he opened, and a room he only stayed in

briefly. His gentle nature and vulnerability came through on a horn that as noted

previously, could also cause people to jump the rails.

Coleman’s last known recorded moment on tenor came ten years later on

“Feet Music” from the album In All Languages. The album reunited the original

Coleman classic quartet with Cherry, Haden, and Higgins. “Feet music” sounds like

the quartet dabbling in a Prime Time vibe, but Higgins doesn’t surrender to the

52
As told to the author by DeSalvo.
33

funk. Haden is very aggressive, almost playing independently. Coleman is in a very

straight blues space in an almost final return to his roots on the horn, completing

the cycle and thus achieving a final resolution of his relationship with the horn.

Dewey Redman (1931-2006) grew up in Fort Worth like Coleman, and after a

chance meeting in 1965 driving a taxi in San Francisco and picking up Coleman at

an airport just back from Japan, he ended up playing with and then joining

Coleman’s bands on tenor saxophone and recording seven albums. 53 Redman was

influenced by Coleman’s melodic approach more than anything else, and found it

daunting to share the stage with him.

Some nights he’d just be on fire, you know? He’d be playing his ass off, and
he always took the first solo, and when he got through playing sometimes there
would be nothing left to play. He played everything, the bebop, the avant-garde,
whatever. And I said, what the hell am I going to do, I play the saxophone too.54

Redman continued playing music written and inspired by Coleman

recording four albums with the band Old and New Dreams, with Don Cherry,

Charlie Haden, and Ed Blackwell from 1976 to 1987. Redman’s son Joshua shared

the stage with Coleman at the North Sea Jazz Festival in 2010 playing “Lonely

53
"Dewey Redman." The Independent. October 23, 2011. Accessed January 21, 2019.
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/dewey-redman-414684.html.

54
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 129.
34

Woman.”55 Joe Lovano played with Coleman at his Chelsea Loft.56 Lovano went too

far however at a Coleman European concert, walking onstage and playing without

discussing it prior, so that he could be seen playing with him.57 David Murray, Ravi

Coltrane, Antoine Roney, Branford Marsalis, and Henry Threadgill all joined

Coleman on stage in June 2014 at a celebration of his music.58

55
Videoservices, Gilaworks Internet- &. "Ornette Coleman Quartet - North Sea Jazz 2010
(part 1-5)." YouTube. July 05, 2011. Accessed January 21, 2019.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IqAx1zXEIrw.

56
Rogers, John. "My Friend, Ornette Coleman." NPR. June 15, 2015. Accessed January 21,
2019. https://www.npr.org/sections/ablogsupreme/2015/06/15/414007418/my-friend-ornette-
coleman.
57
As told to the author.

58
Mandel, Howard, Bob Gluck, John Litweiler, and Howard Mandel. "Ornette Honored and
Playing in Prospect Park June 2014." Jumper. March 09, 2015. Accessed January 21, 2019.
http://www.artsjournal.com/jazzbeyondjazz/2015/03/ornette-honored-and-playing-in-prospect-
park-june-2014.html.
35

5. Trumpet

“The saxophone is flawed in that it’s built like a scale. By its very
design it leads the person playing it into theory before ideas. Not the
trumpet. The trumpet is pure melody.”
Ornette Coleman

It’s important to note that as Coleman instructed me, part of Harmolodics

requires that as a horn player, you should play instruments tuned in Bb, Eb, and in

concert. The trumpet, alto saxophone, and violin matched his self-requirement. It

was during his retreat during 1963-1964 that he studied the trumpet and violin,

completely on his own and without any formal training. He formally played

trumpet in his return from self-imposed exile in 1965 with three weeks at the

Village Vanguard.59 Coleman’s use of the trumpet remains one of the most

controversial aspects of his career. For many musicians and listeners Coleman’s

moves out of bounds were something to be considered, and he was a fantastic alto

saxophonist and composer. The expansion to trumpet without formal training,

however, was crossing the line. Even today in 2019 people say they’re OK with

Coleman, except for the trumpet playing. There also remain Coleman loyalists,

59
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 110-118.
36

musicians and others that feel quite the opposite and are genuinely touched by

Coleman’s work on trumpet. Nevertheless, the Coleman trumpet was derided from

the top down. Hearing Coleman in 1968 on “Freeway Express” from the album The

Empty Foxhole in a blindfold with Leonard Feather, Freddie Hubbard said:

I could have done what Ornette was doing when I was five. Why should a
guy study for years -study- trumpet, then see a guy come out on trumpet, and he
gets a lot of popularity, like this, it doesn’t make sense.60

Miles Davis is well known for his condemnation of the Coleman trumpet,

citing Coleman as being jealous.

Ornette’s a jealous kind of dude. Jealous of another musician’s success. I


don’t know what’s wrong with him. For him- a sax player- to pick up a trumpet
and violin like that and just think he can play them with no kind of training is
disrespectful toward all the people that play them well. And then to sit up and
pontificate about them when he doesn’t know what he’s talking about is not cool
man.61

Both Hubbard and Davis felt disrespected by Coleman’s trumpet work. As a

trumpet player myself, I have always had to move past my initial reaction to

hearing it. The reality is that without formal training, Coleman often missed notes

and had a general instability on the instrument. The core issue is hearing music as

a technical act versus hearing it as music. By playing trumpet, Coleman doubled

60 Feather, Leonard, and Ira Gitler. The Encyclopedia of Jazz in the Seventies. Da Capo
press, 1987, 30.

61 Davis, Miles, and Quincy Troupe. Miles the Autobiography. Miles Davis with Quincy
Troupe. Simon & Schuster Paperbacks, 1989, 250.
37

down on his personal concept for better or for worse. He made a choice based on

his personal beliefs and relationship with music.

Coleman’s trumpet playing was formally introduced on record in 1965 at a

concert in Croydon England and appears on thirty-one recordings. Coleman never

played an entire record on trumpet, except for ionically one of his few appearances

as a sideman, on New And Old Gospel with Jackie Mclean, which I will fully

explore. As Ekkehard Jost explained, the Coleman trumpet started off as a “sound

tool” and gradually transitioned to a melody instrument.62 The trumpet came close

to sharing the stage with the alto on live bootlegs in Europe in the late 60’s but

eventually took its place as a secondary instrument that would be used on one or

two pieces, or as brief interludes in the middle of alto solos. When I studied with

Coleman there was a Jupiter brand trumpet in his music room, but I never saw him

play it or asked him about it. Over the course of his discography, there are several

notable Coleman trumpet moments of musical significance.

At the live Croydon concert, the trumpet’s first hearing on record comes on

“Falling Stars” with Coleman’s trio with David Izenzon on bass and Charles Moffett

on drums. After a blistering tempo is established and a violin solo (the violin’s first

appearance as well) Coleman starts off in the upper register at 3:50 quickly

establishing his peculiar articulation and seems to be more focused on trio

62
Jost, Ekkehard. Free Jazz. Da Capo Press, 1994, 64.
38

interaction than anything else, and the drums take over at 4:40. At 5:22 he returns

again focusing on rhythmic hits until 5:44 when a mournful melodic mood

suddenly occurs that Izenzon immediately matches on bow. A melodic phrase

launches the trio back into fast swing at 6:11. The drums again take over at 6:32.

Coleman never plays a direct conventional solo from beginning to end with the

trumpet, as he seems to seek a different relationship between horn and rhythm

section, an effective assault on what he believed were the restrictions of role

playing. The trumpet makes only one appearance on the record. “Falling Stars” is

recorded again on the next two live dates in Europe.

Coleman next plays trumpet on a movie soundtrack he wrote called Who’s

Crazy? The soundtrack was recorded as Coleman and his trio watched the 1966

film, about insane asylum inmates that escape their confinement and hole up in a

deserted Belgian farm house. On “Changes” he opens with trumpet and plays a

three-minute solo that vacillates between melodic phrases you might expect on

the alto, to rhythmic hits, to other random phrases that sound to me not extracted

from his world of melodic ideas. These moments sound like the alto melodic

content is knocking on the door but cannot get inside. The issue here in not about

Coleman’s ability to play the trumpet, it’s what he’s choosing to do with it. The

effect is not unlike someone with different personalities battling for dominance,

which certainly works with the theme of the film. In this context, the alto was

always the dominant personality that ruled the others. The music also confirms

that when the rhythm section is playing this well, the horn player can do just
39

about anything. When I played my trio recording Spiritual Power for Coleman, he

said “One of the reasons you sound so good is the high quality of your

environment.” On the second LP of Who’s Crazy? on “The Poet” Coleman

improvises on trumpet from 14:00-19:00, and here is where the criticism from

trumpet players would lie. Throughout, Coleman pushes into the upper registers

of the horn where the trumpet is especially difficult, and Coleman lacks control.

Combined with excessive saliva which creates a gurgling sound effect, the

technical effect is someone trying to play something they cannot. The musical

effect however could be someone trying to exist on their own terms in a society

where they cannot relate. During these five minutes, Coleman asks the listener

who is crazy, thus you could say achieving his musical goal. Here we find the kind

of music that defines much of the free playing happening today, both in New York

City and around the world.

Coleman’s next recording is a live date with his trio, the classic The Ornette

Coleman Trio at the Golden Circle, Stockholm. On “Snowflakes and Sunshine” he

trades with himself on violin and trumpet with Izenzon and Moffett switching the

improvised tempo into a different feeling each time. There is no discernable

melody present. Izenzon and Moffett play throughout and while Coleman switches

instruments, they fill in the space. Coleman charts himself the following course,

the timing being the amount of time he spends on the instrument improvising

aggressively.
40

Violin 1:30

Trumpet :40

Violin :40

Trumpet :30

Violin :40

Trumpet :60

Violin:60

Trumpet :60

Violin :60

Listening to the piece one can hear the influence on future musicians Roy

Campbell Jr. and William Parker. While Ray Nance played cornet and violin as a

double before Coleman, nobody prior had thought to switch back and forth

between instruments so rapidly. On this piece the improvisation is extended to

include the use of the instruments themselves. Without stating a melody, Coleman

advances his idea that would later manifest formally as part of his philosophy of

Harmolodics, that the improvisation is the melody.

In 1966, Coleman returned to the studio for the first time in four years, now

formerly presenting the trumpet and violin on Blue Note with The Empty Foxhole.

On the title piece, Coleman records one of his most significant moments on the

trumpet. With the still controversial decision to have his ten-year-old son Denardo

on drums, and Charlie Haden on bass, Coleman plays a short ballad and plays a
41

melody with no improvisation. The simple melody combined with a march figure

from Denardo evokes a haunting feeling that takes the listener right to source of

the music’s title and conception. Here, Coleman connects the trumpet to brass

instrument use in the military as an instrument associated with war. At the same

time, he evokes the human tragedy within that reality. In the liner notes, Coleman

adds a poem to complete an almost perfect artistic statement.

The empty foxhole

men sleeping in the ground

hoping to escape death

thinking of their children

and loved ones

bury not the soul

in a hole,

whose life has yet

to exist

Coleman also plays a piece titled “Freeway Express” using the trumpet. Like

the live material in Europe, this is full bore improvisation but Coleman constructs

ideas and uses space very effectively. Denardo and Haden fill in the space. Ornette

adds a Harmon mute halfway through the 8-minute piece unexpectedly, then

removes it to close, continuing his experiment in sound.


42

The trumpet was clearly on Coleman’s mind during this period. In 1967 he

composed and recorded Forms and Sounds, a piece for woodwind quintet. In the

recording with the Philadelphia Woodwind Quintet, Coleman plays solo trumpet

interludes that he says were written, but certainly contain elements of solo

improvisation. “Forms and Sounds” contains seven different completely solo

interludes that connect a ten-section piece. The interludes are short ranging in

length from twenty to ninety seconds. They often sound composed initially before

opening up. Section six contains an alto like virtuosity, and section seven is all

blues. Coleman only joins the ensemble for the final seconds. He describes the

piece as using a technique he devised called improvised reading, allowing for

octaves to be selected by the musicians. The piece most often features what sounds

like independent movement by the voices, but a commonality and unity in a

shared structure. The piece may have had its origin in an international union

negotiation between American and British musicians where Coleman agreed to use

non “dance” musicians. Regardless, Coleman once again did something that was

never done before and took the trumpet to a place it had never been.

Next, we come to one of the most interesting moments of Coleman’s career,

a call from alto player Jackie McLean to join him on the Blue Note release New And

Old Gospel, recorded in March of 1967. When I asked him about this date, he told

me it meant a great deal to him that McLean called him. Coleman had been

ridiculed, vilified, and even condemned by fellow jazz musicians, but McLean not

only believed in his contributions as an innovator, but went a step further to


43

record and collaborate with him. The still remaining controversy is that Coleman

played trumpet. Who made this decision, or took responsibility for it? McLean first

addressed the issue in the liner notes by Nat Hentoff.

When they heard about the date, a lot of trumpet players asked me why I
used Ornette on that instrument. Actually, he was willing to use any of his
instruments, but it seemed to me as we talked about the session, that we would
complement each other if Ornette focused on trumpet. It’s amazing how far
Ornette has gone in the last three years on that horn. I’m not about to compare
him technically to anybody, because that isn’t the point in Ornette’s case. The
point is how much he plays and the fact that what he plays is entirely him! If you
put on a record of Ornette playing trumpet, I could tell immediately that it’s him.63

Twenty-three years later, McLean revealed more to Kevin Whitehead in

Downbeat. He stated that he originally did want a two-alto date for the contrasting

styles, but that Coleman was focusing on trumpet. He still liked the recording, but

that week he had fights with trumpet players. Lee Morgan said to him “You want a

trumpet player? I’m a trumpet player.” McLean said it was Coleman’s concept that

attracted him more than his alto. McLean had a high compliment for Coleman

calling him a hero, because he took a stand for something and stood his ground,

taking all the pies that were thrown at him.”64

Musically, Coleman is placed in a different position on the album. McLean called

Billy Higgins to play drums who knew Coleman well. Lamont Johnson on piano

63
See Discography: New and Old Gospel

64
Whitehead, Kevin. “Back On Earth.” Downbeat, Oct. 1990, pp. 21–22.
44

and Scott Holt on bass fully supported him in their playing. Coleman is effective

on “Lifeline” where McLean plays some of the most intense alto of his career. In a

free ballad section of the suite, Coleman has a solo where he discovers a

completely new sound using a harmon mute. Coleman’s embouchure is not stable,

but the effect draws you into the heart of the sound of the free jazz movement.

“Lifeline” ends with a truly haunting free duo between McLean and Coleman.

Coleman’s exuberant “Old Gospel” follows, a rollicking piece that stands on its

own as a unique piece in the Coleman canon. Coleman also wrote the last piece

“Strange as it seems” which Coleman describes as like being in love with someone

who doesn’t agree with your philosophy. McLean plays the lead melody and solo

and is clearly playing through a set of chord changes. Coleman uses the harmon

mute again and plays through the changes. Johnson and Holt support him but

listen closely for ways to interact with him by any means. New and Old Gospel is

the kind of album that needs to be listened to many times to fully digest and

remains a singular unique moment in Coleman’s career, the only time he played

trumpet exclusively.

Coleman would continue to use the trumpet as an effective supplement to

his music overall, though the alto saxophone remained dominant. His use of the

horn seemed to have more impact when used less. He led the way on trumpet on

“Love Call” from The Blue Note album of the same name with Jimmy Garrison on

bass and Elvin Jones on drums less than a year after the death of John Coltrane in

1967, with Dewey Redman on tenor saxophone. Coleman again uses a harmon
45

mute. He also plays a ballad he originally played with Don Cherry titled “Just For

You.” Both Coleman and Cherry were not technical masters of the trumpet, but

here the mood and feeling are conveyed as only Coleman could. Garrison

accompanies him with improvised arco. In 1968 Coleman recorded a ballad on

trumpet titled “Forgotten Children” live in Rome in February released on The

Unprecedented Music Of Ornette Coleman, with Ed Blackwell on drums and both

Haden and Izenzon on bass. Izenzon plays arco and Haden plays pizzicato. After a

lovely theme statement and Izenzon solo, Coleman again plugs in the harmon and

plays like his work with McLean. Like the trio had done, Blackwell, Haden, and

Izenzon continually hand the baton off to each other, continually coming up with

new ways to play as a group.

1969 found Coleman recording Ornette at 12 on Impulse, this time with

Haden, Redman, and Denardo, who was playing with more strength and

confidence. As was evident from The Empty Foxhole, Denardo had an almost

symbiotic rhythmic relationship with his father, able to shadow him extremely

closely. Coleman plays trumpet on “Rainbows,” with his established trumpet style,

with a solo that contained flashes of the clarity and coherence often conveyed on

also saxophone. The next trumpet recording took place at Coleman’s Prince Street

Loft on “Let’s Play” from the album Friends and Neighbors, with Haden, Redman,

and Ed Blackwell behind the kit. Coleman is strong here, leading the band with the

trumpet as the dominant voice. He sings with the horn here, loud and in the

higher range of the horn.


46

Fast forward to December 1976 and Coleman recorded two duets on

trumpet with Charlie Haden on bass. Many Coleman fans consider these duets to

be some of the brightest moments of his career, and perhaps the apex of his work

on trumpet. Coleman recorded “The Golden Number” on the album of the same

name for Horizon, an album of Haden playing duets with different musicians. The

piece is a ballad and speaks to the unique musical bond shared between them.

Without drums, it’s clear that Haden could support Coleman like nobody else

having such a deep, intrinsic relationship with his process. Coleman’s technique

hadn’t changed, but his sound is clearer, and he plays with a vulnerable lyricism.

The piece lasts a full twelve and half minutes with the heart-felt melody played at

both bookends. In January 1977 on Artists House, Coleman continued the

conversation with a full album of duets with Haden on the album Soap Suds. He

plays trumpet on the final piece, a ballad titled “Some Day.” Coleman is as

expressive here as he is an any of his alto ballads. The sound of the music could

have only come from him. Again, Haden instinctively knows when to change the

tempo, as if they shared one musical mind. Coleman makes his final argument for

the trumpet and proves his case here. It was never about the technique, but always

about the music itself, and the humanity within.

Coleman’s trumpet would not appear again for a full eight years. In 1985 the

trumpet made a brief appearance at the end of an album Opening the Caravan of

Dreams with Coleman’s free funk fusion unit Prime Time on a track titled

“Compute.” His technique is intact, but the different environment doesn’t change
47

his trumpet style in a short solo. On Virgin Beauty in 1987, the trumpet is used

sparingly on two tracks. It serves an ensemble function, overdubbed on “3 Wishes,”

and again as an overdub improvisation during an alto solo on “Desert Players.”

Again in 1987, Coleman was in Hamburg for a reunion concert with Cherry,

Haden, and Higgins. On the opening piece “Chanting” Cherry and Coleman both

play trumpet, trading a melodic line back and forth in a fascinating contrast of

their sounds and styles. The track only lasts two and half minutes, but Coleman

again found something artistic to do beyond just he and Cherry both playing the

same horn. Coleman continued to use the horn in brief interludes, sometimes

during the middle of alto solos as he did on Sound Grammar in 2005. The horn was

last recorded live in Genoa, Italy in 2010 in this capacity.

Focusing on Coleman’s relationship with the trumpet must of course also

include his collaboration with Don Cherry and Bobby Bradford. Cherry will forever

be associated with Coleman after starting to play with him in 1958, and then

playing on the classic Atlantic albums on pocket cornet. Cherry originally was

mentored by Clifford Brown in Los Angeles and was playing straight ahead before

he became a student and ally of Coleman.65 Cherry plays on fifteen albums with

Coleman plus several bootlegs. His playing with him and unique style led him to

be the first call trumpet player of the avant-garde period of the sixties. Cherry

recorded with every major tenor saxophone player of the period, recording with

65
Silsbee, Kirk. “Don Cherry Interview.” Cadence, 25 Apr. 1984, pp. 5–11.
48

John Coltrane, Pharoah Sanders, Albert Ayler, Sonny Rollins, and Archie Shepp.

Bradford had a harder time connecting with Coleman, recording on cornet on two

albums that also have Cherry, Broken Shadows, and Science Fiction. Coleman wrote

a full symphonic work that featured Bradford called Sun Suite of San Francisco that

was not recorded.66 It is my hope that both Cherry and Bradford will be fully

researched.

Coleman also composed for the trumpet, specifically a chamber ensemble

piece titled The Sacred Mind of Johnny Dolphin, written in honor of John Allen,

also known as Johnny Dolphin, who formed and ran the organization Caravan of

Dreams.67 The piece has been performed at least four times featuring Wilmer Wise

in 197468, Wallace Roney, who spent some time with Coleman directly, replacing

Don Cherry after his death for a period, in 1984,69 Lew Soloff in 1987,70 and Seneca

66
Litweiler, a Harmolodic Life, 130.

67
Ibid, 189.

68
“Wilmer Wise: Be Sure Brain Is Engaged before Putting Mouthpiece in Gear. Greenleaf
Music - Dave Douglas Jazz Blog and Store, 4 Jan. 2010, Greenleafmusic.com/wilmer-wise-be-sure-
brain-is-engaged-before-putting-mouthpiece-in-gear/.

69
Holloway, Keenan. “Wallace Roney - Biography.” Wallace Roney: The Official Site About,
www.wallaceroney.com/bio.php.

70
Holland, Bernard. "JAZZ: ORNETTE COLEMAN AT WEILL HALL." The New York Times.
March 18, 1987. Accessed December 30, 2018. https://www.nytimes.com/1987/03/18/arts/jazz-
ornette-coleman-at-weill-hall.html.
49

Black in 2017 after Coleman’s death.71 There has been no formal recording. In

addition, trumpeter John Marshall spent time studying with trumpet with

Coleman in the 70’s.72 Trumpeter R.J. Avallone spent three years studying and

playing trumpet with Coleman, six to eight hours a day, five days a week, for three

years, though they never recorded.73 The author does not consider trumpeter

Jordan McLean’s trumpet playing on the unauthorized release with Coleman titled

New Vocabulary relevant to the discussion. On a final note, Coleman also recorded

one time with a suona, a kind of wooden oboe with a distinctive loud and high-

pitched sound and could possibly be a musette. The piece was called “Buddha

Blues” from the album Love Revolution, live music recorded in Italy in 1958.74

71
"Lincoln Center Festival: Ornette Coleman's Chamber Music at Stanley H. Kaplan
Penthouse." ZEALnyc. May 30, 2017. Accessed December 30, 2018. https://zealnyc.com/lincoln-
center-festival-ornette-colemans-chamber-music-at-stanley-h-kaplan-penthouse/.

72
As told to the author by saxophonist Daniel Carter, who was present.

73
As told to the author by Avallone. I met him at Coleman’s Chelsea loft in 2005.

74
"Ornette Coleman - Buddha Blues." YouTube. November 17, 2010. Accessed January 03,
2019. www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJePdnUbwc.
50

6. Violin

During the period Coleman developed his trumpet playing, He undertook

teaching himself violin as well. His violin playing remains controversial, but not as

much as the trumpet. Coleman’s use of the instrument was even further from

conventional use to the point that it was difficult to perceive in any standard way.

Coleman almost always played the violin with an almost frenetic assault of sound.

After he returned from his self-imposed exile and played the Village Vanguard in

January 1965, now with the trumpet and violin in tow, Dan Morgenstern from

Downbeat was present and offered his perspective.

Coleman attacks (there is no better word) the violin with intense


concentration. His bowing technique is unorthodox. A rapid, circular arm motion
that almost enables him to touch all four strings simultaneously. Coleman rarely
plays one string at a time. He produces a cascade of sound, sometimes surprisingly
pleasing to the ear, sometimes almost abrasive, but never with the scratchy
uncertainty of incompetent violinists. He seems to have tuned the instrument in
his own manner.75

Coleman provided more insight on his decision to develop the trumpet and

violin in the process of his construction of his most well-known symphonic work,

75
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 113.
51

Skies of America. Coleman was having trouble with classical musicians playing

certain passages. He decided to get a trumpet and violin to see if he could play

what he was hearing and would then play parts to show that they were possible.

Coleman may have played some bassoon and guitar with this goal in mind but

didn’t develop on them enough to formerly use them in action. Coleman played

bassoon at Avery Fisher Hall in 1978.76 He also played it at the Newport Jazz

Festival in the mid-seventies as witnessed by saxophonist Tim Price.77 No known

recordings exist.

Further perspective on the Coleman violin comes from John Litweiler,

seeing that Coleman was not just bypassing jazz tradition at this point, but was

also moving beyond Western musical traditions overall. Here Coleman could

attempt true spontaneous playing, or Coleman as would say, music played without

memory. Coleman elaborated that the concern musicians have for proper

intonation can restrict you from emotions available to non-tempered

instruments.78 Coleman told legendary saxophone repair man Robert Romeo that

the reason he liked a Bundy stock mouthpiece was that it was both flat and sharp

at the same time.79

76
Ibid, 164.

77
As told to the author.

78
Ibid, 118.

79
As told to the author.
52

Critic Max Harrison went further in his perception of the Coleman violin:

He sounds less civilized, more complex, showers of notes well up with little
conscious supervision. Like Charles Ives and John Cage, the music appears to
mirror life’s flux rather than subject it to a personal and arbitrary order. Coleman’s
violin may represent an indeterminacy as drastic as Cage.80

Coleman is listed as playing violin on twenty-two recordings in the Tom

Lord Jazz Discography. He used it less frequently than the trumpet, and never

featured the instrument exclusively. Unlike the trumpet, there are no moments

that stand out with melodies written with the instrument in mind. During 1965 the

violin was played live in Europe in much the same way as the trumpet from the

Croydon concert, Who’s Crazy? and Live at the Golden Circle in Stockholm. 1966

brought the official first studio focus on the violin on a piece titled “Sound

Gravitation” from The Empty Foxhole. In the liner notes Coleman wrote:

Sound Gravitation

Hear a sound-feel a sound

Speak a sound-play a sound,

All the gravitation of

Silence

80
Ibid, 118.
53

After a spacious entry Coleman begins his assault. Within the first two

minutes it’s impossible not to hear his influence on most violin players engaged in

improvisation in 2019. As with his trumpet playing, Coleman’s violin gives him a

new way to relate to the musicians he is playing with. For seven minutes he

engages Denardo and Haden, almost like a game to see how close they can follow

him. The improvisation ends abruptly with no reference to a melody or ending,

Coleman having dipped his toe into the abyss. In 1968 Coleman featured the violin

on “Bells and Chimes” for seven minutes with Denardo and Haden again, along

with Dewey Redman on Ornette at 12 on Impulse. Coleman increases tension by

floating in and out of higher ranges, getting Redman to join him in an almost

ecstatic but nervous expression. The rhythmic pace is relentless with little or no

space except to continue to dare Redman to join him on the outside. Coleman

ends the piece by repeating a note several times as a simple way to exit. In 1970,

Coleman launched into a violin improvisation with an urgent sustain and zero use

of space that sounds like a hoe-down in space over a seventies type groove

following a street type choir singing his piece “Friends and Neighbors” from his loft

at 131 Prince Street. After an eleven-year break Coleman returned with the violin in

Prime Time in 1985 on “Compute” from the album Opening at the caravan of

Dreams. The violin solo mid-way sounds like an electric model. Prime Time brings

an entirely different environment with multiple grooves, but Coleman plays almost

entirely the way he’s always played it. The effect is startling, and the audience
54

certainly enjoyed it based on the response audible on the recording. The violin

returned to another unique environment in 1985 on “Mob Job” from the album

Song X with Pat Metheny. Over a relaxed, loping groove, Coleman again plays

sawing textures with some unusual simultaneous plucking for a minute and thirty

seconds. Metheny stayed out of the way for the most part. He uses the alto to play

the opening and closing melody. In 1986 Coleman can be seen playing both violin

and trumpet with Prime Time at the Live Under the Sky Festival.81 In 1987 during

the fore mentioned quartet reunion concert The 1987 Hamburg Concert on “The

Sphinx” Coleman played an unlisted violin improvisation that Don Cherry floated

over with a Harmon mute with a restrained spacious improvisation creating an

interesting effect in contrast to the Coleman wall of sound. The moment sounds

spontaneous. In 2005 on Coleman’s Sound Grammar on “Song X” to close the live

concert in Germany at six minutes in, Coleman summons the violin and plays over

two bass players, Greg Cohen and Tony Falanga. With Denardo establishing an

almost Prime Time type groove, the string players launch into a very aggressive

group improvisation. Coleman seems to be soloing on top more than creating a

group sound improvisation and the crowd loves it. Closing the concert this way,

Coleman appears as a magician who could summon another instrument and play it

81
LightningTrident. "Ornette Coleman - Dancing In Your Head (live)." YouTube. January
25, 2008. Accessed January 03, 2019. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=72SVN9sO4P4.
55

at will. The Coleman violin made its last official appearance on a non-official

recording live in Genoa Italy in 2010.

While Coleman never played straight melodies on the violin, he would

write them for the instrument. His symphonic work Skies of America of course

contains violin parts. His string quartet piece Prime Design/Time Design in 1985

opens with a Coleman melody for violin as clear, haunting, and heartfelt as

anything he ever composed. Coleman collaborated with violinist Tom Chiu who

assisted Coleman as a self-described musical director for work with strings for 12

years, though they never recorded together.82 Coleman composed a violin fantasy

specially for his friend Malcolm Goldstein titled “Trinity,” recorded by Goldstein

and Jennifer Koh. The piece contains three sections, the last titled swing, and lasts

six and half minutes. The music sounds like the Coleman melody that many people

always wished he would have always played on violin himself. The music is so well

thought out that it could be considered a form of classical perfection, another

singular unique moment in Coleman’s career. The music is simply stunning when

hearing Koh play the piece with genuine emotional honesty and vulnerability. In

this way, Coleman may have planted the seeds for future deepening intimate levels

of emotional expression in classical music that have seemed out of reach prior to

his arrival. Coleman opened the door to abstract improvisation on the violin

inspiring countless musicians on the instrument ever since.

82
As told to the author by Mr. Chiu.
56

At the author’s request, violinist and composer Jason Kao Hwang, one of

the leading improvisors worldwide on violin for many years now in 2019, provided

his thoughts on Coleman’s violin.

I am grateful to Ornette for his passionate, life affirming music. As a


violinist, I’m inspired by his fantastic imagination and individualism that was
rooted in culture and history. Unconcerned with the European classical tradition,
he brought the sound of the violin into his personal voice. I think that because he
was able to resonate such a cornucopia of overtones within a single note of his
alto, he must have enjoyed how easily the violin offered him all the microtonal
vibrations between those overtones. As a great blues musician, his horn would sing
all the notes and all the notes between the notes. The violin, unimpeded by a
Boehm keyboard, must have felt like a great gateway to his infinite harmolodic
continuum. I met Ornette in his loft around 1982. He told me how much he
enjoyed playing the violin.83

83
As written to the author in March 2019.
57

7. Piano

Coleman and his relationship with the piano have long been a reference

point for understanding his relationship with music overall. Most scholars agree

that when he dispatched with it on his second album as a leader for Contemporary

Tomorrow Is The Question! he took a huge step forward towards his own music,

free from the piano establishing chord progressions. On this album, Coleman is

not yet playing entirely free harmonically. Red Mitchell and Percy Heath on bass

(on different pieces) are playing distinct harmony. The absence of the piano

creates more room to move, and on the improvisations, Coleman seems almost

restless, knocking on the door to his next album The Shape of Jazz to Come on

Atlantic where his concept to improvise harmony as well as melody came together.

Coleman himself played piano and had a keyboard in his music room when I

studied with him. He was recorded playing solo piano in 1971 at Jazz Stage Berlin.84

In a 5:30 improvisation, Coleman sounds like he’s improvising Thelonious Monk

harmony, with occasional right-hand flurries that move from Cecil Taylor type

improvising to textures like his violin work.

84
Guy, Jazz Video. "Ornette Coleman Solo - Rare!" YouTube. November 28, 2015. Accessed
January 03, 2019. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=czS2RlmsGY4&t=324s.
58

Research on Coleman and the piano begins with pianist Walter Norris (1931-

2011) from Coleman’s first album as a leader on Contemporary, Something Else!!!!

The Music Of Ornette Coleman. At 28 years old, Coleman was still tied to chord

changes and playing in environments where the idea of harmonic freedom was not

something anyone had fully pursued or was entirely comfortable with. Norris

explained what happened on this recording to Ted Gioia:

I read this book that suggested that I was forcing Ornette to play changes
on this session. But in fact, this was what we had agreed on at the rehearsals, two
or three times a week for six months. For example, we agreed on using “I Got
Rhythm” changes-Ornette was used to playing over those changes, and he was able
to be very free in that setting. I was listening to what he was doing and opened my
comping in response.85

Coleman confirmed in the liner notes to the album telling Nat Hentoff how

he writes the melodic line first as several different chords can fit any melodic line.

Coleman went further saying he preferred new changes on every chorus. On the

recording the chords were some of his and some of Norris and Don Payne on

bass.86 At issue is the practice of comping. How can a pianist provide a harmonic

outline or blueprint so organically? Coleman always fought against role playing in

his music, and the piano was the first instrument under assault to find a different

relationship. Music based on group intuition removed the piano’s expected role

and function, forcing every pianist to play with Coleman to find a new

85
Gioia, Ted. West Coast Jazz: Modern Jazz in California, 1945-1960. Berkeley, CA:
University of California Press, 1998.

86
Gioia, West Coast Jazz, 354.
59

relationship. They all seem to take a slightly different position. Norris, sitting

directly on the line that Coleman was crossing, handles this challenge not only

amicably but with a fair amount of strident, committed work. He sounds like he

should be there as Coleman was beginning his eventual transition to working

without a piano for the majority of his work.

Paul Bley (1932-2016) was next to play piano with Coleman on the Live at the

Hillcrest recording in 1958. On this live recording Coleman is much more

aggressive in his concept. Bley often suggests form and harmonic structure where

it would or should be, though Coleman is not adhering to strict form. The feeling

he and Charlie Haden create is playing as if changes are there, though they are not

being played. The music is not an imitation, but like playing with the safety net

removed. In Bley’s solo on “Klactoveedsedstene” he constructs lines freely that

work in the context, at times sounding like Coleman. Haden and Higgins drop out

leaving Bley alone where he continues the feeling and seems to veer off into his

own song. Bley does suffer during horn solos from poor audio. On Coleman’s “The

Blessing” both Coleman, Bley, and Haden sound like they’re playing Coleman’s

original changes. After Bley lays out, Coleman ventures outside and Haden walks

the line between the original source and organic intuition as only he could. During

Cherry’s solo, Bley and Haden seem to create new changes before going back to

the original ones. On his solo, Bley goes his own way leaving Haden left to hold on

to the form, who eventually lays out. Bley starts playing the melody in different
60

keys to bring everyone back. Bley was not only ready to work with Coleman, he

was an ally, co collaborator if not conspirator.

Next in 1959, Coleman was captured at the Lenox School of jazz. On a tight

arrangement of Coleman’s “The Sphinx” pianist Steve Kuhn (1938- ) maintains the

opening thirty-two bar rhythm changes structure, but plays modally on the A

sections, and plays alternate changes on the bridge. On his solo, Kuhn plays a

static, repeated harmony on the bridge, and sounds like Bud Powell comping on

the bridge, and does not construct lines. The bass player Larry Ridley plays a loose

version of rhythm changes, choosing to follow Kuhn more than Coleman. Coleman

next plays on a tune with chord changes that he did not write titled “Inn Tune.” He

takes a brief solo and plays the changes by pianist Ron Brown, yet still sounds like

himself. In a straight-ahead big band arrangement of a piece titled “To Thee, O

Asphodel” Coleman solos briefly with pianist David McKay. Coleman plays in

harmony and context at the start of his solo, and as he starts to veer off the path,

McKay takes what Coleman plays and follows him with it, ready to jump off the

cliff with him, another ally who was using a technique Butch Morris taught as part

of his live conduction process many years later. On “Blue Grass” Coleman takes

four choruses dipping into his rhythm and blues sound, and McKay stays on form,

but is a busy player more interested in playing with Coleman than for him.

Bill Evans (1929-80) played piano with Coleman on a Gunther Schuller

arrangement of Thelonious Monk’s “Criss Cross” in December 1960. After Coleman

solos for one minute, Evans joins with dissonant out of time comping and even
61

adds in Monk’s “Misterioso.” Evans chords do not appear related to Coleman and

do not have definitive tonal centers. They could both be playing off the melody

simultaneously. Eric Dolphy follows on bass clarinet and he and Coleman briefly

play together. Evans expands and tries to comp for Dolphy with irregular and

extended dissonant tonal implication. In the end the piece sounds more like

Schuller music than Monk or Coleman as they are consumed by the arrangement.

Lamont Johnson (1941-1999) was next in 1967 in the record discussed previously

with Jackie McLean New and Old Gospel. Next in 1972 Cedar Walton (1934-2013)

appeared on Coleman’s Columbia album Science Fiction. Walton comps on a

crowded harmolodic blues titled “Good Girl Blues,” a vocal sang by Webster

Armstrong with Jim Hall on guitar and even an added woodwind quintet. Walton

is more prominent on a ballad vocal featuring Armstrong that Coleman wrote

titled “Is It Forever,” with the same personal. The piece seems to be fully arranged

with Coleman chord changes that Haden and Walton adhere too, but Coleman

and Dewey Redman are very free on top of everything happening. Walton fully

participates and sounds like himself but is hard to hear and is given little space.

Throughout the 1980’s no piano is heard in Coleman’s world on recordings. Pianist

and keyboardist David Bryant joined Prime Time during the 80’s and recorded on

Tone Dialing in September 1995. Bryant was an avid student of Coleman and was

featured to great effect on a piece titled “Kathelin Gray,” fully discussed later in the

thesis. In a solo opening feature on a keyboard with a piano sound, Bryant plays

both the melody and chords in a way that demonstrate he was the first pianist to
62

fully embrace Coleman’s concepts and then apply it the keyboard. With a

prodigious technique, Bryant fearlessly finds a way to partially bring the piano

back to its supporting original role, but with Coleman’s relationship to harmony as

a basis. To achieve this, Bryant spent countless hours playing with Coleman,

though they did not get to record more often. Bryant continues to play this way

today in 2019. I spoke to him about Coleman’s relationship with harmony.

Ornette didn’t like smooth voice leading. So not only did he not feel a need
to practice smooth voice leading by way of theory rules or just by ear resolution,
Ornette didn’t like it, had an aversion to it, wasn’t concerned with it, or more likely
was interested in what was there if you didn’t do it. Sometimes Ornette would
simply suggest a triad with a melody note on top and would say he didn’t want
chord progressions, he wanted sounds.

He never spoke of scale degrees past a 7th and would juxtapose chords with
the two guitar players in Prime Time playing different chords at the same time. He
would continue his attack in rehearsals asking, “What’s a passing tone?” and
exclaiming that “There’s no such thing.” Ornette would say “If I want to go
somewhere, I just do, I don’t need a connection.” He would also say “Chords are
just notes. Any two triads have a common tone or are separated by a half step.

Bryant added that in his improvisation, Coleman practiced a fearless

modulation based on trust and intuition. He was methodical in working out these

musical relationships. There were 20-25 takes of “Tone Dialing” before Coleman

was satisfied. He did have rules of what did work and what didn’t. He didn’t like

weak phrases and believed certain intervals had more power. At times Coleman

told Bryant that what he was playing was Harmolodic but was weak. To work out

these issues, 12-14 hours a day of playing together as a group were required. As

mentioned earlier in the chapter on Charlie Parker and Coleman, Coleman also

told Bryant that he believed three compositions gave you everything you needed to
63

know about Bebop. Bryant said that Coleman spoke more about Bud Powell than

Thelonious Monk.87 In regard to Monk, the author sat with Coleman and listened

to a Thelonious Monk birthday radio broadcast on WKCR for several hours

without speaking. Peter Katz told the author he saw Monk and Coleman attending

a concert together in the early 70’s. Finally, photographer Dee Kalea told the

author that when she was young, Coleman was seeing her mother and at her house

they had a piano. Monk arrived at 3am and woke them all so that he could play it!

Fast forward to 1996, the most significant year of Coleman’s career

regarding the piano. Coleman recorded two CDs of the same compositions

sounding differently, Three Women and Hidden Man on Harmolodic/Verve. He

used the same band, featuring Geri Allen on piano, with Charnett Moffett, the

virtuosic son of the drummer Charles Moffett from his great trio, on bass, and

Denardo on drums. Allen was given the rare distinction to play with Coleman in

this context. She abandons any notion of the piano doing any role playing and

plays without trying to dictate or establish any specific harmony. She is not

comping in any sense but plays in the ensemble as an equal member as Coleman

explained in the liner notes. Allen’s playing doesn’t sound intrusive or in conflict.

Moffett plays with the group with more technique than any previous bass player

and doesn’t hold back, improvising constantly, but always within the context of

87
The author interviewed Dave Bryant by phone in September 2017 following with a live
performance in Cambridge, Massachusetts in November 2017
64

the piece. On “Home Grown” from Three Woman Allen enters what might have

been a solo but becomes three simultaneous improvisations happening together

without Coleman. On the same piece on Hidden Man, Moffett walks and Allen

constructs lines freely. Coleman’s concept of equality is maintained as his alto feels

more like he’s participating than soloing. Allen plays without Coleman for the

opening of “Mob Job” and plays for several minutes with Moffett and Denardo

playing very aggressively but very differently on both CDs, both times shattering

the idea of a role-playing completely. Coleman’s violin appears on “Sound

Museum” and the trumpet appears on “Women of The Veil.” Throughout, Allen

and Coleman are never engaged in true solos. Coleman took what he was doing

during the sixties and pushed it further, while adding the piano into an

environment that it hadn’t been prior. Coleman also guested on two fantastic duos

with Allen on her own album Eyes…In The Back Of Your Head. They played two

pieces, “The Eyes Have It,” and “Vertical Flowing,” continuing the exchange they

shared during Coleman’s records on a more musically intimate basis. In the duo

environment, Allen establishes the melodic space while simultaneously

improvising with and without Coleman at the same time.

In the same year Coleman recorded the live album Colors with German

pianist Joachim Kuhn. He had planned a duo album with a pianist much earlier in

1964 spending three days playing with pianist Jack Wilson, planning to only play
65

trumpet and violin, but the album never came together.88 Kuhn, fourteen years

younger than Coleman, met him in Paris in the early nineties. Coleman flew him

from Ibiza to New York several times a year, renting a Steinway grand piano. They

would play for a whole week, fourteen hours a day. Kuhn combined a system of his

own called “diminished-augmented” with Harmolodics. Coleman was quoted as

saying "He doesn't come from jazz; he comes from music." Kuhn was interviewed

in 2019.

From 1995 to 2000 I was able to play 16 concerts with Ornette. Before each
concert, he wrote ten new songs, which we had worked out and recorded in his
Harmolodic studio in Harlem for a whole week. Since he wanted me to supply the,
as he called it, cards (sounds) for his melodies, I was directly involved in the
composition process. After the concert, these pieces were never played again. Now
I am the only one who has all the recordings and the sheet music of the 170
pieces.89

For Colors, Coleman wrote twelve and recorded eight new compositions for

the concert. Throughout the live concert recorded in Kuhn’s hometown of Leipzig,

Germany, Coleman and Kuhn often do not directly interact harmonically but are

on separate melodic improvisational paths. Kuhn often takes on the role of playing

somewhat extended solo sections, as the two-way independence seemed more

difficult to sustain. On “Refills” Kuhn used his right and left hands somewhat

88
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 113.

89
ACT Music - In the Spirit of Jazz. "Joachim Kühn." ACT Music. Accessed February 18,
2019. https://www.actmusic.com/en/Artists/Joachim-Kuehn/Melodic-Ornette-Coleman/Melodic-
Ornette-Coleman-CD/Produkt-Info-Melodic-Ornette-Coleman.
66

independent of each other, working on two not completely related ideas at the

same time. The trumpet appears for some brief spacious call and response, then

after total silence the alto erupts. On “Story Writing” the violin appears. Coleman

plays melodically with the nature of the piece as written at times but stays within

his usual violin sound methodology. On both instruments he responds differently

as Kuhn suggests an entire alternate harmolodic universe. “Night Plans” is a slower

and heartfelt ballad with more space than the rest of the music. Kuhn follows

Coleman here more, instead of speaking at the same time, though that’s not

necessarily a bad thing in Coleman’s world. Colors stands as a unique document.

Kuhn’s dense, more orchestral approach contrasts Geri Allen’s work. He is also the

only person to record a full duo album with Coleman other than Charlie Haden. In

February of 2019, Kuhn will release a solo recording of the pieces he used to play

with Coleman that were never recorded called The Melodic Ornette Coleman.90

Beyond Colors are more piano players that worked with Coleman but were

never recorded. Kenny Barron joined Coleman in 1997 at Lincoln Center, looking

for a way into his world. Wallace Roney also played with Coleman in this group.91

Don Friedman played with Coleman in back in Los Angeles, though the exact time

is unclear. Friedman considered Coleman a natural or ear player not interested in

90
Ibid

91
Ginell, Richard S. "Ornette Coleman." Variety. July 15, 1997. Accessed January 03, 2019.
https://variety.com/1997/music/reviews/ornette-coleman-1200450526/.
67

the intellectual world of chord progressions.92 In the mid 50’s He spent a week

playing with Coleman at club in Vancouver, Canada on a gig that that Don Cherry

originally acquired. When pressed by Dr. David Schroeder at NYU about Coleman,

Friedman almost seemed agitated by the question. He claimed Walter Norris told

him he had to rewrite Colemans music in order to play it and was especially harsh

on Denardo’s playing. Friedman said Coleman’s music was written wrong so he

would spend a whole day teaching Cherry the music by ear. A devout practitioner

of playing straight Western harmony, he said Coleman wrote weird music and

spoke in strange ways adding that “he did what he was capable of.”93 In the liner

notes to Soap Suds Coleman speaks of an all-night session where he played with

both Cecil Taylor and Bud Powell switching off at the piano bench, and even

mentions playing with Eubie Blake! Regarding Powell we have more evidence from

a story that Coleman knocked on his door and said ‘Good morning, Mr. Powell. My

name is Ornette Coleman. I’m a saxophonist and all my music is based on the

intervals and changes of the sevenths in your left hand.’94

92ArtistsHouseMusic. "Jazz Pianist Don Friedman on Playing With Ornette Coleman and
Chet Baker." YouTube. September 13, 2011. Accessed January 03, 2019.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CZPbv5_qVe0.

93
Studies, NYU Steinhardt Jazz. "Conversations with Don Friedman." YouTube. September
23, 2016. Accessed January 13,2019
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NRgSqW_VxOA&feature=youtu.be.

94
"For Bud Powell's 87th Birthday, A 2004 Bud Powell Homage in Jazziz." Today Is The
Question: Ted Panken on Music, Politics and the Arts. June 16, 2014. Accessed January 03, 2019.
68

Charles Farrell is a boxing promoter and avant-garde piano player known

for working with Evan Parker. He became friends with Coleman and attempted

collaboration with him but was frustrated by the experience. He wrote openly

about his experience online. Farrell takes the unusual perspective of drawing

attention to his perception of Coleman’s inadequacies, citing difficulty in

connecting with him musically. He claims the music often didn’t function and that

he walked out of a session with bassist Henry Grimes based on the musical

tension. Farrell couldn’t comprehend Coleman’s musical theories but was able to

connect when he sought out a more musical human connection through the blues.

In an odd experiment Coleman and Farrell attempted to play like a duet record

that Farrell did with Evan Parker so that Coleman could explore his own

boundaries. Farrell is an unusual person and their friendship displayed Coleman’s

humbleness and desire to explore his own practice even in his later years.95

Ellis Marsalis played with Coleman in his formative days in his 1956, driving

Ed Blackwell to New Orleans and spending two months with Coleman.96 While

https://tedpanken.wordpress.com/2011/09/27/for-bud-powells-87th-birthday-a-2004-bud-powell-
homage-in-jazziz/.

95
Farrell, Charles, and Charles Farrell. "Playing With Ornette." The Concourse. June 16,
2015. Accessed January 21, 2019. https://theconcourse.deadspin.com/playing-with-ornette-
1711507776.

96
Mandel, Howard. "Reasons to Be Cheerful: Wynton Books Ornette." Jumper. April 28,
2011. Accessed January 21, 2019.
https://www.artsjournal.com/jazzbeyondjazz/2009/03/reasons_to_be_cheerful_wynton.html.
69

trying to adapt to the concept, he recalled a moment where they came together.

Alvin Batiste was also trying his hand at playing piano with Coleman.

Both of us were playing piano. I started a cycle of seventh chords, just


moving them up the scale, up the piano chromatically, and Ornette said, ‘That’s it!
That’s it! Keep playing that!’ I didn’t really understand what I was doing, but
Ornette related to it. I had forsaken the rhythmic responsibilities of the group in
favor of trying to play harmonically what Ornette was hearing and trying to hear
myself what was going on.97

Adam Holzman played probable overdubbed keyboard with Coleman on

three tracks on a recording that was made in 2009 titled New Vocabulary. The

recording was in legal dispute as the Coleman estate was never consulted about

the legitimacy of its making. The musical exchange is inconsequential.98 Finally, I

know three pianists who played with Coleman in his music room in Chelsea,

Manhattan in the early 2000’s. Dr. Lewis Porter, Casimir Liberski, and Joel Lacardi.

Porter met with Coleman several times in his Chelsea loft and used his digital

keyboard in his music room.99 Liberski spent a great deal of time studying and

playing with Coleman during the last decade of his life, but like R.J. Avallone, was

a serious student but did not record.100 Lacardi was present when the author

97
Wilmer, Valerie. ""Alvin Batiste and Elvin Marsalis"." Coda, June 1980.

98
Tsioulcas, Anastasia. "Update: Suit Over Ornette Coleman's 'New Vocabulary'
Dismissed." NPR. May 27, 2015. Accessed January 21, 2019.
https://www.npr.org/sections/therecord/2015/05/27/410065414/ornette-coleman-sues-over-new-
vocabulary.

99
As told to the author.

100
As told to the author.
70

arrived at a Coleman study and practice session in 2005. He seemed to know all of

Coleman’s music by memory and played with incredible fluency. They clearly had

an established musical history and relationship. Finally, pianist Yoichi Uzeki

played with Coleman on a session led by bassist Jamaaladeen Tacuma, and said he

felt he could play freely and not worry about whether his notes were right or

wrong.101 Bobby Zankel told the author that pianist Joanne Brakeen spent time

with Coleman in Los Angeles, though it remains unclear what the nature was of

their exchange. In all of Coleman’s time spent with pianists, he confronted his

relationship with harmony in the extreme, no different than a scientist trying to

cure a disease. Coleman was in a sense, an experimental music scientist who never

stopped looking for evidence of his own musical truth. In playing with pianists, he

created an environment within his own musical world where he sought out direct

confrontation between himself and the function of sound on multiple levels.

101
As told to the author.
71

8. Guitar

Coleman’s first known collaboration with guitar in his own music first

appeared on “Blues Misused” an unissued piece from his self-produced Town Hall

Concert in 1962. Written for alto saxophone, guitar, piano, two basses, and drums

we only have a review from Bill Coss in Downbeat to describe the music. Coss

described it as “a sometimes historical, sometimes satirical, sometimes plain funny

piece that exhibited the best and worst of rhythm and blues.”102 The pianist,

guitarist, and second bassist remain unknown. Coleman explained some of his

perspective on guitar to John Litweiler.

Guitar has a very wide overtone. One guitar might sound like ten violins in
terms of strength. You know, like in a symphony orchestra two trumpets are
equivalent to twenty-four violins. So, when I found that out, well, I’m going to see
if I can orchestrate this music that I’m playing and see if I can have a larger sound-
and it surely did. So, about 1975 I started orchestrating the same music that I was
playing, that I’ve always written, for the kind of instrumentation that I was
using.103

Guitarist Jim Hall (1930-2013) was present on "Variants on a Theme of

Thelonious Monk (Criss-Cross)" arranged by Gunther Schuller from Jazz

Abstractions recorded in 1961. In the final minute of the arrangement Hall is

102
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 104.

103
Ibid. 157.
72

present for a group improvisation where Coleman and Eric Dolphy are present. He

returned to record two pieces with Coleman on “Good Girl Blues” and “Is It

Forever” in September 1972, released in 1982 on Columbia on Broken Shadows. His

unique sound is present improvising throughout “Good Girl Blues,” though he gets

no official solo time. Hall plays a very short introduction and improvises

throughout “Is It Forever,” without an arranged solo as well, in a type of precursor

to the role of the guitar later in Prime Time.

James Blood Ulmer (1940- ) truly brought the guitar into Coleman’s musical

universe and made a tremendous impact. Ulmer moved to New York City in 1971

and met Coleman through Billy Higgins. Ulmer moved in with Coleman and spent

several years studying with him before Coleman formed a quartet with bassist

Norris Jones, known as Sirone, and Higgins on drums. Coleman held six months of

rehearsals before the group went to Europe. Ulmer went deep into finding a place

for the guitar in Harmolodics.

He never had a guitar before me. I was orchestrating his improvised parts as
he played them. Instead of setting up sounds for him to play, I would play where
he went to. It’s different from following the patterns of chord changes. In Ornette’s
music, the change comes after the phrase. It allows the soloist to make whatever
phrase he wants. I got a chance to solo. I think the guitar worked more with his
music than anyone else. I had to learn instant modulation and orchestration,
which are now important parts of my conception.104

104
Bourne, Michael. “‘Ornette's Interview.’” Downbeat, 22 Nov. 1973.
73

He loved that sound that didn’t have no changes, didn’t have no chords. I
dreamt a tuning that didn’t have chords and scales to it, and he said, “Oh my God,
Blood you just came up with the real Harmolodic transposed notes.” We patented
the Harmolodic Scale, and the Harmolodic Clef. Harmolodic music isn’t free at all.
Coleman told me it had to have composition and improvisation.105

Ulmer’s harmolodic tuning for the guitar is a unique creation. In rehearsals,

Coleman would call out random and unusual chords to see if Ulmer could keep up. Ulmer

dreamed the harmolodic tuning as a solution by tuning all six strings to the same note.

Coleman then called out chords that Ulmer could no longer access, so they just started

playing and discovered Harmolodic guitar.106 Ulmer has gone as far as to explain and

demonstrate harmolodic tuning on Vimeo. From the bottom up, the A tuning is E A E A

A A. The E tuning is E B E E E E.107

A bootleg of a complete live concert of the Coleman quartet with Ulmer,

Sirone, and Higgins on Padua in Italy, 4 May 1974 exists on YouTube.108 Though

105
Ulmer, James. "To Be A Harmolodic Player, You Have To Be A Harmolodic Person”
Celebrate Ornette! CD Box Set. June 2016.

106
Himes, Geoffrey. "James "Blood" Ulmer and Vernon Reid: Harmolodic Blues." JazzTimes.
Accessed January 28, 2019. https://jazztimes.com/features/james-blood-ulmer-and-vernon-reid-
harmolodic-blues/.

107
"The Unwritten Theory: Guitar Harmolodic." Vimeo. January 27, 2019. Accessed January
28, 2019. https://vimeo.com/94781026.

108
Zechberger, Paul. “Ornette Coleman in Concert Feat. James 'Blood' Ulmer.” YouTube,
YouTube, 23 Apr. 2014, www.youtube.com/watch?v=x54nuTXSZEc. Accessed 28 Jan. 2019.
74

the sound quality is poor, Sirone and Ulmer are audible. Ulmer’s approach is

startling in its effectiveness as he orchestrates Coleman in a way that only he could

achieve and has never been duplicated. At 56 minutes in, Ulmer plays a blues

connotated harmolodic solo that lifts the entire group. In 1978 Ulmer was in

Germany with Prime Time, in a transitionary band with Bern Nix on guitar. Ulmer

and Nix play a stunning harmolodic guitar duet At 6:22 on a video of this group on

YouTube. In December of 1978 Coleman played the rare role of a sideman in a

quartet album led by Ulmer and released on Artists House called Tales of Captain

Black with Jamaaladeen Tacuma on bass and Denardo on drums. Ornette also

produced the record. In a Prime Time type of quartet with simultaneous occurring

improvisations, Ulmer becomes the central voice with Coleman recorded on one

channel much the way he would have placed one of his two guitars. Coleman’s

voice and sound are stronger than this position usually calls for. Ulmer is the

leader, taking solos with Coleman laying out. Denardo is extremely aggressive,

borderline soloing throughout, pushing Tacuma into overdrive. The entire album

has a hyper blues laced urgency. Ulmer did not join Prime Time.

Ulmer spoke about some of the more human aspects of having a musical

relationship with Coleman.

Well, when you're working with someone close, like the way me and Coleman
was, the thought is never what you're doing for each other. The thought is what you're
doing for what you're trying to do. Coleman always worked on something specifically
and tried to take it to the highest level there is. So, when you get through doing that, you
ain't got time to be thinking about influencing somebody. You're trying to finish that
75

piece of work. The coolest thing he told me (was) that I was a natural harmolodic player.
He was one of the persons who could make you feel like what you were doing was so
important. That's another thing that I got from Coleman- it's like someone who makes
you feel that what you do is good. That's what he done. I think the people that Coleman
has been playing with have been changing, not the music. Coleman plays the same music,
the same way. The only reason that he sounds different now is because of the people he
plays with.109

Bern Nix (1947-2016) was right out of the Berklee College of music when his

father arranged an audition with Coleman in 1975. He joined the original Prime Time

with guitarist Charles Ellerbee. Nix had studied traditional jazz guitar, but fully embraced

Harmolodics, moving in with Coleman to focus on the process. He was in Prime Time for

twelve years from 1975-1987. He recorded with Coleman eight times, often doubling the

melody and playing what he saw as improvised counterpoint. Nix still used parts of

traditional harmony though he always looked for new ways to open it up. His sound had

no pedals or distortion, as he became the bridge between jazz guitar from Charlie

Christian to Harmolodics. On Body Meta, the second Prime Time album, Nix plays an

opening introduction and solo that define what Coleman called the clearest tone of a

guitarist for playing Harmolodics, though Nix didn’t completely agree.110 In an interview

at All About Jazz, Nix offered rare insight into Harmolodics from the front line with

Coleman.

109
"JAMES BLOOD ULMER." Miles Davis- The Electric Years- Perfect Sound Forever.
Accessed January 28, 2019. https://www.furious.com/perfect/bloodulmer.html.

110
As told to the author.
76

It's a different approach to playing. I listened to Ulmer to see what was going on
with Harmolodics and Coleman's sound. I needed to listen to him play. Harmolodics is
like playing a standard jazz guitar, but only more contemporary, it's a fresh approach to
playing jazz guitar, just a way of looking at music. It's not a system. It's a way of
handling the difficulty of dealing with melody, rhythm and harmony by way of utilizing
melodic variables. It's exploratory. The harmony doesn't dictate the direction, the melody
does. I see it like counterpoint. I said to Ornette that it seemed like counterpoint. He said,
'Well, it's not exactly counterpoint, it's something else.' You shouldn't have to think in
terms of the traditional role on your instrument. The guitarist can be thinking like a
drummer, or a bassist. You can change at any given minute. It's like an organic kind of
music-making. The whole idea is to keep it changing, trying to avoid making it sound too
formulaic or predictable. Ornette gave us all these notebooks. We had to write out ideas
in the notebooks. I’ve had these things for years and use them for my own composition.

I listened to some of that music in North Africa when Ornette went there.
Sometimes the way the drummers play, something about Prime Time reminds me of the
playing in Joujouka, Morocco. I hear that similarity. Ornette spent some time in North
Africa hanging out with these guys and playing the music. It's almost like what we were
doing is kind of like what they do. There are similarities between how they played and
how Prime Time played. It's like everyone is playing a separate melody or a unison but
everyone's got... everyone's playing, like, an independent lead.111

To me, it’s like Zen. There are no exact answers. It’s all enigmatic and
contradictory. Ornette speaks in puzzles and riddles; you just have to figure it out. It’s a
metaphysical inquiry into the nature of music. But the whole idea is you can start from
whatever your favorite type of music is, and mine is jazz guitar.112

After Nix left Coleman, he pursued his own music and continued to work with

Coleman’s ex-wife Jayne Cortez recording a total of seven times. He found it

increasingly hard to find work though never gave up, recording a trio record, a solo, and

finally forming a dedicated quartet with the author, bassist Francois Grillot, and drummer

111
AAJ. “Bern Nix: A History In Harmolodics.” All About Jazz, 24 Aug. 2009,
www.allaboutjazz.com/bern-nix-a-history-in-harmolodics-bern-nix-by-aaj-staff.php?pg=4.
Accessed 10 Jan. 2019.

112
Kanzler, George. “Guitarist Enjoys Untying Chords.” The Star-Ledger, 5 Sept. 1997, pp.
26–26.
77

Reggie Sylvester in 2010. This group rehearsed weekly and performed more than fifty

times including a concert only two days before Nix’s death. The author spent many hours

on the phone with Nix and was the person who discovered he had died. The Bern Nix

quartet recorded one album titled Negative Capability. Nix would occasionally play

music written by Coleman such as “European Echoes.” His written work was influenced

by Coleman but the major difference, and what made Nix so unique, is that he applied

Harmolodics to a straight-ahead jazz guitar context in a type of coinciding reversal and

evolution. Nix would find chords that were derived from a combination of Harmolodics

and traditional harmony that had never been heard before and haven’t been heard since.

When speaking of Harmolodics, Nix would often joke that he was a member of a twelve-

step program called Harmolodics anonymous, but that unfortunately, there was no known

cure once one had fully engaged the process. Denardo Coleman considered Nix to be a

brother, and Nix was booked to play a Prime Time reunion at Lincoln Center scheduled

just weeks after his death. The author organized a memorial.113

Charles Ellerbee joined Coleman with Nix but was coming from a different

world. He and Nix formed a partnership of very different perspectives. Of Ellerbee, Nix

stated:

113
O'Haire, Robert. "BERN NIX Memorial 7-8-17 Korean Cultural Center, NYC." YouTube.
July 11, 2017. Accessed January 30, 2019. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FD7b8pjaU0M&t=66s.
78

Charlie Ellerbee was more of a rock player. He used a lot of things rock guitarists
use, like the effects and the pedals. He was listening more to rock than he was to jazz.
One thing he told me once he said that the only jazz he's ever been digging was McCoy
Tyner because the music McCoy Tyner played reminded him of acid rock! 114

Observing a Prime Time rehearsal, writer Howard Mandel noted that Coleman

was focused on a point of theory with Ellerbee. Bern Nix was attentive while Ellerbee,

who was at that moment missing a job with the disco band Tramps at a record company

promo party on a boat in the East River, looked bored.115 Ellerbee recorded eight times

with Coleman, and with Nix on every occasion. Robert Palmer reviewed a Prime-Time

performance in 1982.

The band includes two guitarists, Charles Ellerbee and Bern Nix, neither of whom
plays conventional lead or rhythm guitar. Mr. Ellerbee has been in commercial funk
bands and is good at terse scratch-rhythms, but on several tunes from the new album -
''Jump Street,'' ''Love Words'' - he thickens the texture of the music with boiling,
distorted-sounding improvisations that bring Jimi Hendrix to mind. Mr. Nix's guitar is
often voiced with Mr. Coleman's alto saxophone for harmony or unison passages; in the
improvisations, which are dominated by the saxophone, his principal function seems to
be melodic counterpoint.116

114
AAJ. “Bern Nix: A History In Harmolodics.” All About Jazz, 24 Aug. 2009,
www.allaboutjazz.com/bern-nix-a-history-in-harmolodics-bern-nix-by-aaj-staff.php?pg=4.
Accessed 10 Jan. 2019.

115
Mandel, Howard. Miles, Ornette, Cecil: Jazz beyond Jazz. London: Routledge, 2015.

116
Palmer, Robert. "ORNETTE COLEMAN'S PROPHETIC JAZZ." The New York Times.
March 14, 1982. Accessed January 30, 2019. https://www.nytimes.com/1982/03/14/arts/ornette-
coleman-s-prophetic-jazz.html.
79

Ellerbee stayed in the Prime-Time family and in 2017 in a reunion concert, two

years after Coleman’s death, he said it felt like they hadn’t missed a day, stating that the

occasion was not “oldies but goodies”117

Pat Metheny (1954- ) recorded one album with Coleman, Song X in 1985 on

Geffen Records. He claims the unique position of a guitarist who shared an equal amount

of solo space with Coleman much like Don Cherry had on trumpet. Metheny went even

further as a contributor and is co-listed in the album credits on four of the eight pieces as

composer. Charlie Haden had pushed Coleman for years to collaborate with Metheny

who was well-established at the time. He brought Coleman to the Vanguard to hear a trio

he was in with Metheny, introduced them, and Coleman and Metheny found they had

common ground.118 Metheny was not new to Harmolodics, having recorded and toured

with Haden and Dewey Redman, along with Jack DeJohnette on drums on a project titled

80/81 on ECM records during 1980-81.119 In typical Coleman fashion, Metheny and

Coleman spent three weeks playing and rehearsing six to twelve hours a day in

117
"'Free Jazz' Visionary Ornette Coleman Is Ready for Prime Time." NBCNews.com.
Accessed January 30, 2019. https://www.nbcnews.com/news/nbcblk/ornette-coleman-jazz-
visionary-ready-prime-time-n779871.

118
Haden, Charlie, and Josef Woodard. Conversations with Charlie Haden. Silman-James
Press, 2016, 79.

119
Pareles, Jon. "JAZZ'S ODD COUPLE JOIN FORCES TO MAKE SPLENDID MELODY."
The New York Times. April 20, 1986. Accessed February 04, 2019.
https://www.nytimes.com/1986/04/20/arts/jazz-s-odd-couple-join-forces-to-make-splendid-
melody.html.
80

preparation, attempting to invent a new vocabulary. 120 After recording the band on Song

X, Coleman, Metheny, Haden, DeJohnette, and Denardo Coleman played at the Caravan

of Dreams on New Year’s Eve under the name Endangered Species, Coleman wearing a

purple cowboy hat and a blue suit. A tour commenced in the Spring of 1986 consisting of

varying combinations of the group with Denardo playing very strongly as a full member

of the ensemble.121 Looking closely at the album, Metheny, while taking suggestions

from Coleman, added additional chords that he felt we’re substantial enough that he took

credit, notably on “Kathelin Gray.” In a fakebook he published of his own music, on

“Kathelin Gray” Metheny added the notation “Chords by Pat Metheny.” A full analysis

of this piece is included in the thesis. In the liner notes to a 2005 twentieth anniversary

release of the album Metheny wrote:

This release includes two pieces where I contributed some more conventional
blowing changes for us to play on the improvised sections to go with Ornette’s great
melodies, how rare and beautiful to hear Ornette play on structures like that.

As it will be examined, Coleman may have re-recorded Kathelin Gray in 1995

with his own chord structure to reestablish his authorship of this tender ballad-like piece.

Regardless of this, Metheny was inspired by being able to collaborate with Coleman. In

conversation with Haden and Josef Woodward he said:

To me, the most inspiring thing about Ornette is that he’s somebody who’s
dedicated his whole musical life to defining his own language and making up his own

120
"Lyle Mays / Pat Metheny - Interviews With Lyle Mays And Pat Metheny." Discogs.
January 01, 1986. Accessed February 04, 2019. https://www.discogs.com/Lyle-Mays-Pat-Metheny-
Interviews-With-Lyle-Mays-And-Pat-Metheny/release/1545687.

121
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 190.
81

way of hearing. He’s the only musician I can think of who has a complete musical
universe at his fingertips at all times. He made up his own language, his own
everything.122

Song X opens with Haden playing a country-swing vibe that only he could create.

The melody of “Police People” is then played in unison with Coleman and Metheny who

has a processor that makes his sound voice like, and similar to Coleman. DeJohnette and

Denardo on drums both fill up lots of space without getting in each other’s way, while

Haden grounds the entire ensemble. Metheny takes the first solo instantly demonstrating

his ability to construct ideas and swing in his own unique way in a harmolodic

environment. Coleman switches up “Song X” from playing heads with solos to full on

full ensemble improvisation. Denardo’s electronic drum processing adds an additional

unique sound. The music on the record is more swing based than the funkiness happening

in Prime Time. Nix told the author he was taken aback by Coleman’s use of Metheny

since he played in a similar manner and had been with Coleman for ten years when Song

X was made. To make matters worse, Nix found out about the recording not from

Coleman, but from the press. Reviews were positive, mostly focusing on Metheny’s

ability to adapt. The guitar would never again receive such a prominent role in role in

Coleman’s world. James Blood Ulmer had given Coleman a harmolodic environment but

did not solo extensively. Metheny, by way of star power, and having a genuine gift for

122
Haden, Charlie, and Josef Woodard. Conversations with Charlie Haden. Silman-James
Press, 2016.
82

improvising in a communicable way with large audiences, stands unique in Coleman’s

relationship with the guitar, participating more as an equal soloist.

In the fall of 1986 guitarist Chris Rosenberg found a message on his answering

machine asking him if he would be interested in auditioning for Prime Time. At the

audition in Harlem, only Coleman was present. When asked to play anything he wished,

Rosenberg, who studied classical guitar played a movement from the J. S. Bach cello

suite and Coleman improvised over it. This was a moment Coleman recreated with Prime

Time on his 1995 recording Tone Dialing titled “Bach Prelude.” After beating out a few

remaining guitarists, Rosenberg joined Prime Time with his friend Kenny Wessel, whom

he had recommended to Coleman. Rosenberg spoke about rehearsals for Tone Dialing

with Michael Stephens.

Ornette had by this time built his studio on 125th street over the Metro Train
Station, on the sixth floor of the building. For that recording, it took place over a fairly
long period of time, and the recording sessions themselves were really long, like fifteen
hours. There may have been fifteen versions of each song recorded. There were enough
versions of each track to be their own albums. Early on the rehearsals were so long that
you really had to put away a chunk of your life to make that commitment. A rehearsal
was kind of a laboratory for the kind of music he wanted to make.123

Kenny Wessel played guitar with Coleman from 1988-2000. Wessel and

tabla player Badal Roy joined Coleman on the same day and have been close

collaborators ever since. Wessel and Roy opened up a Prime Time concert

123
Stephans, Michael. Experiencing Ornette Coleman. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield, 2017,
88-89.
83

available on YouTube in 1991 in Lugano playing duo.124 Wessel was touring with

Arthur Prysock when he got the call to audition after the recommendation of his

friend Chris Rosenburg. As Wessel explains in the interview later in the thesis, he

was permanently changed from the experience in what he feels was a positive way.

Wessel is very active in 2019 as both a player and educator in New York City.

124
Crownpropeller. “Ornette Coleman Prime Time Lugano 1991 (1/3).” YouTube, YouTube,
11 June 2015, www.youtube.com/watch?v=dHYFIXft0pw. Accessed 10 Feb. 2019.
84

9. Bass

The bass in Coleman’s world was vital and was almost always present

throughout Coleman’s entire career and discography. Jimmy Blanton and Charles

Mingus had taken steps to free the bass from the role of harmonic and rhythmic

support, but as early as 1958 Coleman and Charlie Haden were engaged in a new

level of freedom for the instrument in jazz, in a more participatory and

improvisational role. At least twenty different bass players crossed paths with

Coleman. Charlie Haden and David Izenzon recorded with him more than more

than any others, and from 1967-69 both of them were with him. Like the piano,

every musician playing bass with Coleman looked for their own way inside, and

almost every one that played with Coleman developed a personal approach.

In 1958’s Live At The Hillcrest, Charlie Haden (1937-2014) had already begun

to digest Coleman’s approach and was supporting Coleman’s step outside of form

and traditional chord progressions with Paul Bley also adapting. Haden was

present on the famous Coleman album in 1959, The Shape of Jazz to Come where

Coleman’s concept had taken shape into a new form of music. From the very first

notes of Haden’s bass on Coleman’s standard “Lonely Woman” it’s not a bass being

heard, it’s Haden playing his bass. Who he is and what he’s playing are more

relevant than the responsibility of the bass. Haden still took on the responsibility
85

of the harmonic gap, and even saw himself as taking over the role of the piano.

Haden explained his relationship to Josef Woodward.

I actually am glad, in a way, that we didn’t have a pianist, because it gave


me an opportunity to take that role, and I learned a lot from it. I had to play the
chords for everyone. I thought that way for myself too, because I’m really a
harmony person. I would make sure to lay them down for everyone. I need to hear
the harmony man, If I can’t hear the harmony, it’s just not the same.125

Haden didn’t just lay down the harmony however, he added the element of

swing, rhythmic interaction, and would respond to who was playing in distinct

personal ways. A great example is how Haden handles the transition between

Coleman and Cherry solos on “Congeniality” from The Shape Of Jazz to Come.

Haden supports Cherry in a very different way as Cherry is more inclined to stay in

certain harmonic areas and modulate less. At the core of Haden’s craft is his ability

to listen on an extremely deep level and then play in a way that compliments the

soloist so effectively, almost instantly in a continual state of open renewal. In 2011

Haden reflected on his formative years with Coleman to Don Heckman.

There’s a record we made with Paul Bley called The Fabulous Paul Bley
Quintet at the Hillcrest. And we’re playing tunes like “Klactoveedsedstene,” and all
those songs with chord changes. And Ornette is playing all the changes. You can
hear them. And, man, he used to play chord changes with us all the time. We did it
all by ear. At first when we were playing and improvising, we kind of followed the
pattern of the song, sometimes. Then, when we got to New York, Ornette wasn’t
playing on the song patterns, like the bridge and the interlude and stuff like that.
He would just play. And that’s when I started just following him and playing the

125
Haden, Woodard. Conversations with Charlie Haden, 19.
86

chord changes that he was playing on-the-spot new chord structures made up
according to how he felt at any given moment. And Cherry was kind of playing like
that, too, so Billy and I kind of followed it. The truth is that when we had first met,
we were kind of all hearing that way already. We just happened to be at the right
place at the right time, all together, to make this thing happen. And it just kept
getting better and better.126

The contradiction remains in that Coleman moved further and further away

playing changes in a conventional way that can be followed. Chords are easier to

follow in Coleman’s compositions. In improvisations he might play three chords in

one bar that don’t voice-lead anywhere. Haden’s gift was being able to follow

Coleman that closely and play in way that made it work. He was the anchor, the

tether, and that line that astronauts hold onto when they spacewalk so that they

don’t drift off into outer space. The primary source Haden and Izenzon used was

the melody. As Stephen Rush theorized, the bass line was a result of the melody,

and the melody was source code for all musical events, harmonic or contrapuntal.

Many composition teachers believe the harmony should be written first when

composing. Coleman wrote the melody first. He practiced motivic generation with

no regard to tonal hierarchy, and Haden was able to join him on the never-ending

adventure.127

126
Heckman, Don. "Charlie Haden: Everything Man." JazzTimes. Accessed January 14, 2019.
https://jazztimes.com/features/charlie-haden-everything-man/.

127
Rush, Stephen. Free Jazz, Harmolodics, and Ornette Coleman. New York, NY: Routledge,
2017.
87

Haden was with Coleman on the next three classic albums on Atlantic

before being derailed by a heroin addiction. He returned in 1966 to join Coleman

on Blue Note with young Denardo, after a six-year hiatus. Coleman than brought

Haden into his trio with Izenzon and Moffett through 1967, with Blackwell

replacing Moffett in 1968. Haden recorded with Coleman seven more times before

a five-year break in 1971. In 1977 they collaborated as a duo to incredible effect as

previously discussed on Soap Suds and on “The Golden Number” in the most

crystal-clear demonstration of their musical rapport. Eight years later Haden

joined Coleman with Pat Metheny to great effect on Song X. See the chapter on

“Kathelin Gray” for more analysis. The opening of “Police People” from the album

features Haden’s unique country blues rhythmic feel and sound. Haden was on a

reunion of The Shape Of Jazz To Come quartet on the album In All Languages in

1987 and was on two more live recordings with the same group again in 1987, and

then recorded with Coleman for the last time in 1990. Why Haden didn’t record

with Coleman during the last fifteen years of Coleman’s life remains unclear,

perhaps they had said everything that needed to be said by this point. Haden owns

a unique place in the history of the bass as a master of the instrument and as a key

member of Coleman’s inner circle. The musical relationship they shared, based on

intuition and trust, remains the benchmark example of Harmolodics, and of the
88

role the bass plays within. They still played together, as evidenced on YouTube at

the North Sea Jazz Festival in 2010 on “Turnaround.”128

Before we reach David Izenzon it’s important to examine the bass players

that preceded him. Don Payne (1933-2017) played with Coleman in Los Angeles and

was a supporter and advocate. Payne got Downbeat to listen to a test pressing of

Something Else!!!! He also got the Modern Jazz Quartet to listen to Coleman, two

important connections. On his one early recording with Coleman, Payne played

straight changes, and participated in a lot of preparation and rehearsal for the

date. On his solo on “The Blessing” the changes are very clear. Red Mitchell (1927-

1992) was an established and respected bop bassist in Los Angeles. Mitchell was a

reference to Lester Koenig at Contemporary to consider Coleman as a composer.

He was bassist on three pieces on Coleman’s second Contemporary album

Tomorrow Is The Question! He attempted to adapt to Coleman notably on

“Lorraine” though he sounds tentative trying to hold on to the melody and changes

during improvisations. On Coleman’s classic blues “Turnaround” Mitchell is the

first soloist. In a solo lasting until 3:43 he effectively uses space though continues

playing straight time, opening considerably midway through the solo. On

“Endless” Mitchell plays it straight though with a slightly elastic, rubbery feel.

128
Videoservices, Gilaworks Internet- &. "Ornette Coleman Quartet - North Sea Jazz 2010
(part 4-5)." YouTube. July 05, 2011. Accessed January 18, 2019.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zSVMG0Y-Dvs.
89

Coleman and Cherry felt he wasn’t working, and they drove to San Francisco to

persuade Percy Heath (1923-2005) to finish the date. The group does sound more

relaxed with Heath on the final six tracks. Heath is more agreeable to the concept,

less fearful, and trusted Coleman and Cherry more than the structure. Coleman is

breaking free on “Mind and Time.” Cherry was also recording with a Pakistani

pocket trumpet for the first time. Heath was thirty-six to Coleman’s twenty-nine

and established with the Modern Jazz Quartet. His support was both musical and

personal.129

Scott LaFaro (1936-1961) replaced Haden in Coleman’s working quartet on

Haden’s recommendation in January 1961 while Haden left to confront his

addiction. LaFaro recorded with Coleman three times before his tragic death in

July of the same year in a car accident at only twenty-five years old. LaFaro had

also been Haden’s roommate in Los Angeles. On December 20th, 1960, Lafaro was

present with both his boss Bill Evans and Coleman under the baton of Gunther

Schuller recording “Variants on a theme by Thelonious Monk.” The very next day

LaFaro and Haden played together on Coleman’s seminal double quartet Free Jazz

on December 21st of December of 1960, each finding their own space and having

solo features while the other bassist provided support along with drummers Billy

Higgins and Ed Blackwell. The bass solos are separated by a brief ensemble

129
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 65-66.
90

moment. LaFaro is somewhat of a mythical figure from playing a central role in Bill

Evans trio starting in 1959 and his short tenure with Coleman. Coleman said, “He

felt superior not only to Negroes, but to whites as well.” LaFaro would complain to

Haden that he would never be good enough.130 He was a brilliant technician who

played more ornamental than integral, freeing Coleman to work more with Ed

Blackwell on drums to great effect on the album Ornette! recorded in January 1961.

LaFaro has an incredible solo ending “WRU” where he sounds more influenced by

Coleman’s horn playing than any other bassist. The solo sounds reactionary to the

environment, a withheld amount of tension being released. LaFaro had the rare

distinction of recording a piece named for him by Coleman titled “The Alchemy of

Scott LaFaro,” that was released in 1970 by Atlantic from unreleased sessions

without Coleman’s input or authorization on an album they titled The Art Of The

Improvisors. The piece is extremely fast, and Coleman is on fire. Ironically LaFaro

does not solo, though he maintains a burning 4/4 improvised line throughout. On

“C & D” LaFaro opens with an arco solo displaying a classical sensibility, though

not the unabashed virtuosity that would later arrive from Izenzon. His solo

contains a vocal and exploratory nature and seems to short. He died in July of 1961,

though Coleman had replaced him by March with Jimmy Garrison to record

Ornette on Tenor.

130
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 97.
91

Jimmy Garrison (1934-1976), recorded three albums with Coleman, before

and after his trio with Izenzon and Moffett. He also appears on one unreleased

piece from Ornette on Tenor that was released on The Art of the Improvisors titled

“Harlem’s Manhattan.” Garrison’s sound and musical personality that people

associate from his work with John Coltrane were already present on Ornette on

Tenor. He worked with drummer Ed Blackwell’s aggressive interaction without any

issues and created a space of support, that also contained great group interaction.

He did, however, have a personal struggle with Coleman’s ideas.

With Ornette I learned how to resolve notes instead of chords. Ornette


writes phrases the way he feels them; If it comes out 3 and a half bars then that’s it.
His playing sometimes leaves you hanging the same way, he leaves you wanting
more, leaves you thinking ‘Is there more to come?’ But it just means it’s the end of
the phrase and he’s moved on…. He said, ‘Well, James, just play, and listen, of
course, and if there’s anything you want to do, just ask. ‘You can only go so far in
his music without knowing about it, and one night I just exploded.131

Garrison did just that at the Five Spot, stopping the band and telling them

they were all crazy in front of a packed house. Garrison left to join John Coltrane

with Coleman’s blessing and respect of his musical beliefs 132 Garrison returned to

record twice with Coleman for Blue Note in April and May of 1968 after Coltrane’s

tragic passing in July of 1967. He was joined by his partner with Coltrane, Elvin

Jones on drums, and tenor saxophonist Dewey Redman from Fort Worth. These

131
Heckman, Don. "Jimmy Garrison." Downbeat, March 9, 1967.

132
Spellman, Four Lives in the Bebop Business, 145.
92

two records, New York is Now, and Love Call are extraordinary in witnessing the

power of drummer Elvin Jones, to be discussed in the following chapter. Critics

were at a loss in reviewing these albums feeling Garrison was somehow out of

place. Garrison simply plays himself on these sessions picking up where he left off

and as he continued to find his own unique way to relate to the music. Group

interaction was at a high level. Garrison and Jones switch up everything as much as

Izenzon and Moffett did in their own way, building on their shared experience

with Coltrane. Criticism of Garrison not following Coleman calls into question

Coleman’s own penchant to free the bass from role-playing. Garrison chose to

follow Coleman more rhythmically than harmonically, perhaps still having the

issue of not knowing exactly what harmony Coleman was playing. When he does

walk in time it does feel almost like a release. When Garrison begins playing

during Coleman improvisations in his own style, such as on “Airborne” from Love

Call, or on “The Garden of Souls” from New York is Now! he is not only effective,

but his honesty and strength of musical personality are tenets from the highest

levels of the book of Harmolodics.

David Izenzon (1932-1979) was one of Coleman’s greatest bass players,

recording fourteen albums with him, and a member of the trio that some

musicians today consider Coleman’s greatest band. Izenzon played with the NBC

orchestra and had classical technique and was a master of the bow. In a 1966

documentary from the filming of the soundtrack to Who’s Crazy? Izenzon said he

refused to sign a contract with NBC because that would that would in effect turn
93

him into a slave, as conductors force allegiance to them before the music. With

Coleman, the music came first. Inside the trio. Izenzon spoke of the audience

being first, but that they did have a devilish thing happening inside the group to

one up each other through improvisation. Izenzon also spoke of staying inside the

group for love of Coleman and Moffett though he had dreams of disappearing from

the scene entirely. The documentary also has a clip of Coleman playing piano

almost like Cecil Taylor in order to tune his violin.133 Through 1965 Izenzon played

on important Coleman albums. Live at Town Hall, The Croydon concert, The

Chappaqua Suite, and Who’s Crazy? In 1965 Coleman’s The Ornette Coleman Trio

at the Golden Circle in Stockholm contained examples of some of Izenzon’s best

work with Coleman. Thom Jurek noted that no matter Coleman went, Izenzon was

there at exactly the same time with an uncanny sense of counterpoint, and he

often changed the harmonic mode by force, with either stunning arco or pizzicato

work.134 Izenzon plays an incredible arco solo on Coleman’s ballad “Dawn”

containing deep emotional expression as he also conveyed at Town Hall on

Coleman’s “Sadness.” Coleman next had both Izenzon and Haden together on five

live recordings through 1968. In February of 1968 two sets of Coleman with them

133
NoteVerticali, Redazione. "Ornette Coleman Trio Performing The Soundtrack 1966 DVD
Quality." YouTube. June 16, 2015. Accessed January 14, 2019.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GzoboHzKOGU.

134
Jurek, Thom. "At the "Golden Circle" Stockholm, Vol. 1 - Ornette Coleman Trio, Ornette
Coleman | Songs, Reviews, Credits." AllMusic. Accessed January 14, 2019.
https://www.allmusic.com/album/at-the-golden-circle-stockholm-vol-1-mw0000216128.
94

and Ed Blackwell were recorded in Italy that are available on a CD release titled

Ornette Coleman Quartet The Love Revolution. On the first CD on “Lonely

Woman,” it’s clear that Haden is playing pizzicato, and Izenzon arco, their two

specialties in collaboration. This effect works especially well on Coleman’s ballad

that he performs on trumpet titled “Forgotten Children” where Izenzon doubles

the melody on arco while Haden strums. Haden then continues in support of an

Izenzon arco solo.

The next bassist to work with Coleman was Norris “Sirone” Jones (1940-

2009). YouTube has one clip of this incredible band with Billy Higgins and James

“Blood” Ulmer playing incredible Harmolodic guitar on Coleman’s piece “Theme

From A Symphony”. Sirone’s strong sound and personality are not easily heard, but

his presence in the group is felt. Close-ups show both his eyes rolling to the back

of his head in total surrender to the music. Sirone found the perfect balance of

suggested role-playing by improvising with his own sound and style in this

somewhat lost Coleman band.135

Coleman heard of a nineteen-year-old electric bassist from Philadelphia

named Rudy McDaniel from Miles Davis Guitarist Reggie Lucas and Davis

percussionist James Mtume. In 1975 he invited him to come rehearse the early

concept for Coleman’s famous electric band Prime Time. After a month of

135
P3ximus. “Ornette Coleman - Rome, Music Inn 1975.” YouTube, YouTube, 24 Nov. 2013,
www.youtube.com/watch?v=FlY8puv3-tw.
95

rehearsing, McDaniel, now named Jamaaladeen Tacuma went to France with

Coleman and ended up rehearsing for four months. Tacuma recorded on both

Dancing In Your Head and Body Meta in 1975. As soon as “Theme From A

Symphony” begins on “Dancing In Your Head” Tacuma, on electric bass, plays high

uneven lines that converse with Coleman providing a melodic counterpoint that

sounds brand new and unique in Coleman’s world. Tacuma at times plays the

melody and modulates through several keys on his own. He also contributed to a

seventies sound. In December 1978 he recorded with Coleman on an album by

Guitarist James “Blood” Ulmer. In 1979 Tacuma recorded with Coleman on Of

Human Feelings. Coleman had two guitarists and two drummers with Tacuma in

the center almost playing like a third guitar, very prominent in the mix. With the

different environment and electric bass Tacuma had by this point redefined the

bass in Coleman’s music. He improvised constantly in a very free manner,

providing just enough bass conceptually, though he is often freer than Coleman

himself, swirling around, stalking him. Tacuma next recorded with Coleman in

1985 on a live concert titled Opening The Caravan Of Dreams. Here Coleman added

second bassist Al MacDowell, who provided a counterweight of sorts to Tacuma

while making Coleman’s music denser and more complicated. MacDowell slaps

the bass more and with less room to operate, Tacuma slowed down somewhat as

Prime Time swelled to a living orchestral mass of four electric lines intertwining

while Coleman floated on top. On “Compute” Coleman and Tacuma have an


96

extreme duet with Coleman sawing away at the violin. In Downbeat, Tacuma

explained his take on two bassists.

That was Ornette’s plan, to make me freer. He could see that he created a
monster and that I’m not going to be satisfied unless he opened other doors for
me. So, the other bassist was added. Ornette paved a new way for me to play and
not get in his way or anyone’s way, and still express what I wanted to communicate
and still be part of the organization. 136

Tacuma’s next recording with Coleman came in 1978 titled In all Languages,

a double LP with the original quartet and Prime Time on separate LP’s. “Story

Tellers” opens with a Tacuma and MacDowell duet improvising on the melody.

MacDowell plays in a more ensemble fashion keeping the group together while

Tacuma improvises. Fast forward to 2010 and Tacuma produced a tribute album

with Coleman present titled For the Love of Ornette. Tacuma picked up where he

left off with Coleman playing free, but with more extreme melodicism. The album

opens with Coleman instructing the band saying “Fellas, forget the notes and get

to the idea.” “Movement one” begins with a touching duet with Tacuma and

Coleman, one that sounds almost like a private session from Coleman’s music

room in his Chelsea loft. In notes to the album, Tacuma revealed that at one point

in his life, a spiritual path he was on caused him to consider stopping playing

music. Coleman traveled to Philadelphia and met with Tacuma’s mother, pleading

136
Tinder, Cliff. “Electric Bass in the Harmolodic Pocket.” Downbeat, Apr. 1982, pp. 19–71.
97

with her to urge him to rejoin music. Tacuma did, and on the album, he expresses

gratitude and Love for Coleman.137

In 1987 Coleman recorded Virgin Beauty with MacDowell and Chris Walker

on bass. Walker was more conservative, and MacDowell slapped more aggressively

on the date, filling some of the space previously held by Tacuma. MacDowell had

more history with Coleman, first meeting him at only seventeen years old and

appearing with him in 1976 at a live concert at Lincoln Centers Avery Fisher

Hall.138 “Honeymooners” features both bass players, Walker having a very fluid

style and great technique. Both play a guitar-based style influenced from Jaco

Pastorious and Stanley Clarke. MacDowell performed live with Coleman and

recorded with him on Tone Dialing in 1995, a Prime Time album influenced by Hip

Hop and Funk. Brad Jones also played bass on the album, his only documented

work with Coleman. He played acoustic bass within all the electronics and opens

“When Will I See You Again” with solo bass, then walking in time when the

melody starts in a kind of quartet-Prime Time reverse methodology. The piece

fades out unexpectedly halfway through. MacDowell played with Coleman on his

last record, live in Genoa in 2010 on electric bass in tandem with Tony Falanga on

acoustic bass. That same year they both played with Coleman at the North Sea

137
“For The Love of Ornette.” Atom, Jamaaladeenmusic.com/album/36564/for-the-love-of-
ornette.

138
"Al MacDowell." The City Boys Allstars. October 14, 2015. Accessed January 18, 2019.
http://www.thecityboysallstars.com/the-musicians/al-macdowell/.
98

Festival with MacDowell representing Prime Time in a continued type of acoustic

electric juxtaposition. MacDowell plays aggressive non-jazz rhythms, doubling the

melody with Coleman and doesn’t hold back.139

Barre Phillips (1934- ) crossed plays with Coleman as early as 1958 in

Sauslito, California and said Coleman was already trying to impart the ideas of

Harmolodics to other musicians, many of who were confused by it. In 1962

Coleman sat in with Phillips but then asked him why he was still playing “school

music,” which led Phillips to break up the group and move to New York City. In

1975 Phillips got the call to sub for Haden at the Bologna jazz festival in Italy and

held his own. In 1991 Phillips was asked by Coleman to record with him on the

Naked Lunch movie soundtrack with Howard Shore. Phillips recalled that at one-

point Coleman was asked to re-record a solo over the orchestra by Howard Shore

because he was playing sharp. Coleman then played completely in the tempered

scale, and then said to Shore: "You might like that, but that's not me, and it's not

interesting."140 The seven trio selections that Coleman composed for Phillips and

Denardo were very effective. Phillips had an extremely personal sound and

personal rhythm. His forward momentum, slightly different from both Ornette

139
Videoservices, Gilaworks Internet- &. "Ornette Coleman Quartet - North Sea Jazz 2010
(part 3-5)." YouTube. July 05, 2011. Accessed January 18, 2019.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kaQHB3i3RzU.

140
Phillips, Barre. "Ornette Coleman 1930–2015: Barre Phillips - The Wire." The Wire
Magazine - Adventures In Modern Music. Accessed January 20, 2019.
https://www.thewire.co.uk/in-writing/essays/ornette-coleman-1930-2015_barre-phillips.
99

and Denardo, created an interesting effect. “Intersong” is a tender ballad that is

almost a duo with Coleman and Phillips. “Writeman” opens with aggressive

bowing from Phillips who switches to pizzicato for extremely fast improvisation.

Phillips interacts with both Coleman’s simultaneously and sometimes modulates

before Coleman.

I first met Charnett Moffett (1967- ) at Coleman’s Chelsea loft in 2005.

Besides the musical exchange and my witnessing that Moffett had completely

absorbed Coleman’s process, I was struck by Coleman’s looking at him, then

reaching out to grab him and hug him. Moffett is the son of Charles Moffett from

Coleman’s great trio during the sixties. Charnett possesses an incredible virtuosic

technique. He recorded two albums in 1996 in Harlem with Coleman, the fore

mentioned Three Women and Hidden Man with pianist Geri Allen and Denardo.

When asked about the role of the bass in Coleman’s world Moffett said:

I was rehearsing with Ornette once and I asked him, ‘What’s the bass part?’
and he said, ‘You’re already playing the bass; now play the idea.’ When you
improvise, it’s all about the idea. And you’re always discovering new ways to
approach that idea.141

On Hidden Man and Three Women, Moffett begins “What reason” playing

the melody on solo bass altering his sound on each take. Moffett is like Tacuma in

141 Randall, Mac. "Charnett Moffett - On Loss, Love & Vibrational Healing." JazzTimes.
Accessed January 20, 2019. https://jazztimes.com/departments/overdue-ovation/charnett-moffett-
overdue-ovation/.
100

his ability to play just enough in a supporting role but play mostly free, with an

endless string of ideas in conversation with Coleman, Allen, and Denardo all at the

same time. The differences being the acoustic bass, acoustic bass technique, and

the more jazz-based environment. Moffett doesn’t provide a walking bass line for a

sustained period, preferring to play ideas in reaction to the music. On “European

Echoes” from Three Women, Moffett’s plays incredible pizzicato improvisation

while Allen and Ornette play the melody in a stunning display of speed and

dexterity.

Greg Cohen (1953- ), known for his work with John Zorn and Woody Allen,

handled the pizzicato bass roll on Coleman’s Pulitzer Prize winning release Sound

Grammar in 2005. Cohen’s strategy was to construct a fast-up-tempo bass line

throughout the record while Tony Falanga was free to soar with improvisations on

his bow. The defined territorial strategy and boundaries worked. In 2006 at

Carnegie hall, Coleman attempted adding Al MacDowell on electric as a third

bassist with mixed results.142 Cohen and Falanga are featured together on Sound

Grammar on a ballad titled “Once Only” that works extraordinarily well. Cohen

left Coleman to focus on Zorn’s Masada and was the person that introduced

142
Ratliff, Ben. “A Three-Bass Happening at Carnegie Hall.” The New York Times, 19 June
2006, www.nytimes.com/2006/06/19/arts/music/19orne.html. Accessed 20 Jan. 2019.
101

photographer John Rogers to Coleman, which led to my meeting him. Falanga

auditioned for Coleman in 2002.

Ornette started auditioning classical bassists. As he said at the time, ‘I don’t


want anyone with a jazz influence—I want a new set of ideas.’ He happened to
audition my friend John Feeney, the Principal Bassist for the Orchestra of St.
Luke’s. John played a solo bass piece at his audition, and Ornette was very
impressed. Then Ornette asked him to play free on the spot—any tempo, any key,
whatever he wanted. But Feeney wasn’t comfortable doing that; he didn’t have a
jazz background, and he didn’t really know who Ornette was. John just couldn’t
hang with the free thing, but he told Ornette, ‘I know somebody who would be
perfect for this.’” I came in the next day and nailed the audition. “Ornette said,
‘Just play,’ and I was like, ‘Yeah, let’s go!’ And he dug that. He asked me to join the
band, and from there it was an ongoing process of studying his concept and
working it out on the bandstand.143

Coleman’s last official recording in 2010, a live concert in Genoa Italy had

Falanga and MacDowell both playing bass. Like he did with Cohen, Falanga

claimed the bow territory while MacDowell on electric bass played chords and

melodies like he did with Prime Time. Falanga spoke about his musical

relationship with MacDowell.

We’re not looking to out-do each other, we’re looking to complement each
other to make the music stronger. Ornette wants you to come up with new stuff all
the time, and he wants it to happen on the bandstand, not in the practice room.
That’s where the ideas have to emerge—from the tune, from the audience, from
us. And he wants each of your spontaneous ideas to trigger another new idea. If
you play something that really works and you take that same idea to a concert the
next day, Ornette will do everything he can to destroy it. It may have happened so
well the night before—the audience is going nuts and everything—but he won’t

143
Milkowski, Bill. "Tony Falanga & Al MacDowell, Ornette Coleman's Two-Bass Tandem."
BassPlayer.com. December 01, 2010. Accessed January 20, 2019.
https://www.bassplayer.com/artists/tony-falanga-amp-al-macdowell-ornette-colemans-two-bass-
andem.
102

want to repeat that idea. He’ll say, ‘I was hoping that you guys would find
something better … because it exists.’ That’s what’s so special about him. He wants
to keep it fresh, happening, and in-the-moment all of the time. In Ornette’s band,
you have to keep making it better—no ifs, ands, or buts.144

In seeking out any other bassists to play with Coleman, Art Davis played

with Coleman in a second attempt at a double quartet that was never recorded.

Buster Williams subbed for Charlie Haden on occasion.145 Christian McBride

played with Coleman when he sat in with Sonny Rollins at the Beacon theatre in

September 2010.146 I have also witnessed bassist Hilliard Greene play with Coleman

at his Chelsea loft. Greene went to study with Coleman on five occasions.147 There

are undoubtedly others that crossed path with Coleman, including Shayna

Dulberger, again initiated by John Rogers.148 The bass held a unique place in

Coleman’s music. With the eventual absence of the piano in most situations, the

bass was the only connection to Coleman’s approach to using harmony with

another musician. Every person that took the space had to work with Coleman to

144
Ibid.

145
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 164.

146
Carroll, Christopher. "The Singular Sound of Sonny Rollins." The New York Review of
Books. Accessed January 20, 2019. https://www.nybooks.com/daily/2012/08/10/sonny-rollins-
singular-sound/.

147
As told to the author.

148
Rogers, John. “My Friend, Ornette Coleman.” NPR, NPR, 15 June 2015,
www.npr.org/sections/ablogsupreme/2015/06/15/414007418/my-friend-ornette-coleman. Accessed
21 Jan. 2019.
103

find out how they could be themselves in Coleman’s world. While Haden will

always be known for a profound connection, David Izenzon, Sirone, Jamaaladeen

Tacuma, Al MacDowell, Barre Phillips, Charnett Moffett, and Tony Falanga all

shared a special musical and human exchange with Ornette Coleman.


104

10. Drums

Having examined Coleman’s bass players, we have already begun to

examine the drummers he played with as the bass and drums are so bonded. The

striking difference is that there are far fewer musicians that held down this unique

chair, with four specific drummers that are on the majority of Coleman’s

discography. Billy Higgins, Ed Blackwell, Charles Moffett, and Denardo Coleman

adapted their own styles to embrace Coleman’s concept more than any others.

Billy Higgins (1936-2001) was the first drummer to record with Coleman,

and was a member of what people call the classic Coleman quartet with Don

Cherry and Charlie Haden. Higgins is on thirteen Coleman recordings with

Coleman, the majority with Charlie Haden on bass. Los Angeles was pivotal in the

development of Coleman’s long-term musical relationships, and that’s where he

met Higgins. Like Haden and Cherry, Higgins was into bebop, but willing to

explore the new compositions and idea of improvisation presented by Coleman, six

years his senior. Higgins plays the straight man on Coleman’s first recording

Something Else!! that was very thoroughly rehearsed by Coleman. His melodic

ensemble playing on “The Blessing” and hitting on an arranged 4th beat on the

super-fast “Chippie,” stand out. Higgins was playing the role and swinging, though
105

Coleman would eventually attempt to get drummers to abandon form and role-

playing. His eventual goal for them became to “just be the drums.”149 On

Coleman’s third record on Atlantic, The Shape Of Jazz To Come, Higgins sound is

intrinsic to the music’s success, notably on the classic “Lonely Woman.” On the

famous Coleman piece, Higgins plays a super-imposed double time that coincides

with Haden playing a far slower melodic motif. The juxtaposition reveals a new

way for the rhythm section to play. On “Congeniality” Higgins still plays melodic

ensemble hits and swings when Haden walks, but the horn and bass are up front,

both musically and dynamically. In 1960, while playing at the Five Spot, Higgins

had his cabaret card revoked leading to a seven-year period playing without

Coleman.150 Higgins played a lot of hard bop during this period, leading to the call

from Jackie McLean and reunion with Coleman on Old and New Gospel in 1967. In

an environment where Mclean was stepping out and Coleman was stepping in,

Higgins became the glue, working with bassist Scott Holt to hold it all together.

Higgins old gospel beat on “Old Gospel” is infectious. As he did with the bass,

Coleman used two drummers combining Higgins with Ed Blackwell both live and

in the studio on the records Free Jazz, Broken Shadows, and Science Fiction.

Higgins always maintained the classic sound from “The Shape Of Jazz To Come”

on future recordings with Coleman, with a fast light touch on the cymbals still

149
As told to the author.

150
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 81.
106

allowing the bass and horns to play up front on In All Languages in 1987. On classic

quartet reunion concerts in 1987 and 1990 Higgins sounds louder, possibly a result

of the recording and the live situations. Higgins told Val Wilmer "You're not

supposed to rape the drums; you make love to them as far as I'm concerned."151

Higgins will forever hold a place in Coleman’s music. As a master of hard bop as

well, he appears on more than seven-hundred recordings!

Ed Blackwell (1929-1992) played on nineteen recordings with Coleman, and

they shared a deep history. They met in 1949 in New Orleans.

When I heard Ornette for the first time, I felt the happiness he generates.
That was one of the main things I loved about his playing. It was so free, although
he had so many terrible experiences behind him because of the way he played. I
couldn’t understand why people couldn’t hear it.152

In 1953 when Coleman tried Los Angeles for a second time, he roomed with

Blackwell in Watts when they were both extremely broke. Ellis Marsalis mentioned

a moment when Blackwell turned a song around on a thirty-two-bar structure,

which stopped Coleman from finishing his phrase. Coleman stopped the group

and suggested that his phrase was more important than the form- a key

harmolodic and Coleman moment.153 Marsalis believed that the Blackwell-

151
Fordham, John. "Obituary: Billy Higgins." The Guardian. May 07, 2001.Accessed
January21, 2019.www.theguardian.com/news/2001/may/07/guardianobituaries.johnfordham.

152
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 38.

153
Wilmer, As Serious as Your Life: John Coltrane and beyond, 60.
107

Coleman connection was so strong that no other rhythm section players were

necessary when they played together.

The things Blackwell and Ornette did together accentuate a certain kind of
rhythmic importance and rhythmic emphasis that was in Ornette’s music. Their
teaming was sufficient without other rhythm section players. The harmony that
comes from the piano, bass, or guitar, was not necessary154

Blackwell believed Coleman was trying to escape four-beat measures and

that his own experiments in time-keeping helped them both break free.155 His

debut recording with Coleman came in 1960 replacing Higgins on This Is Our

Music. Blackwell interacts with the group in a much different way, breaking rolls,

leaving phrases unresolved, and most noticeably, interacting with Coleman by

shadowing almost every note he plays, sometimes even finishing his phrase for

him. Blackwell’s playing completely changes the dynamics of Coleman’s music in

this way, moving the drums from role-playing to active participation in the

improvisation, a true Coleman innovation. Coleman’s album Ornette! on Atlantic

in 1961 contains a piece titled “T & T” where a melody is only used to introduce a

long Blackwell solo, in a complete feature for the drums. On “Proof Readers”

Blackwell almost replaces the bass played by Scott Lafaro as the instrument

primarily interacting with Coleman, forcing Lafaro into role playing. Blackwell was

very strong throughout this album, one of the highlights of his playing career with

154
Ibid. 62.

155
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 46-47.
108

Coleman. In 1961 Blackwell played on the fore-mentioned Ornette on Tenor and

was more comfortable and aggressive in the environment, than bassist Jimmy

Garrison. Besides the joint work with Higgins, Blackwell continued to work with

Coleman into the early 1970’s. He fought with kidney problems for most of his life

and died in 1992. Coleman’s Free Jazz on Atlantic with Higgins in the left channel

and Blackwell on the right channel is the ultimate example of their contrasting

styles in Coleman’s world. Higgins light and fast cymbals alongside Blackwell’s

popping and rolling toms and snare have been a future clinic for drummers on

how to work together ever since.

Incredibly, a surfaced bootleg cassette recording of a Coleman rehearsal of

the band from the late sixties with both Haden and Izenzon on bass, contains

several directives from Coleman to Blackwell. Even after years of collaboration,

Coleman continues to try and break Blackwell free from role-playing. The

following are from Coleman to Blackwell.

We’re conditioned to sound like we’re going somewhere rather than being
where we are.

You played that idea like you had to play another idea behind it.

Whatever you play, see if you get a feeling that the bass or saxophone cause
you to take an idea to a certain place rhythmically to you thinking that you have to
complete it.

You’re doing what I told you to avoid doing.

Blackwell: Play without thinking I have to complete it?


109

Coleman asks the bass players to not play 2 5 1 progressions and asks all of

them not to be the background, calling them to reach for stone presence, even if

they feel he’s crazy.156

Charles Moffett (1929-1997) went back the furthest with Coleman, all the

way back to High School in Fort Worth. Moffett also played trumpet and played in

a band with Coleman and Prince Lasha in high school called The Jam Jivers.

Coleman was his best man and played at his wedding in 1953. In 1961 he moved to

New York City to work with Coleman’s new band with Jimmy Garrison and Bobby

Bradford. Coleman had tried Pete LaRoca and Roy Haynes before settling on

Moffett, and after several weeks of rehearsal they played the Five Spot.157 Garrison

was replaced by Izenzon and Bradford left in frustration because Coleman would

work sporadically and turn down jobs unless the money was correct, leading to the

Ornette Coleman Trio. Their first big concert was the famous self-produced Town

Hall, released on ESP in 1962. Moffett’s natural relationship to music was rooted

more in swing. He and Izenzon would set up transitions with or without Coleman,

and his drive brought Coleman slightly into more grounded improvisation on alto

saxophone. At Town Hall they were starting to develop their group sound and

relationship, with Izenzon’s bow deep in the mix. After Coleman’s sabbatical, he

156
Music, We Should Share. "Ornette Coleman Rehearsal." YouTube. June 11, 2018. Accessed
January 21, 2019. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=39CMByFGkas&t=9s.

157
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 101.
110

reformed the trio to be featured on The Chappaqua Suite in 1965. For some

listeners, Coleman has never had as much swing in his music as on this recording,

reacting to Moffett’s driving momentum. Moffett traveled to Europe for the

Croydon concert, live recordings at the Tivoli and in Paris before working on

another soundtrack with Coleman titled Who’s Crazy? There’s a telling moment in

a documentary of the making of Who’s crazy? when Moffett becomes angry with

the producer and Coleman gets him to relax.158 The famous Golden Circle concert

in Sweden was next. Along the way Moffett and Izenzon took stronger positions

within the trio moving far from role playing, but still swinging, and Izenzon

sometimes improvising aggressively. Eventually in 1967 Haden joined. Coleman

then added Blackwell. With the drums covered, Moffett returned to trumpet and

added vibraphone. Moffett was fired without explanation, though he felt it might

be due to so much doubling, and not playing the drums. He returned to public

school teaching and still played music.159 He recorded with Coleman nine times.

He also had five children that became musicians, including Charnett on bass, and

Cody on drums whom the author played with at jam sessions that Moffett ran at

the Blue Note in New York City in the early 90’s. Moffett had me improvise with

158
NoteVerticali, Redazione. "Ornette Coleman Trio Performing The Soundtrack 1966 DVD
Quality." YouTube. June 16, 2015. Accessed January 22, 2019.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GzoboHzKOGU&t=858s.

159
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 125-126.
111

only him on drums playing very aggressively and explained that when it’s just

drums and a horn, that’s when you go for it.

Denardo Coleman (1956- ) ties Ed Blackwell, recording with Coleman

nineteen times. Ornette’s decision to record with Denardo on The Empty Foxhole

at ten years old remains controversial. My full interview with him is included in

the thesis. Ornette doubled down on his own philosophy when he chose to record

with his ten-year-old son. He liked that Denardo was free of trying to please any

critics and was too young to have any political agenda. Charlie Haden played bass

and took more control over the tempo. Critic Pete Welding felt that Denardo’s

playing worked well, and he was responsive to his father’s playing. Freddie

Hubbard said the music sounded like a little kid fooling around.160 Close listening

shows that Denardo listened to and worked with his father quite well, and he

contributes to the conversation musically as an important part of the group. He’s

not role-playing, or imitating. The blueprint of his future style was already present.

His semi-broken march on the title tune contributes to the mood and the visual.

Throughout the recording, while it’s clear that the music was rehearsed, he made

his own musical decisions. As he grew older Denardo strengthened his concept,

recording on Ornette at 12 in 1968, and Crisis in 1969. A ten-year span then took

place during which he took over more managerial tasks before he returned on Of

Human Feelings in 1979 making him the only drummer to play in both Coleman’s

160
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 121.
112

acoustic and electric music. Denardo’s concept works especially well in the Prime

Time environment. In 1985 Coleman’s string quartet with Denardo titled Prime

Design / Time Design stands out. He plays very aggressively almost continually,

making the piece sound like no other string quartet before or since. His thick and

multi-textured playing suggested multiple time signatures and a unique technique

and sound on the drums that is entirely original. One of his unique skills that I

have experienced in person, is to create the feeling of unusual tempos and time

signatures without explicitly playing them. I’ve heard Coleman play in a way that

suggests possibly the fastest tempo of all time, but at a dynamic where you can still

play over it in any time. 1985 also saw the release of Coleman’s collaboration with

guitarist Pat Metheny on Song X on which Denardo and Jack DeJohnette both play

drums. Coleman played at times on a processed kit that played other sounds such

a horse whinnying or a woman’s ecstatic moan as heard on “Compute.” Both

drummers together create a wall of sound. “Endangered Species” takes the wall of

percussive sound to the extreme, with urgent crashing sonic waves that never

crest. From 1987-1988 Denardo shared the Prime-Time drum chair with Calvin

Weston, who Coleman had started working with when Weston was nineteen. On

the record In All Languages,” Denardo plays a groove that could work fine in any

eighties pop or rock song, giving the music the sound of the period in which it was

made, possibly one of Coleman’s goals. Later in 1995 Denardo gives the music a

nineties feel, including a hip-hop orientation on “Search For Life.” In 1996 Denardo

was the only drummer in the quartet with Geri Allen and Charnett Moffett on
113

Sound Museum: Three Women, and Sound Museum: Hidden man. These two

recordings may be the best example of his craft on the drums as an equal ensemble

member where he is entirely himself, notably with the fast but light cymbal touch

and the rolling toms. “City Living” is a good example, as well as Denardo’s opening

solo on “Stopwatch.” Denardo’s final triumph is being the only drummer on the

Pulitzer Prize winning Sound Grammar in 2005. Working with the ensemble or

shadowing his father, his propulsion of the two-bass ensemble is in perfect

balance. The first piece “Jordan” displays the super-tempo described earlier.

Denardo is the definitive harmolodic drummer. He reflected on his father after his

death in a very open piece titled “My Father Was Deep.”

I spent a long time playing with my father, recording, traveling, managing,


fighting, endlessly laughing, and going from one exhilarating experience to
another. You had to be immersed in Ornette World to realize this wasn’t merely
his music — this was how he thought, how he lived. Back in the day we would go
real late at night to his favorite Chinese restaurant, at 21 Mott Street, and he would
order ten dishes even though there were only four of us. He liked to have lots of
different dishes to taste and then to mix together. That’s right, even our dinners
were Harmolodic. And forget about giving away the extra food to a homeless
person – Dad would see a homeless person on the way home and invite him to
sleep at his house.

I started managing my father’s career in the 80’s, in my mid-20s. I had been


out of college for a few years and playing with him. My father would enjoy a great
run of activity and success and then shut it all down for a while, frustrated yet
again by the music business. He always felt taken advantage of by managers,
promoters, record companies. Finally, I couldn’t sit by and watch the endless cycle
of boom and bust any longer. One day I just said, “Let me manage you. You won’t
have to stop and wonder if you are being ripped off.” He said okay, and for the next
30 years we did our best to turn ideas into projects.

My father was deep, meaning his way of thinking and intuition could not be
tracked. But he always seemed to bring new insight, new logic to whatever he was
contemplating. The sound of his horn reflected this depth, the depth of the
114

emotion of the raw soul. His concepts so advanced, so intellectual, yet his
expression so human, so direct. He created and spoke his own language. For some
his music was too complicated, too abstract, nothing to grab on to, just too out
there. For others it was utterly profound because it spoke directly to the brain and
to the soul simultaneously. As he would say, “It’s about life. You can’t kill life.” He
was obsessed with expressing life through sound. He went into its properties as
scientists had explored genomes, discovering DNA. He called his science
Harmolodic. Open thinking, equality, freedom, the pursuit of ideas, helping others
all included. He would say, “It’s about being as human as possible.161

Elvin Jones’s (1927-2004) two records with Coleman on Blue Note, New York

Is Now and Love Call in 1968 are a testament to his power. Even in an environment

created by Coleman, Jones has tremendous influence on the music by way of his

musical personality. He adapts to Coleman’s compositions and concept on his own

terms, and his high energy causes Coleman to raise his own playing level and

urgency. “Round Trip,” “Airborne,” and “Check-Out Time” are all good examples

where Jones up-tempo polyrhythms constantly boil over in wonderful tandem with

Jimmy Garrison. During his improvisations Coleman is not leading Jones, rather he

is adapting to where Jones takes him.

Ronald Shannon Jackson (1940-2013) also made two records with Coleman,

having much the same effect as Jones, where his personality almost dominates the

music, now with Prime Time. Dancing In Your Head and Body Meta from the mid-

seventies are all Jackson. His Texas Blues based rhythms define the two albums.

161
"My Father Was Deep by Denardo Coleman." Ornette Coleman. Accessed January 22,
2019. www.ornettecoleman.con/father-deep-denardo-coleman/.
115

Like so many others in Coleman’s universe, he came up in Fort Worth Texas.

Guitarist Jack DeSalvo who played with Jackson told the author that Coleman

encouraged Jackson to play flute to compose, which Jackson did, embracing

Harmolodics on his own terms. In an interview, Jackson revealed how he beat out

seventeen other drummers auditioning for Coleman.

When I met Ornette that Sunday, he had already tried out seventeen
drummers. The problem he was having was that he had this nineteen-year-old kid
from Philadelphia playing electric bass. He was wanting to go electric. I had been
practicing Buddhism and my attitude had changed a hell of a lot. I was trying to
make everything positive and not dwell in the negative. What happened with the
other drummers, because he told me, was after they got through playing, they all
enjoyed playing with Ornette, but they would tell him that he needed to get an
upright bass player and so he would never call them back. And when I went
around there, he left us in the loft, Bern Nix, Jamaaladeen, and myself. He left us
for about four hours, and he came back and asked Jamaaladeen and Bern how it
was, and they said it was beautiful and so that is how I got the gig.162

Ed Blackwell and Denardo both stand as the drummers that spent the most

time with Coleman, both masters of Harmolodic rhythm with their own musical

identities. Drummers had a unique power in Coleman’s world, free of harmony,

free from form, and free of role-playing to be who they truly were. Giving

drummers that much space could be dangerous, but Coleman often had two

drummers and still made it work. Like Denardo said, he had it all figured out.

162
"FIRESIDE CHAT WITH: RONALD SHANNON JACKSON." Interviews. Accessed
January 22, 2019. https://www.jazzweekly.com/1999/03/fireside-chat-with-ronald-shannon-
jackson/.
116

11. Chamber and Orchestral Works

Coleman told John Litweiler that he had been trying to write classical music

since 1950, but also added he did it to challenge the image of him as illiterate.163 In

December 1962 Coleman self-produced a concert at Town Hall that was released

on the ESP label. For this concert he premiered his new trio with David Izenzon

and Charles Moffett and had a string quartet perform a nine-minute piece titled

“Dedication to Poets and Writers.” The piece starts in minor and ends in major and

contains no detectable improvisation.164 The ensemble works through several

different sections flawlessly, with slight variations of tempo and mood owing more

to European models than Coleman’s innovations in jazz. In the end, Coleman

proves his case of literacy to his critics. The poets and writers were a clique of

people that gathered at his New York City club appearances.165 Regarding the ESP

label, when I asked Coleman about the owner of the label Bernard Stollman, he

called him an assassin.

163
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 104.

164
Ibid. 105.

165
Wilson, Peter Niklas. Ornette Coleman: His Life and Music. Berkeley Hills, 2000, 136.
117

Coleman’s next orchestral work was for many on his most successful,

Chappaqua Suite, recorded in June of 1965. Coleman was considering a move to

Europe when a young filmmaker named Conrad Rooks offered him a five-figure

sum to compose and record a soundtrack for his new movie Chappaqua. Though

described as supposedly hesitant at first in the liner notes by Rafi Zabor from the

unauthorized and edited release on CBS, Coleman accepted and spent three days

in the studio with eleven classical musicians and arranger Joseph Tekula. It

remains unclear what role Tekula played, though he may have been the conductor,

as Coleman solos on alto through the entire eighty recorded minutes.166 Rooks

declined not to use the music citing it as “too beautiful” and instead commissioned

and used music by Ravi Shankar. When the movie was released it was a flop and

soon sank into the abyss. What makes Chappaqua unique in Coleman’s amongst

Coleman’s orchestral work is the full inclusion of his trio, operating at full power.

Moffett is aggressive enough that the ensemble is almost pushed to the back,

though they stand their ground. The two groups almost appear to be separate at

times with the trio improvising and swinging, for long stretches. The exact

ensemble instrumentation remains unknown, but flute, clarinet, oboe, horn,

trumpet and violin can be heard. The ensemble is tutti playing short passages and

holding out dramatic and dissonant chords where they are most effective at

entrances. Part one opens dramatically and moves into medium tempo free swing.

166
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 113-114.
118

Part two begins with a blues connotation with the ensemble bringing in Coleman

voiced chords. Part three contains more aggressive free playing. Part four has a

definitive tempo increase with the ensemble playing big band hits and chords. Two

short improvisations arise from tenor saxophonist Pharoah Sanders towards the

close of the piece with an oboe solo and Coleman solo between them. Sanders

plays briefly, almost coming from an ensemble function, but clearly is himself. 167

Coleman joins the ensemble in sustained pitches before they close the piece alone

in a possible foreshadowing to the future Skies of America. On YouTube recently,

an additional two hours of music from “Chappaqua” have been released,

presumably the material removed by CBS.168 The additional material features

additional percussion from Moffett and more dissonant attempts at ensemble

interaction that may have planted the seeds for William Parker’s Little Huey Music

Orchestra far in the future.

The very next month Coleman was in Croydon England, recording “Forms

and Sounds” for a Woodwind quintet. Coleman was forced to compose to compose

a classical piece in order to be reclassified as a concert artist in order to appease a

British quota system. In two weeks, he composed the 10-movement piece for the

Virtuoso ensemble, this time without the trumpet interludes discussed earlier in

167
Wilson, Ornette Coleman: His Life and Music, 139-140.

168
Yates, Jorge. "Ornette Coleman Chappaqua Suite (Full Album/Reissue)." YouTube.
December 08, 2017. Accessed February 18, 2019. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NBKxSwPtyg4.
119

the 1965 recording. The music sounds like an atonal collective playing hopscotch.

There is no detectable motif in the piece which produces the feeling of a sustained

and controlled group improvisation, with virtually no tempo change. The

individual voices are all treated as equals that operate individually with two voices

at a time working together. Beginning and endings are vague. All these factors are

Coleman’s intention. In 1967 Coleman received the prestigious Guggenheim

fellowship for composition which led to the rerecording of “Forms and Sounds”

mentioned earlier with the trumpet interludes for RCA.169 Coleman followed with

the twenty-minute-long “Saints and Soldiers” with the Chamber Symphony of

Philadelphia string quartet. The inspiration came from Coleman visiting churches

in Rome in 1965 and discovering that the remains of both saints and soldiers were

placed in jars. The piece contains an emotional urgency and maintains the

unresolved dissonance derived from Coleman’s Harmolodic theory. The equality

suggested by the final resting place of saints and soldiers corresponds with how he

viewed the different parts of music being from the same source with no need for

separation by sound classification. Like any scientist, Coleman’s chamber works

are attempts to prove his theory, or perhaps the validity of it and or the process of

its creation. The four voices work together and more closely than the woodwind

quartet, applying more natural function based on range. Also recorded was “Space

Flight,” a turbulent, up-tempo piece that was a short three minutes and forty

169
Wilson, Ornette Coleman: His Life and Music, 154-155.
120

seconds. Coleman was pleased with the performance by the quartet and how they

were not totally restricted by the page. It’s unclear how much freedom the

musicians had. The opening sounds like a spacewalk or UFO sighting, but the

tempo increases slightly suggesting what could have happened had Coleman

orchestrated his work from his quartets with Don Cherry, though this door was

never opened. What may have been missing was Coleman himself. In May 1967,

Coleman composed and performed his first symphonic work, Inventions of

Symphonic Poems at the UCLA Jazz Festival. The piece was conducted by

clarinetist John Carter and Coleman played alto saxophone. Shockingly, no

recording exists.170 In August of 1968, Coleman premiered Sun Suite of San

Francisco for a thirty-five-piece orchestra, and quartet with soloist Bobby

Bradford. Only short clips of the orchestral segments have survived in Shirley

Clarke’s documentary on Coleman in 1986 Made In America.171

Coleman’s journey with a large symphonic ensemble would reach an apex in

April 1972 in London when he recorded Skies of America with the London

Symphony Orchestra for Columbia Records. The piece was conducted by David

Measham. Coleman plays alto on six of the twenty-one tracks, broken up from the

original piece by Columbia to attempt radio accessibility. Coleman was forced to

name all the tracks after the recording. The late alto saxophonist William Connell

170
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 124.

171
Ibid. 130.
121

was the copyist and had a difficult time working with Coleman on the music.172

Coleman’s cousin James Jordan and Paul Myers from CBS were the producers. The

British Musicians Union again blocked Coleman’s quartet from playing, but

Coleman’s solo moments with the eighty-five-piece orchestra may have been a

blessing in disguise. His emotional vulnerability within the symphony is striking,

unlike anything ever heard before. The use of the drums is key to the sound of the

music. Coleman had classical timpani with tom toms on the left and a traditional

jazz kit on the right.173 The album was done with two rehearsals and reported

difficulty from the musicians being challenged with a new concept, as well as

Columbia not willing to fund the project properly. Two months after the

recording, the piece was performed at the Newport Jazz Festival in New York City

by the American Symphony Orchestra with Leon Thompson conducting and

included Coleman’s quartet. The performance had an additional ten minutes than

the edited forty-minute release. Coleman had a clear inspiration for the piece,

spending the night on a Crow Indian Reservation in Montana and participating in

sacred rites. To Coleman, the sky had witnessed everything ever done in America,

and was a place of true natural equality, where nobody owns territory.174

Coleman’s heartfelt liner notes suggest that if the sky can do it, then so can we.

172
As told to the author.

173
Wilson, Ornette Coleman: His Life and Music, 189.

174
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 141.
122

While acknowledging the tragic past and reality of American culture, he seems to

believe in an evolutionary narrative. Coleman introduced the idea of Harmolodics

in the notes. Reviews of the piece range from “dangerous and rewarding”175 to

"another grand mess, generously and boldly conceived but stifled by the grim

playing of the LSO."176 Musically it’s interesting to hear “The Good Life” which

later became “Schoolwork,” before it became “Dancing In Your Head.” “All Of My

Life,” a beautiful vocal from Science Fiction recorded in 1971, becomes haunted

when expanded into a harmolodic symphony. At times Coleman’s titles validate

the track separation. “Love Life” pitches his alto alone struggling against the

cosmic force and weight of love. “The Military” contains war like posture. “Sunday

in America” feels like a cumulative ending, grand in scope, and a unification of

Coleman’s concept including a musical resolution on his own terms. The long alto

solo on “The Men Who Live In The White House” is beautiful and lyrical, making

it difficult to unite with the frenetic opening. Overall, the music throughout is an

evolution of all his chamber and string music up to that point.

Coleman next performed, but did not document, a piece for trumpet,

percussion, and strings in 1974 titled The Sacred Mind Of Johnny Dolphin, as

mentioned in the chapter on Coleman and the trumpet. The piece was written for

175
Jurek, Thom. “Skies of America - Ornette Coleman | Songs, Reviews, Credits.” AllMusic,
www.allmusic.com/album/skies-of-america-mw0000061385.

176
Cook, Richard. The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings. Penguin Books, 1994, 277.
123

Coleman’s friend Johnny Allen, leader of the group that formed and operated the

cultural center called Caravan of Dreams.177 An arrangement of the score now

exists for college ensembles to perform.178 As mentioned earlier, the piece has been

performed at least four times, but has yet to be recorded. In 1985, Coleman

composed and recorded Prime Design, Time Design, his last string quartet, in

honor of Buckminster Fuller at a live concert. Coleman offered advice to listeners

that conventional listening won’t get you far in listening to this piece. The piece

was performed by the Gregory Gelman Ensemble and begins with a heartfelt

passing around of the phrase that is the same notes as the song “Moon River.”

Coleman had an architecture-like approach to his improvisational strategy on the

piece. After a delicate opening, Denardo joins in and is very aggressive until the

end of the piece, sounding like water that has instantly boiled. As Coleman

suggested, trying to follow the individual lines proves difficult, while listening to

the song as a mass entity can also be challenging to some. Coleman’s arrangement

calls for each musician to play in different time signatures at the same time. To

close, the strings stop playing in the order that they started. Coleman attempts to

replace harmonization with humanization.179

177
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 189.

178
"Lincoln Center Festival: Ornette Coleman's Chamber Music at Stanley H. Kaplan
Penthouse." ZEALnyc. May 30, 2017. Accessed December 30, 2018. https://zealnyc.com/lincoln-
center-festival-ornette-colemans-chamber-music-at-stanley-h-kaplan-penthouse/.

179
Wilson, Ornette Coleman: His Life and Music, 209-211.
124

In January 1987, the Kronos string quartet performed Coleman’s “In Honor

of NASA and Planetary Soloist” with guest Oboist Joseph Celli. The New York

Times review described short, jazz-based movements. Movement one contrasted

frenetic string scraping with a calm swing from Celli. In additional contrast, Celli

also used an Indian instrument called the mukhaveena with aggressive vocal

effects that held attention. 180 In 1989 Coleman composed the never recorded

Freedom Symbol for a large string and wind ensemble with the assistance of

violinist Tom Chiu. Freedom Symbol was performed in Battery Park New York City

in the shadow of the statue of Liberty in 2000 and was reviewed by the Chicago

Tribune providing insight into the piece. The work was a tribute to the ideals of

the French Revolution and performed by a 20-member Harmolodic Chamber

ensemble containing timpani, strings, and winds. Howard Reich described blocks

of sound, long extended solos, waves of dissonance, and long sinuous melodies,

complete with a bold symphonic unified climactic finish.181

In 1991 Howard Shore asked Coleman to collaborate with him on the

soundtrack to Naked Lunch, a science fiction thriller. Shore composed and co-

composed the music and conducted the seventy-seven-member London

180
Crutchfield, Will. “Concert: Kronos Quartet at Weill Hall.” The New York Times, 18 Jan.
1987.

181
Reich, Howard. "ORNETTE COLEMAN MAINSTREAM SENSATION: HOW TIMES
HAVE CHANGED." Chicago Tribune. August 28, 2018. Accessed January 13, 2019.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-2000-06-05-0006060055-story.html.
125

Philharmonic. In the liner notes, Coleman explains that the music is Harmolodic

going into technical detail, seemingly having achieved a type of validation of his

theory by its successful work in action through collaboration. Coleman solos at

length over the orchestra backdrops and is inspired throughout. As stated earlier,

the orchestra is offset by a Coleman trio with Denardo and bassist Barre Phillips to

great effect. Coleman wrote new music for the trio. The Master Musicians of

Joujouka make an appearance as well, superimposed on Shore’s orchestral

textures.182 Coleman displayed the deeper levels of his alto virtuosity throughout

the soundtrack. His agility on the trio’s “Bugpowder,” naked emotion on the ballad

“Intersong,” and his playing over Shore’s Mujahaddin” stand out. In 2017 at a

Coleman celebration at Lincoln Center, Naked Lunch was revisited with Denardo,

Charnett Moffett, Ravi Coltrane on tenor and Henry Threadgill on alto. Forms and

Sounds was performed, as well as In Honor of NASA and the Planetary Soloists for

string quartet and oboe.183

Finally, we reach Coleman’s dream symphonic work that unfortunately was

never realized. Truly epic in scope, we are only left with Coleman’s description.

The title is The Oldest Language. The piece was comprised of several ideas. It

would be written for one hundred twenty-five people, two from each of the United

182
Wilson, Ornette Coleman: His Life and Music, 226.

183
Russonello, Giovanni. “Ornette Coleman's Innovations Are Celebrated at Lincoln
Center.” The New York Times, The New York Times, 17 July 2017,
www.nytimes.com/2017/07/17/arts/music/ornette-coleman-lincoln-center.html.
126

States.184 He wanted to use excerpts from as many different linguistics as possible,

using all different tongues.185 Coleman also wanted one person from twenty-two

different world cultures, the number being denoted with numerological and

mystical power as he was taught by the Crow Indians. The piece would be two to

three hours long.186 The Third World had to be included, and the greatest

challenge: all the musicians must live together for six months and reconcile all

cultural and linguistic differences before seeing the score.187 Producer and

musician John Snyder has seen the first page of the score, and every note is in a

different color.188

184
Feather, Leonard. “Interview Ornette Coleman.” Downbeat, July 1981, pp. 16–93.

185
Mandel, Howard. “Ornette Coleman The Creator As Harmolodic Magician.” Downbeat, 5
Oct. 1978, pp. 17–56.

186
Rockwell, John. All American Music Composition in the Late Twentieth Century. New
York, NY: Da Capo Press, 1997.

187
Davis, Francis. Jazz and Its Discontents: A Francis David Reader. Cambridge: Da Capo
Press, 2004.

188
Coleman, Ornette, performer. Celebrate Ornette. Recorded 2016. Denardo Coleman,
2016, Vinyl recording.
127

SECTION III: THEORY

12. Other Masters

Coleman had definitive impact on several of his contemporaries. Miles

Davis criticized him but was undeniably influenced by his work. John Coltrane

openly embraced Coleman and studied with him. Sonny Rollins formed a similar

band that adapted Coleman’s concepts. Jackie McLean recorded with Coleman in

the previously discussed New And Old Gospel. Roy Eldridge said in a well-known

rebuke of Coleman, “I listened to him high and I listened to him cold sober. I even

played with him. I think he’s jiving, baby.”189 Charles Mingus, with a complicated

relationship to the avant-garde, was unhinged by Coleman to a degree. Max Roach

assaulted Coleman. Archie Shepp said of Coleman: “Call Ornette the shepherd and

Cecil the seer,” and also added “His tunes have about them the aura of a square

dance telescoped through the barrel of a machine gun.”190 Wayne Shorter added

that Coleman was one of his favorite astronauts.191

189
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 82.

190
Jost, Free Jazz, 56.

191
Weiner, Natalie. "Wayne Shorter Remembers Ornette Coleman: 'One of My Favorite
Astronauts'." Billboard. June 12, 2015. Accessed February 10, 2019.
https://www.billboard.com/articles/news/6598047/wayne-shorter-ornette-coleman-obituary-
memorial-remembers-homage.
128

In the Miles Davis autobiography, Davis stated that in 1960, a new black

alto saxophonist named Ornette Coleman came and just turned the whole jazz

world around.192 Davis not only heard Coleman at the Five Spot but sat in several

times.193 Davis wasn’t impressed with the playing but considered Coleman’s

liberation from form and structure to be important.194 The Davis quintet with

Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter, Ron Carter, and Tony Williams contains this

influence. Most people however point to a famous rebuke of Coleman when Davis

said “Hell, just listen to what he writes and how he plays. If you’re talking

psychologically, the man is all screwed up inside.” 195 Davis also felt that the “New

Thing” designation of the avant-garde was an attempt by white critics to quickly

own something that they weren’t able to understand.196 Davis came to slowly open

to Coleman. He compared one of his compositional techniques as going back as far

as Bach, that music could be played three or four different ways, independently of

each other.197 Davis’s On the Corner contains the influence of Coleman’s Prime

192
Davis, Miles The Autobiography, 249.

193
Ibid. 250.

194
Ibid. 251.

195
"Factbox: Quotes by and about Saxophonist Ornette Coleman." Reuters. June 11, 2015.
Accessed February 10, 2019. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-people-ornettecoleman-
factbox/factbox-quotes-by-and-about-saxophonist-ornette-coleman-idUSKBN0OR23220150611.

196
Davis, Miles The Autobiography, 251.

197
Ibid. 322.
129

Time. Coleman also wrote music for Davis on occasion198, though it doesn’t appear

to have been recorded. Coleman’s manager Neil Blyden told the author he

witnessed Davis at Coleman’s loft trying out different tunes that Coleman had

written, offering to buy the ones he liked with Coleman declining.199 Davis wanted

to have a public perception of his relationship with Coleman while at the same

time incorporating ideas he could work with. When Coleman was asked about

Davis in 1991 shortly after his death, his response contained a broad scope.

Miles was one of the first improvisors that had such an individual
personality (musically and humanly) and philosophy, that because he was born in
America, his concept of himself existed because there was a country called
America that allowed him to be that way.200

John Coltrane was a humble man and profoundly interested in the deeper

realities of music. When Coleman arrived in New York, Coltrane heard something

that he felt he could directly apply in his own personal quest. Charlie Haden said

that at the Five Spot “Coltrane used to come hear us every night. He would grab

Ornette by the arm as soon after we got off and they would go off into the night

talking about music.”201 Coleman also came to see Coltrane perform and talk to

198
Litweiler, A Harmolodic Life, 125.

199
As told to the author by Blyden, now deceased.

200
Sobol, Aaron. "Ornette Coleman Discusses Alan Hovhaness and Miles Davis - 1991."
YouTube. August 30, 2016. Accessed February 10, 2019.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=thHlJ3_0qHw.

201
Palmer, Robert. ""Charlie Haden's Creed"." Downbeat, July 20, 1972.
130

him between sets.202 Coltrane sat in with Coleman during this period and said “I

would like to make a record with Ornette Coleman. I’ve only played with him one

time in my life; I went to hear him in a club, and he asked me to join him. We

played two pieces-exactly twelve-minutes-but I think this was definitely the most

intense moment of my life!”203 Coltrane was very open to Coleman’s music, as

documented by Dr. Lewis Porter. On Coleman, Coltrane spoke very highly.

I Love him. I’m following his lead. He’s done a lot to open my eyes to what
can be done. I feel indebted to him. When he came along, I was so far into Giant
Steps chords that I didn’t know where I was going to go next. I don’t know if I
would have thought about just abandoning the chord system or not. I probably
wouldn’t have thought of that at all. And he came along doing it, and I heard it, I
said “Well, that must be the answer.” Since we have a piano, we have to consider it,
and that accounts for the modes that we play, but that’s going to get monotonous
after a while, so there probably will be some songs in the future that were going to
play, just as Ornette does, with no accompaniment from the piano at all. Maybe on
the melody, but as far as the solo, no accompaniment.204

Coltrane also told Tsujimoto in Japan that Coleman was a great leader, and

that a leader was a great thing to be.”205 During Coleman’s self-exile in the early

sixties, he emerged to sit in with Coltrane at the Half-Note in February 1964,

202
Porter, Lewis. John Coltrane: His Life and Music. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan
Press, 2008. 176.

203
Porter, John Coltrane: His Life and Music, 204.

204
Ibid. 203.

205
DeVito, Chris, and John Coltrane. Coltrane on Coltrane: The John Coltrane Interviews.
Chicago, IL: Chicago Review Press, 2012.
131

playing trumpet, and in January,1965 he almost joined Coltrane’s band, stopped

only by an opening slot at the Vanguard.206

By 1965, Coltrane had moved on from pre-arranged chord progressions.

Coleman spoke about his exchange with Coltrane noting that Coltrane was

interested in non-chordal playing.207 Coltrane had, by the time he heard Coleman,

extended and mastered the use of chords in jazz beyond what anyone else had

previously thought possible. Martin Williams witnessed Coltrane in observation of

a Coleman rehearsal as early as 1961 with Jimmy Garrison on bass.208 Coleman told

the author that after Coltrane died, he received a letter thanking him with money

included for lessons, and that after receiving the letter he spent several days

crying. Coltrane had experimented as early as the summer of 1960, a year after

Giant Steps on the record The Avant-Garde with Don Cherry, Charlie Haden or

Percy Heath, and Ed Blackwell, but was still hesitant at walking away from chordal

playing completely. With his classic quartet, it was not uncommon for pianist

McCoy Tyner to lay out at times during solos. “Chasing the Trane” from Live at

Village Vanguard is a great example of extended improvisation with no piano

support or restriction. Coltrane would go even further than Coleman on his duet

album Interstellar Space with drummer Rashied Ali, removing the bass and leaving

206
Porter, John Coltrane: His Life and Music, 204.

207
Ibid. 204.

208
Ibid. 204.
132

him alone in a duo with drums, one of his favorite environments, with the right

drummer.

Sonny Rollins was open to Coleman’s innovations incorporated on his own

terms. In a 1962 blindfold test with Leonard Feather he responded to hearing

Coleman play a Coleman piece titled “Folk Tale” on Atlantic.

I’m in favor of Ornette and many of the things he has done. He does possess
the basic elements that go to make up a jazz artist. A rhythmic drive. Qualities you
can find in everybody since Louis Armstrong, all the good guys. I can still see in his
figures a certain quality that was exemplified by Bird. Everybody says Ornette’s
playing sounds weird or so forth. But Ornette has the basic jazz essentials, drive
and the rhythm. Rhythm is the most necessary part, the prerequisite, the positive
element. But of course, harmony is the negative through which the positive must
exert itself. 209

Rollins and Coleman went as far back as during Coleman’s earlier days in

Los Angeles. Rollins sought him out, as he told Scott Spencer.

When I used to go out to L.A. back then, there was something I could do
you couldn’t do today, says Rollins. I’d drive my car out toward Malibu, park it on
the side of the road, and go down to the beach to practice. I invited Ornette to
come with me and we’d play, just the two of us standing in the sand, putting our
sound out over the ocean. I really liked what he was doing. A lot of the established
musicians didn’t like his playing, they were doing things like walking out on him,
but I liked him.210

209
Feather, Leonard. The Encyclopedia of Jazz in the Sixties. New York: Horizon Press, 1966.

210
Spencer, Scott, and Scott Spencer. "Ornette Coleman: The Outsider." Rolling Stone. June
25, 2018. Accessed February 11, 2019. https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/ornette-
coleman-the-outsider-193373/.
133

Rollins was inspired enough by Coleman that he hired Billy Higgins and

Don Cherry, and wanted Charlie Haden, for a tour in Europe after Coleman

finished a run at the Village Gate in 1961.211 Rollins album Our Man in Jazz was a

result of the band he formed with Henry Grimes playing bass. Many bootlegs of

this group survive. Rollins embraced the open harmony but chose to continue to

use form and some of his usual repertoire, resulting in a unique group that was a

result of Coleman’s influence. Rollins thrived in this environment though he often

maintained a tonal center and didn’t modulate as freely as Coleman. He spoke

highly of Don Cherry as an original voice, who suffered criticism for his technique

but was in possession of a great musical mind.212 Rollins always played with a

controlled openness in his playing from this point forward in his career. The two

titans famously reconvened in 2010 at a concert celebrating Rollins birthday at the

Beacon theater with Christian McBride on bass and Roy Haynes on drums on

Rollins “Sonnymoon for Two.” Though Coleman’s entry is delayed, once he enters,

he kept the exchange going for fifteen minutes, Rollins openly responding to

Coleman’s singing lyricism and free modulation.213 The New Yorker described the

happy moment as Matisse and Picasso trying to agree on a line.214

211
Haden, Woodard. Conversations with Charlie Haden, 23.

212
Guy, Jazz Video. "Sonny Rollins and Don Cherry." YouTube. December 06, 2013.
Accessed February 11, 2019. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=srweoZIlao0.
213
Dixiefeet. "Sonny Rollins & Ornette Coleman - Sonnymoon For Two (Live 2010)."
YouTube. February 07, 2012. Accessed February 11, 2019.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WhXlwdkcLc4&t=5s.
134

Charles Mingus was an innovator and experimenter in jazz in his own right,

open to avant-garde jazz practice on his own terms. In October 1960 on his album

Charles Mingus presents Charles Mingus on “What Love?” the music is borderline

free playing with Coleman’s friend Eric Dolphy on bass clarinet playing beyond

conventional harmony into pure vocal expression of emotions not commonly

expressed in jazz. Mingus had issues with Coleman’s technique, but he couldn’t

deny that there was a necessary crossing of boundaries taking place. I again turn to

Leonard Feather’s Blindfold Test in Downbeat taken in April 1960. Feather didn’t

play Coleman, but Mingus wanted to speak about him anyway. The question

remains, how much did Coleman influence the music he recorded that October

with Dolphy?

You didn’t play anything by Ornette Coleman. I’ll comment on him anyway.
Now, I don’t care if he doesn’t like me, but anyway, one-night Symphony Sid was
playing a whole lot of stuff, and then he put on an Ornette Coleman record.

Now, he is really an old-fashioned alto player. He’s not as modern as Bird. He


plays in C and F and G and B Flat only; he does not play in all the keys. Basically, you
can hit a pedal point C all the time, and it’ll have some relationship to what he’s playing.

Now aside from the fact that I doubt he can even play a C scale in whole notes—
tied whole notes, a couple of bars apiece—in tune, the fact remains that his notes and
lines are so fresh. So, when Symphony Sid played his record, it made everything else he
was playing, even my own record that he played, sound terrible.

214
Remnick, David, and David Remnick. "Ornette Coleman and a Joyful Funeral." The New
Yorker. June 19, 2017. Accessed February 11, 2019. https://www.newyorker.com/culture/culture-
desk/ornette-coleman-and-a-joyful-funeral.
135

I’m not saying everybody’s going to have to play like Coleman. But they’re going
to have to stop copying Bird. Nobody can play Bird right yet but him. Now what would
Fats Navarro and J.J. have played like if they’d never heard Bird? Or even Dizzy? Would
he still play like Roy Eldridge? Anyway, when they put Coleman’s record on, the only
record they could have put on behind it would have been Bird.

It doesn’t matter about the key he’s playing in—he’s got a percussion sound, like
a cat on a whole lot of bongos. He’s brought a thing in—it’s not new. I won’t say who
started it, but whoever started it, people overlooked it. It’s like not having anything to do
with what’s around you and being right in your own world. You can’t put your finger on
what he’s doing.

It’s like organized disorganization or playing wrong right. And it gets to you
emotionally, like a drummer. That’s what Coleman means to me.215

A photo of Charles Mingus at his Newport Rebels festival shows Coleman

on stage with Mingus, Kenny Dorham, and Max Roach. What were they playing?

Available evidence is that Mingus and Coleman alternated sets,216 and that

extended jam sessions took place with Mingus or Coleman taking the lead.217 The

photo has them all playing together with Mingus looking at Coleman, but it

remains another event where no recording exists as of 2019. Mingus was present at

the Five Spot in a well-known story by Charlie Haden that he looked over at the

bar while setting up, and Charlie Mingus, Ray Brown, Percy Heath, and Paul

215
Blindfold Test | Charles Mingus: The Official Site." Charles Mingus The Official Site.
Accessed February 11, 2019. http://mingusmingusmingus.com/mingus/blindfold-test.

216
Monson, Ingrid Tolia. Freedom Sounds: Civil Rights Call out to Jazz and Africa. Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 2010, 184.

217
Wein, George, and Nate Chinen. Myself among Others: Cambridge, MA: Da Capo Press,
2004, 195.
136

Chambers were all there waiting to hear how he approached Coleman’s music.218

Mingus wrote an article in Downbeat titled “An Open Letter to the Avant-Garde”

though he didn’t mention Coleman in the article, taking issues in general with free

players who didn’t have the skill to play chord changes, suggesting that an Avant-

Grade album by Duke Ellington, Mingus, Clark Terry, and Thad Jones, players who

could play chord changes playing free would be the most valid innovation.219 Bern

Nix told the author that while he was living with Coleman, Mingus called Coleman

in the middle of the night to confront him on his trumpet playing saying “Mother

Fucker- who told you could play the trumpet?”

Despite the negative criticism they received initiating the bebop revolution,

both Dizzy Gillespie and Max Roach were initially very hostile towards Coleman,

Roach going as far as violence. Both of them eventually came to accept Coleman

with Roach embracing the avant-Garde in the extreme. Coleman told the author of

an event where he and Gillespie were booked at the same venue. Coleman played

the first set. During the intermission, tenor saxophonist James Moody approached

Coleman for lessons, impressed with the music he heard. Gillespie overheard the

interaction and intervened, forbidding him from studying with Coleman, and in

front of him, told Moody that Coleman was a charlatan. A decade later however,

218
"Charlie Haden on His First Time Playing at the Five Spot." NEA. June 15, 2015. Accessed
February 11, 2019. https://www.arts.gov/audio/charlie-haden-his-first-time-playing-five-spot.

219
Ideologic - Stephen O'Malley - News. Accessed February 11, 2019.
http://www.ideologic.org/news/view/charles_open_letter_to_the_avant_garde.
137

Gillespie told Leonard Feather that he had played with Miles Davis quintet with

Herbie Hancock and Tony Williams, and that it reminded him of Ornette

Coleman. As ever with Gillespie, he just needed to hear the harmony.

It reminded me so much of Ornette Coleman. I never listened to him much


at this point. But when Bernard Stollman gave me one of his Town Hall concerts, I
was alone when I put on the record, and I could follow the chords he was playing.
It was difficult stuff, very complex and highly enjoyable. And that’s when I really
started listening closely to what he was doing.220

Roach initially walked of the bandstand when Coleman tried to sit in in Los

Angeles.221 Coleman told the author that Roach attacked him in the bathroom the

Five Spot and punched him in the mouth. In 1960 in France during an interview

and asked about the spirit of his music, without a piano, Roach said “We’re trying

to assimilate the talent of the individuals of the group, and from this try to evolve a

style where we have something exclusive with ourselves.”222 Roach was also

working without a piano and may have felt competitive about the idea of playing

without it. Whatever hostility Roach may have had from Coleman’s perceived

threat to end his way of life, he ended up recording with Anthony Braxton, Archie

220
Feather, The Encyclopedia of Jazz in the Seventies, 33.

221
Feather, Leonard. “Interview Ornette Coleman.” Downbeat, July 1981, pp. 16–93.

222
“Jazz Improvisers.” Katie Couric - You Can Watch #GenderRevolution Right Here,
www.facebook.com/JazzImprovisers/videos/1000392320071453/. Accessed 11 Feb. 2019.
138

Shepp, and Cecil Taylor, and even convinced Gillespie to record a record of them

improvising freely!223

Albert Ayler admired Coleman’s business practices,224 though he didn’t

speak about his music. When the author asked Coleman about Ayler, he became

visibly upset and said that if Ayler had come to study with him as they discussed,

that Coleman would have straightened out everything, and in fact may have been

able to save his life. We have previously discussed Eric Dolphy who also came to

embrace and record with Coleman. When asked by the author about Dolphy and

the album Free Jazz, Coleman said he told Dolphy to bring whatever horn he

wanted, and Dolphy chose the bass clarinet. As previously discussed, Jackie

McLean collaborated with Coleman playing trumpet on his album New And Old

Gospel.

223
"Max Roach and Dizzy Gillespie - Max Dizzy, Paris (1990)." Something Else! December
28, 2016. Accessed February 25, 2019. http://somethingelsereviews.com/2007/07/30/max-roach-
and-dizzy-gillespie-max-dizzy-paris-1990/.

224
ZOUMHANE, Fayçal. "Albert Ayler Interview -Sonny Rollins, Ornette Coleman Et John
Coltrane." YouTube. May 24, 2011. Accessed February 11, 2019.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a6RWMHVwKhk.
139

13. Harmolodics

Coleman’s identifying his philosophy with a term he devised first appeared

in the liner notes to Skies Of America in 1972, as Coleman announced a book called

The Harmolodic Theory. He doesn’t mention that he’s the author, or that he had

been working on the book since his self-imposed exile from 1963-64. Today in 2019,

the book remains unpublished, however Denardo Coleman has plans to have it

edited and formally released.225 Three attempts have been made at translating

Harmolodics on to the page to a degree. Michael Cogswell wrote his dissertation

titled Melodic Organization In Four Solos By Ornette Coleman in 1989. Nathan A.

Frink wrote his dissertation in 2012 titled Dancing In His Head: The Evolution Of

Ornette Coleman’s Music and Compositional Philosophy. Stephen Rush wrote a

book titled Free Jazz, Harmolodics, and Ornette Coleman. All three seek evidence

of rules, or laws that might define Harmolodics as a dialect that can be learned and

spoken such as bebop, or George Russell’s Lydian Chromatic Concept. Frink, for

example, states that a tenet of Harmolodics includes the practice of polymodality,

225
As told to the author.
140

that a lead soloist could change the key of a piece.226 Keys were not relevant to

Coleman in composition or improvisation as a core function. The idea is what

mattered. Cogswell got closer stating that while Coleman’s principal innovation is

the abandonment of a pre-determined harmonic progression as the scaffolding for

a group improvisation, his melodic motives occasionally imply harmonic

progressions or delineate cadential formulae.227 In analysis of Coleman’s music he

examined rhythm and pitch sequence, contour, repetition, and motivic chain

association in an attempt to read his mind and diagnose his form of hearing. The

effect is like performing exploratory brain surgery on a melody. The difficulty

remains for all scholars interested in Coleman’s work in that he did not seek

validation. His goal was to prove himself on first his own scientific terms, and later

to broaden his scope to examine the function of humanity. Harmolodics does have

rules, but Coleman’s goal in using and teaching it was not to create a separate

dialect in jazz that separates a musician from the other dialects. His goal was to set

musicians free to relate to music in what he saw as a more natural way. The idea’s

that Coleman define as part of his creed are those that allow a musician to find or

create a pathway to himself. He has tried to explain this process hundreds of

226 Frink, Nathan A. "DANCING IN HIS HEAD: THE EVOLUTION OF ORNETTE


COLEMAN’S MUSIC AND COMPOSITIONAL PHILOSOPHY." November 16, 2015. Accessed April
04, 2019. www.d-scholarship.pitt.edu/27686/1/NFdissfullPittrev2.pdf, 95.

227 Cogswell, Michael. "Melodic Organization in Four Solos by Ornette Coleman." Digital
Library. March 09, 2015. Accessed April 09, 2019.
https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc501207/, 15.
141

different ways over the years. Those who have applied his process to their own

musical practice all have different interpretations, because they have all

experienced different results, being different people.

I feel it best to begin with my own experience. The moment I met Coleman,

he asked me to play. I played an improvisation of a piece I wrote that was an

extension of his piece “Dancing In Your Head.” What I didn’t know was that in

under thirty seconds, I had been diagnosed, with the result that Harmolodics

could help me figure myself out. Coleman offered that I could return at any time

for this exchange. I learned that no scheduling would be possible. If I felt it was

time to go, I would, and if Coleman was home, then it was supposed to happen. I

returned shortly after this and when the elevator door to his loft opened, he said

“You got me!” The first day, or session was all conversation of philosophy for

several hours. I leaned one of Coleman’s favorite riddles, designed to help people

view a new perspective. The question is “What’s the tonic, or root note, of a chord

in the key of F?” Most people try, the root, then the third, seventh, fifth, or flat

fifth, before folding. The answer defines the entire concept:

You. You’re the tonic.

To offer my own translation, this means that the feeling you have, and the

sound that comes out of you is the root, or center of what’s happening when you

play music and improvise. As throughout Coleman’s hundreds of ways to see what
142

he is pointing out, the challenge is to see music as a human act, more than

something based on the intellect. It is assumed that the intellect is already

understood. Once you know what the root is, you are not beholden to it. Playing

this way calls for intuition, trust of yourself, and others, all very human things.

Whatever rule that you present based in traditional musical theory, Coleman

almost always had an alternate view.

In Western musical theory transposition, different instruments are pitched

in different keys. Violins play in C concert, trumpets are in Bb, and alto

saxophones are pitched in Eb. In this way, a C on Violin, is a D on trumpet, and an

A on the alto saxophone. Coleman is quick to ask; how can a sound be classified as

three different notes? By calling attention to the instability behind the theory,

Coleman is asking to see notes as sounds before their classification. Human beings

that listen to music respond to the sound and the feeling. In jazz, the audience is

never informed of the key, progression, or form. Coleman took this idea a step

further to offer me a harmolodic rule as a horn player, questioning where my Eb

instrument was. It was during this period that I took up the alto clarinet. Coleman

opened the door to a horn I was already very curious about. In practice however,

we had conflict in that I had two Bb instruments. One day while playing music, he

took my bass clarinet and placed it in another room and handed me my trumpet.

He felt the trumpet was my natural voice. He held the instrument in high regard

and pointed out the flaw of the saxophone: The saxophone is built like a scale, and
143

thus leads the player directly into theory. The trumpet escapes the connotation

and is pure melody.

In Coleman’s next application of Harmolodics to my playing, I reached the

apex of my experience with him, one that changed me forever. Bassist Charnett

Moffett came over and we were improvising a duo when Coleman stopped us.

You didn’t resolve your idea.

Moffett offered an example. For me, this was a huge confrontation, because

at that time I was simply not aware of or concerned with idea of resolution.

Resolution could be as simple as ending with a major or minor third interval, or

what might be a chord resolution from wherever I was at. The theory wasn’t as

important as that what I played was coherent on some level. It had to sound like it

made musical sense, regardless of theory. I learned how idea resolution is really

sourced in the way the human ear works. Idea resolution became the core issue

between us, and he would stop me playing whenever I fell into this self-created

trap. At one point, Coleman seemed agitated when I attempted a Johnny Hodges

type glissando the length of a fifth. While I thought he would be impressed, the

opposite result was achieved, and he asked, “How can have an idea if you don’t

speak with words?” Coleman stopped me a third time and said “I know what you

sound like, and now you’re playing like somebody else. Why would you play like

someone that wasn’t you?” This was a serious and unexpected problem to him, and
144

I offered no solution. I eventually understood the answer, which was that I was

trying keep up with Moffett! Coleman may have offered a path away from

conventional harmonic thinking, but he still expected musicians to use functional

musical language. I soon had the epiphany that in Harmolodics, while harmony

was no longer a prison of sorts, there were other aspects of music used in jazz that

became even more important. Melody was elevated in status just as much as

harmony was reduced. At this point, constructing harmonically free melodic ideas

that resolved, became my core process and I spent several years developing it,

checking in with Coleman. At one point I started playing all microtones and he

said “I’m telling you that you’ve found a new way to play. Stop proving it and start

using it.”

A key part of Harmolodics is that musical relationships are human

relationships first. Charlie Haden is the supreme example of this. Haden naturally

adapted to Coleman’s concept, and then resolved to support him in practice

perhaps more than any other musician. Coleman trusted Haden, and together

their shared intuition speaks to the kind of human understanding that can one can

sense between, say, Billie Holiday and Lester Young. Coleman became emotional

when I asked him about drummer Ed Blackwell and he explained that the problem

I had wouldn’t exist for him with Blackwell, because he could finish Coleman’s

phrases and even resolve his ideas. Throughout his life, Coleman sought to get

bass players and drummers to abandon any role-playing responsibility, and to

replace it with their human responsibility. I played a Charles Gayle trio record for
145

Coleman who said, “Well, he certainly wasn’t waiting for anyone to tell him what

to do.”

Coleman’s Harmolodic process also pushed the envelope in other more

abstract areas. He observed: “I see you have a sexual relationship with your horn.”

Sex was a popular topic with Coleman, and he often would relate music to male

and female dynamics. It was through discussions with him that I started a large

ensemble of an equal amount of men and women seeking a new balance of energy.

Coleman also had Greg Osby over for a pre-interview and immediately after sitting

down, stated a belief and asked him a question at the same time.

The major is white, and the minor is black. Isn’t that so? Do you agree?

Coleman attached philosophy and spiritual concepts more and more as he

became older. In our last conversation by phone, I called him demoralized from

having been forced into a foot-messenger job out of desperation. He quickly

turned the conversation into looking at broad spiritual and musical concepts and

said that sound, and the soul, are eternal.

I’ll shift now to more evidence of the functions of Harmolodics through

musicians that played with Coleman. In the earliest explorations of the process,

Coleman himself wrote an essay in Downbeat, taking quite a scientific approach.

What is Harmolodics? Harmolodics is the use of the physical and mental of


one’s own logic made into an expression of sound to bring about the musical
sensation of unison executed by a single person or with a group. Harmony,
melody, speed, rhythm, time, and phrases all have equal position in the results
146

that come from the placing and spacing of ideas. This is the motive and action of
Harmolodics.228

Coleman wrote an additional essay about Harmolodics for a book title Free

Spirits, The Insurgent Imagination.

Harmolodics can used in almost any kind of expression. You can think
Harmolodically, you can write fiction and poetry in Harmolodic. Harmolodics
allows a person to use a multiplicity of elements to express more than one
direction. The greatest freedom in Harmolodics is human instinct.229

Don Cherry is of course a vital source on Harmolodics as one of Coleman’s

closest and well-known collaborators.

Harmolodics is a profound system based on developing your ears along


with your technical proficiency on your instrument. In the early days people felt
that we didn’t really know our instruments, that we were just playing anything.
But Harmolodics is based on a system on notation. We have to know the chord
structure perfectly, know all the possible intervals, and then play around it. The
system gives you the freedom to phrase differently each time you play a song.230

Returning to electric bassist Jamaaladen Tacuma, he was asked about how

Coleman approached harmony in Prime Time, providing another perspective and

continuing to dispel the myth that chords were irrelevant in Harmolodics.

228
Coleman, Ornette. "Prime Time for Harmolodics." Downbeat, July 1983, 54-55.

229
"Harmolodic-Higher Instinct: Something to think about" Buhle, Paul. Free Spirits:
Annals of the Insurgent Imagination. San Francisco: City Lights Books, 1982.

230
Silvert, Conrad. "Old and New Dreams." Downbeat, June 1980, 17-19.
147

There is a certain melody that is played. We might play it in harmony or


individually. From the melody we go into compositional structure. We set up
bridges constantly, and we actually go through the whole maze of chordal
structure in music, period. Ornette might have one person play I-V, a C to a G, and
have another person play C, Eb, and Bb, which can still hook up musically. He
shows us different ways chords can hook up; it’s incredible, he’s like a wizard
because he’ll show you so many ways to combine chords. Ornette got me in a raw
stage and what he did was just create a monster. He says I’m the master of the
sequence 231

In 1990, Howard Mandel spoke to three additional Prime Time members.

Keyboardist David Bryant, the great tabla player Badal Roy, and bassist Al

MacDowell about playing in a Harmolodic band.

Bryant: Ornette’s not getting rid of the soloist, he’s getting rid of the
accompanist by elevating the role to the soloist’s height.

Roy: Ornette wants me to never play the same thing more than four times. I
can get a groove going, but he says, ‘I’m always changing; keep playing so I can
keep playing around you.’ For Ornette, 30 seconds of the same thing is too long.

MacDowell (who started playing with Coleman right out of high school in
1975): Harmolodics is music before it’s orchestrated. Jazz is live composing on the
spot; Harmolodics is that, but even with a melody, it’s not what you can play
according to somebody else. If Ornette plays a C, he may be in C Major, but maybe
C minor, or F; and he might be playing any of the three clefs. Harmolodics is my
interpretation of what his playing possibilities are.232

Finally, I return to Coleman for more of his ideas concerning himself and

Harmolodics. Howard Mandel had a unique connection with Coleman, and

231
Tinder, Cliff. "Electric Bass in the Harmolodic Pocket." Downbeat, April 1982, 19-21.

232
Mandel, Howard. "Ornette Coleman's Prime Time Primeval Update." Downbeat,
November 1990, 30-31.
148

believed Coleman had two ideas as strong as commandments: the primacy of the

individual, and the possibility of a perfect world modeled on musical rapport. He

got unique responses from Coleman over the years.

The rhythm and sound are like a man and a woman, they have to get along
with one another or else they’ll start to fight.233

We can all play together, and if we all play with honesty, full attention, and
freedom, the music will coalesce as it would.234

I always tell people I think of myself as a composer who plays.235

The melody can be the bass line, the modulation line, the melody, or the
second or third part. That’s how I see Harmolodics. You can take any melody, and
use it as a bass line, or a second part, or as a lead, or as a rhythm. I do it in all the
music I play. Melody is only unison, it’s not melody. Melody is only unison, but
there are as many unisons as there are stars in the sky.236

Coleman told Bill Kohlhasse.

I’m very scientific about the way I approach writing and playing. I’m always
investigating different kinds of musical concepts, keys and ways to cue them, and
usually my melodies, my unisons, come out of that. I’ve searched for those things

233
Mandel, Howard. "Ornette Coleman The Creator As Harmolodic Magician." Downbeat,
October 78, 17-56.

234
Ibid.

235
Ibid.

236
Mandel, Howard. "The Color Of Music." Downbeat, August 1987, 17-19.
149

that you can’t hear, that you have to know. That’s one of the reasons that
Harmolodics has been so useful in my way of dealing with musicians and music.237

Pianist and educator Dr. Lewis Porter held a workshop with Coleman for his

students at Brandeis University. Coleman had the following instructions for his

ensemble, which resulted in interesting results.238

Bass: play whole steps

Trumpet: play only 4ths

Alto: play only half steps

Piano: play only thirds

One day when I was studying with Ornette, it was just the two of us. He

played alto saxophone and I played alto clarinet. We played for about forty

minutes. On several occasions we were playing together, and both ended up

playing extended sound in the upper, very vocal ranges of the instruments. On two

or three moments we ended up holding out the same pitches, literal unisons.

Afterword’s Coleman looked at me and said, “There’s really nothing better than

that in life.”

The unison.

237
Kohlhaase, Bill. "Coleman Classics." LA Weekly, July 1988.

238 As told to the author.


150

SECTION V: INTERVIEWS

14. Denardo Coleman

Denardo Coleman is of course Coleman’s only son, first discussed in my

chapter on Coleman and the drums. Besides being the living master of Harmolodic

drums, he remains his father’s number one supporter and the caretaker of his

legacy since his death on June 11th, 2015. In the interview we speak about his

currant activity teaching Harmolodics worldwide through connections he made

between both of his parents. He still uses Ornette’s loft in Chelsea to rehearse

music and conduct business related to Ornette. While I was studying with

Ornette, I never met Denardo. We first met at Sam Ash music where I worked

during the day selling trumpets and saxophones after Ornette’s death. When tenor

saxophonist Joshua Redman left behind sheet music for a concert of Ornette’s

music from the soundtrack to Naked Lunch at the store on 34th St., management at

Sam Ash music contacted me at Michiko Studios (where I currently work), not

knowing who the music belonged to but believing that I would. I then called Bern

Nix to acquire Denardo’s telephone number to tell him I had the music, and

Denardo and I agreed to meet. Shortly after this in May 2017, I discovered Nix in

his room, also in Chelsea, dead from a heart attack. I immediately contacted

Denardo who considered him a brother. A year later I reached out to Denardo for

the interview, which then took place in May 2018 at Ornette’s loft. This was the
151

same loft that I studied with Ornette in, and we were in the same music room, or

laboratory that we had played in. Ornette’s many paintings and library were

exactly as I remembered, with the addition of the actual telephone from the cover

of Tone Dialing placed nearby near where we sat.

Matt Lavelle: So, Bern talked about Ornette and Harmolodics a lot. And

then of course, almost a year today we found out that Bern had moved on. Since

then, I've started seeking more Harmolodics knowledge from different sources.

I’ve been talking to Kenny Wessel about “Kathelin Gray.” Kenny Wessel sent me

his lead sheet from the rehearsals. Then I met Dave Bryant and he sent me his lead

sheets. Then I found Pat Metheny had a real book and he had his version. There

was an author named Steven Rush who did a book and he had another one. Plus,

online a saxophone player named James Mahone did a transcription, So, now I had

five different versions of it to try to put it together, and I'm still trying to put it

together.

Denardo Coleman: Damn. Man. So, how different were the versions?

ML: They were all different. And some of the guys took hardcore

positions about what certain things were. Some of them I agreed with, some of

them I didn't. The key was in question. The more I investigated it, I think what I

learned is that maybe Ornette intentionally created something elusive? Kenny said

he would change the chords anyway. Finding out that he was dictating chords to

the guys was something for me. I think a lot of people decided what they think
152

Ornette's music is, or what Harmolodics is, or they've decided to put a label or a

style on it, but they don't really know what it is and it's misunderstood.

DC: So, the fact that he was dictating chords might not go along with?

ML: Yeah. Some musicians I’ve spoken with thought you could just play.

But I would really like to talk about your musical world.

DC: (Coleman spoke at length here without any questions) Yeah, yeah. But

before we do that, just what you touched upon in terms of having those different

versions of “Kathelin Gray,” and none of them is not necessarily the definitive one

or the one that's supposed to be right. Because if you listen to it, people will just

say, "Okay. Well, it's a pretty understandable melody." But then you've hit on

something that's so central, meaning you can't lock it into a key or just a chord

progression or structure that easily fits into something. And which is an interesting

thing when my father would write a song. And I remember another musician, they

had been working together on something. My father wrote a song and the other

person put some chords to it. So, he felt he was a co-writer with the song until my

father really explained to him, "Well, those chords can change all the time. The

next performance, we might change those chords." So, not coming at it from that

place when you just lock into the formality of that, compared to the information of

the idea. It's the idea. And that's the problem with the ... Well, not what we'll call

a problem, but it's ... When you try to create a theory to match the information. If

somebody puts some information, you create a theory, so you can teach this

theory, and somehow become the authority on that information, creating work for
153

yourself and institutionalizing stuff. When that person that came up with the

idea, they didn't say, "Well, okay. This is a sub-dominant of this and I'm going to

move it to the this or that." No. Somebody came by later and fitted into their

knowledge. And they may be limited. Their knowledge could be limited. But now

you're bound by their limitations. That gets fossilized and passed around as if

that's the thing. But then, somebody comes along and reveals that, "Well, that was

just an idea. Your whole thing is just an idea." It's like somebody stepping outside

the room and maybe figuring out they're not the only world. There’re other worlds.

And yet, like you're saying, when you were talking about how that B is a D, that

just totally shifted this whole perception. Then you question everything at that

point, because your thing is built on, "This is what it is." That’s the beauty of my

father and the way he just thinks. He doesn't come at it with a mindset of things

stop, that where they stop is that absolute place where they can go. Because now,

he's getting into the sound. He's just really getting into the properties of sound.

Because obviously, around the world different cultures treat sounds in different

ways.

DC: So, why is it for us in this fixed system and for these other folks, they

can use it for a different purpose, and it doesn't involve any of the scales that we

know or any ... It's sound, so sound, nobody can contain it. And nobody can

contain how it activates you. It's energy. So, he's looking at it from going into the

properties of it.
154

DC: And so now, if sound can energize and activate it, emotion, or if it can

activate healing cells in the body, or has all these powers to it, why would you then

try to regulate it to some container and then have everybody's ideas just come

from that container? And so, I don't think he was trying to bring everybody's

attention to the fact that there was a container.

DC: I think he was just his own thinker and was just thinking of beyond

that anyway. And since his medium was jazz and saxophone, he was in that

territory where it was contrast to what had been agreed upon. Then the idea that

somebody's going against that became a focus. But he wasn't going against it. He

was already outside and saw the other possibilities.

DC: And so, he was already passed it. But you could be out of sync then.

The rest of the world as we know, they've all agreed on something. And you don't

agree with ... It's not that you don't agree with what they agreed upon. You don't

agree that it should even be an agreement. You know what I mean?

DC: So, you're just not participating in that whole line of thinking, because

you realize there's this expansion of ideas and ways of thinking. And people have

proven it, because whether you believe it works for you. If it was an absolute, that

same thing would have to apply to everybody. But it doesn't apply to everybody.

DC: If you believe frogs are God, frogs are God. You know what I mean? If

you believe frogs are not God ... But it works for you. If that believe, whatever your

belief is, works for you, get you through, powers you, gives you energy, gives you

that strength. And so, how are you to somebody else, "That doesn't exist?"
155

DC: How can you say what exists and what doesn't exist? What works, what

doesn't work? And so, then you don't have those kinds of limitations, now you're

exploring. So, that's really what it's about. You are exploring. And then, you're able

to ... When you're open, you're able to make connections to other things that ...

And it wasn't his music.

DC: This is just how he is. He would just put it on his plate. He would put

different combinations of food together that you wouldn't normally think go

together. So, that's why I'm saying that's just how he was in general. And that

would create a new taste. And some things he would just like. He might, instead of

when people mix iced tea and lemonade. That kind of thing.

DC: So, that was his thing. He would mix that kind of thing up. And that

would be what he would dream, or something like that. And so, it's like the ... So,

James Blood Ulmer. We put this Ornette tribute out that celebrated Ornette, and

they had liner notes for different people.

DC: And so, Blood wrote a liner note. And really, what he was saying was,

he was talking about Harmolodics. He said the title of it was, "To be a Harmolodic

player you have to be a Harmolodic person." And that's really what it meant. It

wasn't about a music thing. It's really about the openness of the universe and being

open to the universe.

DC: And the fact that the universe is ... There's so much more to it. There's

so much more there. And so, I'm sure when you talk about my father, you've got a

lot of just that, the philosophy of ... And he had his own language. So, he made
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what he saw was good music ... And when he talks about the unison, he's really

talking about melody, what people call melody. But he calls it unison and things

like that.

DC: And then, when we would rehearse, and we'd play something, he would

pull the guys and say, "Okay. Well, what key was that in?" So, when you talk about

the key, everybody had a different answer. But it wasn't because he wanted it to be

elusive. It was revealing itself that there's many answers. It doesn't have to be one

answer. That's the whole. It doesn't have to be one answer. It can be many

answers. That's why it can be many versions. But now, what if you're playing all

those keys? Now your ideas it's like wow. And all those clefs. So, now those clefs

open up all those other sounds.

DC: That's why if you've got the four clefs and you run stuff through the

different clefs, or you're thinking about it through a different clef and you're

playing something else, it takes you. It's like a device that takes you out of having a

set mindset. And you've now super imposed other things. And once you hear some

super imposed ideas, that wakes another part of your senses up. And so, now your

ideas are traveling in a different place. And so, I think Harmolodics in terms of

musical theory, it's like a device to get a person into a different space so they can

think in a more expanded way so that ... Because it's hard. It's hard if you think of

scale and chords in a way. If it's lined up in a way. No, you can have great ideas and

sound really great and all that. But now, if you don't line them up, if you don't line
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them up then what can happen? But it's like, "How do you not line them up?" It's

like if you get a plate of food and you warm it up, because that's automatic.

DC: It's like, "Alright, I've got to warm my food up." But now, okay. Well.

What if somebody says, "Alright, you've got four things on your plate. Just warm

two things up to this temperature. Warm these other things up and not at all.

Then you get them back together, mix them together." Now you've got a whole

totally different experience of what you think that is or what it isn't.

DC: But it changes your perceptions to a degree to maybe now you don't

treat it as just a routine. Maybe you taste something else. Maybe that taste now

takes you to like, "Oh, wow. You know what? I've got to look at food differently

now." So, to me Harmolodic theory and Harmolodic. Like Kenny, like all of us.

We've been just giving hundreds and hundreds, if not, thousands of lessons, how

to get to all these places.

DC: And with him, he will play what he's talking about. But you've got to ...

Like you're saying, it takes a while to really absorb it and for it to really line up, so

you can translate it to yourself. Because, like I say, he's got his own language. He's

so advanced in what he's figured out that sometimes when he's speaking, he's

speaking from his perspective that he sees clear as day. Maybe the other person

doesn't see it as clearly, so he'll try to demonstrate that. And so, yeah, it's

interesting. So, I'm going to try to do what you're talking about, meaning I've got

to, you know. So, he wanted to put this all together like in the book. And he's

written that book, but he's written it 200 different times. So, we're going to try to
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put that book together. But I think the way you went about it in terms like the

“Kathelin Gray,” is a really good way to talk to other musicians about it, because

particularly like you said, the theory guys are guys who really are tuned into all the

aspects of writing and listening. And they can analyze it. And then given the

information of, "Okay. Well, look at it differently."

DC: If you're analyzing it not from that perspective but in a different way,

what could you get out of it? And the thing is, it just makes sense no matter how

you look at it. Meaning, it's just an idea. And now, if you boil it down to it being an

idea, then you can accept it. It doesn't have to fit anything.

DC: You can accept it. It's an idea. So now, he would ... It's like Song X is a

melody. But now, if you put that melody in front of somebody to play, it doesn't

sound like a standard melody. It sounds like an idea. So, that's one of the reasons

why he really, I think liked to play that song, because it clearly is an idea. But it's a

melody.

DC: And that idea then when you get passed that melody should lead you to

other ideas, because it's the ... The melody is just like the opening. And if you can

make you improvisations sound stronger than that melody, that's what he's

striving for. So, he'll play a song and play a melody. And again, he'll hear that

melody in his improvisation.

DC: Not necessarily the notes to that melody, but how that idea of that

melody relates to his ideas that came after that. And to me, that's where it's at.

That's where it's at. That's all he ever talked about, were ideas. Now he was able if
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he wanted to, to make the melody and the ideas, and let's just call it more

conventional, he could do that. When he improvised, clearly, he was improvising

in that direction. So, he could line it up that way if he chose to and make it clear.

Or he'd go on a deeper level.

DC: The thing about the other musicians who can play complicated things,

which is great and sounds really great, but his complicated things were more like

he's just his own super computer. It wasn't complicated in a musicianship sort of

way. Complicated in terms of ideas being super imposed over other idea, being

super imposed over other ideas, and being able to do that in micro seconds.

DC: So, it's like, "Okay." So, that's why he's hard to figure out, because you

can't. You can't. Because he wasn't following in any chord thing or something, you

can't figure out his roadmap. But his roadmap is clear, but you just can't figure it

out. But it's clear. And that's the good thing about it, because you're not thinking

of it as a map anymore. You're not thinking of it as a map. You're thinking of it as,

he's creating destinations as he goes. Creating destinations as you go. So, now

you're not bound by the math, the environment, any structural thing in terms of

what's already there. That's what makes it an idea. And now, you're taking that

thing. But there's a lot in there, Matt. The things that you're trying to figure out are

what kind of things?

ML: I feel like after the time I spent with Bern, I got closer and closer to

trying to create in that space that you just described. And at the same time, at

Rutgers I've gone through jazz history step by step. And in the beginning, for a
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while I was a totally straight guy, but I really wasn't. I was just looking at the liner

notes to Sound Museum and he was saying that the way that people use style is

that it's like a punishment of free will. And I have, for most of my musical life,

been a slave to stylistic perceptions. In the notes Ornette said, "Sound or music has

been a slave to styles." And so, Harmolodics for me is basically, was freedom. The

word you just said I really like, is unbound. Like it's okay for you to be who you

really are. For me, that's beyond profound. It's like a spiritual thing. It's like letting

people attach themselves to their own soul.

ML: And whatever that is, it's okay. But not only that. From Ornette I felt

that's what he's asking you to do. He's not asking you to follow in a specific set of

rules but come out and play who you are outside of that context. So, for me I'm

coming around full circle to Harmolodics. People want to put styles on me, but

I'm operating from a place where I'm just being who I am. But I don't think I would

have got there if I didn't cross paths with him, for him to encourage that kind of

thing. You know?

DC: Yeah. But now, why do you think it exists in a sense of it gets taught

that way? The way it gets taught?

ML: And that could be institutionalization. Jazz education is such a big

thing. It seems to have a need to self-validate and self-reinforce. I'm on the

periphery though, new to it.

DC: So, do you think, is it more than one school of thought, or is it pretty

much uniform at this point?


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ML: It's so interesting because in seeing the video that you made, I'm

starting to think that the whole thing is shifting on some levels. The video that you

just made in Cuba to me is not just a subtle movement. It's like a real tectonic shift

to bring those two worlds together. The musicians I cross paths with in their 20s,

more and more of them that I'm encountering, is they're looking for a way out of

the slave to style thing. It's hard for them because there's so much judgment that

goes down. I mean, Jazz Lincoln Center has this thing called the Essentially

Ellington competition that they do. That's not just surface or psychological, it is

hard core judgment. They have set of laws. I've been dying to ask you what you

thought about The jazz Lincoln Center Orchestra playing Ornette just a few days

ago. As someone who's trying to be outside of styles, I really ... I had a hard time

with it. I saw one set, and I kept thinking what Ornette would think about this.

They said that they did it one time, and Ornette was there. Wynton told the

audience that, "Well, Ornette said ..." Then he goes, "We can't tell you what

Ornette said." He was about to say something that Ornette said, then he decided

not to, so I don't know what it was. (Author’s note: This ended up that Coleman

told arranger Ted Nash that “You can transcribe a solo, but you can’t transcribe an

environment”.)

ML: They were on this clinic vibe. To me, it was on stage in the process of

trying to take Ornette and now put him into a box. They seemed to be suggesting

that he was cool with their level of. But here they are trying to deliver a lecture

explaining this is what Ornette's music was like, and then they have their
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arrangements. To me, they did these long intricate arrangements, and then they

would try to blow. To me, they were all missing. Everybody was missing the point

They seemed to be in that place, this place where a lot of people go where they

think that if you're in an open space that you can just go anywhere, say anything.

You can just disregard everything and just play some random stuff. There was no

search for ideas. There was no urgent need to come up with a new melodic idea.

There was no search for that idea that's coming from you that you can really feel,

that kind of in-the-moment urgent kind of thing.

DC: Yeah.

ML: I had heard about something like this before with when they did a

concert with Wayne Shorter. I wasn't there, but someone that I know was there,

and he said Wayne didn't look like he was into it because it seemed like they were

literally putting him into the museum. They were literally taking him ... He's still

alive, and they're trying to put his bust up on the shelf. What you just did in Cuba,

this one of the things I wanted to talk to you about, I looked at your discography

today, and I was checking it out. I mean, of course people associate you with

Ornette .... of course, you're his son. You've been in his band for decades, but your

mom, Jayne Cortez, I’m looking at your discography and the video, you did one of

your mom's tunes, “I See Chano Pozo”, and brought the Latin thing up. It all came

together. You've got young people, you got a cross cultural thing going on. You got

women involved ... there's a woman on percussion, there's a woman on flute ...

dancers. Then the rapper comes out, and he's rapping in Spanish. The question I
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wanted to ask you was he doing his own thing, or was he taking your mom's words

and doing them in Spanish, or a combination of both?

DC: Well, what happened ... He was doing a take off her words. Originally, I

was ... There's a good friend of my mother in Cuba who is the national poet of

Cuba named Nancy Morejón ... a woman similar to my mother, and they're really

close friends. I was going to have Nancy do the poem and the rapper responding to

the poem. But then, kind of like how our weather was this winter where the winter

was ... never went away ... it was unusually cold out in Cuba this winter. Everybody

down there was sick this winter, so she got sick. We were rehearsing with her and

brought the rapper in. She ended up not doing it because she got sick. By that

time, we had been rehearsing and rehearsing, and he had it. He had the vibe ... you

know what I mean. He was inside the poem. I said, "Let's just go with it." It wasn't

those words, but it was the spirit of what she was talking about, in terms of just

Cuba, Chano Pozo today and honoring the whole thing and going forward.

DC: That's what I'm saying, man. It was ... For me ... You're right, and you

hear it, merging all that stuff, all my ... this who I am ... and try to keep going

forward. That's what it's about.

ML: I mean, maybe what Ornette is calling for is inevitable. The boundaries

between everybody ... maybe they must come down somehow, because in my

group that's what it's all about. I've got everybody. I've got a rapper in there, and

I've got big-time multi-generational ... I've got 19 to 65. Culture thing is mixed up,

the sex thing is mixed up.


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DC: Well, the thing is I don't think it's just about everybody playing their

personal sound, because I think there's also progress when you are playing it, but

you actually are delving in or chasing your own concept of what that is, which

takes it away from this randomness. That's the things ... Some people think

everybody can just play what they want and play together ... they just go this

random freedom of sound. It's okay ... that's okay. But my father, day after day, is

in there studying the properties and how those properties relate to one another ...

those molecules, get into the DNA of it and really ... as a science. He's, every day,

studying it, and you move this to there and how that affects this over here, you

shift that around to there. He's constantly been writing new things. We come in

and rehearse, he's got a whole new set of songs to play based on what he was doing

the night before. We'll do that, we'll play. He'll listen to that, and he'll write

something else the next day, but it's all in that study and search that he's going

somewhere with it. It's not about just ... There's nothing wrong with freely playing,

but that's not what he was doing. It sounded free because it wasn't the

conventional. Because it wasn't conventional, it didn't sound like the conventional,

so it sounded random. The fact that he let other people have the freedom to have

their own voice made it sound even more random to those folks who were more

conventional, but he was coming from his own concept.

DC: I think people should explore their own concepts. Then when they do

that, you hear more depth to what they're doing because then it's ... like I said,

those ideas. Ideas mean that there's something behind it. There's something
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behind it. Using music for some purpose, it's for some purpose. That could be just

to feel good or move and dance, or reflection. When you talk about something like

rap and jazz and all that ... I mean, it's all one thing. To try to make it not, we get

into the social aspect and the commercial aspects of it.

DC: Unfortunately, the state of black folks today is not very good, and that

music reflects what that is today. In 1940s, that blues reflected what it was then.

It's just a reflection of what it is. It's not a ... whether what it is has been imposed

or whether that's closer. 1960s, black people ... It was ... The pride was able to

emerge more. You had strong voices reflecting lots of different information and

people being able to make their own statements more and more.

DC: Now, this is my own personal reflection. But by the time that became

too powerful, then black society was inundated with crack. That is what we're

living with today, because I can't think of anything more powerful than when a

person starts killing their own parents for five dollars or whatever. When it turns

you into that, and now the children, grandchildren of that, of course ... then added

upon that, the institutions that promote that. Now everything got turned on its

head.

DC: What you hear reflected in rap is that it glorifies you being in the

gutter. The more gutter you are, the more glorified you are, in terms of what's

commercially pushed. That is true. I mean, the reflection ... That's not a reflection

of black people. That's a reflection of the condition they've been put in and

psychologically contorted into, but that's what it is. It's really a matter of
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conscious. Consciousness got too strong coming up 40, 50, 60 ... all the way back

to the 70s, 80s. It got too strong and too threatening, and people get that

conscious. Anything to crush that is what has happened since, and what gets

promoted to the masses is that contorted image now.

ML: Yeah.

DC: Let's talk about that. I hate to say jazz is not that much further away

from that. Jazz got so super advanced ... super advanced ... and that came from

black culture and what it produced, in terms of how you had to survive. It's like

soul food ... take the scraps and create incredible nourishment. You take the

instruments, you take what you know, and you create something that's really

advanced, never been here before. Now they call it jazz. Where it was in 1950

doesn't mean that's where it ... That was just how it was exploding. It was

exploding all this time, then it got cut off. It got cut off because it was too

advanced. What if it hadn't got cut off for these past 50 years? Well, it would have

maybe outdated what they call classical music. It was a threat to all of that, so it

got cut off. The growth was cut. Somebody else can now take ownership of it and

use it how they want, in the same way that black culture can be destroyed on a

certain level so other people can take ownership of it and use it how they want.

That's just consciousness. That's why I'm saying ... You were talking about

my mother and other folks who are understanding that level. That's the level of the

game. That's what I'm saying. But if you're bottled up into the limitations of the
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prescribed thinking, you just can't see the bigger picture. The picture is just so

much bigger than all of that.

DC: That's the thing. It goes ... Like you said, it goes so far back. When you

get to people and talk to people who are really knowledgeable, they'll tell you

something that's related so far back so you understand really close to what the

genesis of the thinking and thought process is. Then you start to really understand

the layers of it ... you're not just reacting on the surface. Even if that surface is 100

years ... I'm talking about 500 or 1,000 years ... People understand how the society

formed, because the way the society formed is still how we are today.

Understanding how society formed and this move to that, then you start to

understand really how we got where we are and who we are.

ML: I was also thinking about you and Bern in both groups, Prime Time and

Fire-spitters, and both groups existing at the same time. I know you spoke about

Bern a little bit. For a certain period of time, you were in both bands together. It's

really the same energy, because it wasn't like ... It really wasn't like two different

experiences. It was the same experience.

ML: Yeah.

DC: Yeah. I mean, the thing ... My mother, she really wanted that exact

same thing. That's the thing about harmolodics and now having all of that territory

over there to work with. That means your ideas can flow ... you're really breathing

fire. That's exactly what she wanted.

ML: Would you say she was also Harmolodic?


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DC: Oh, yeah.

DC: Well, I think the thing is there's a lot of people who are Harmolodic.

You are Harmolodic.

ML: Yeah. Thank you.

DC: Yeah. No, that's the thing about it. That person may not call themselves

that, but those people who really are in expanded universe ... That's all it is. That's

all harmolodics is, is expanded universe. You're harmolodic. I mean, that's how my

father would explain what that energy is.

DC: There's lots of Harmolodic people. Cecil Taylor wouldn't call his music

Harmolodic ... I would call it Harmolodic. We're just talking about from a

philosophical point of view, it's not from a theoretical point of view. It's the fact

that he's in an expanded place ... his universe is way expanded. He was able to get

to ideas and play the way he played, which ... It's just him. It's him, but he knew

exactly what he was doing. He could play something for hours. It wouldn't repeat

itself, but he could play that same thing again if he wanted to. He had concept. He

had his concept. The way he played, and the sound became a healing sound. I

mean, I could see him as the leader of some community. When they needed to

have certain things bring things to another level of understanding, they could have

him play and that would happen.

DC: That's what my father would call that ... and my mother. That's the one

thing about great artists, so to speak, is they're usually great because they've

expanded things. They've somehow expanded how you can hear things or their
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writing or their voice, their way of thinking. They keep expanding where we're at

as people. He calls that energy Harmolodic.

DC: My mother is ... Then you have those types of people who are really

looking to expand, they're on a mission to expand. That's one of the harder things

to do as an artist, if you consider an abstract artist. You're on a hard mission.

DC: I mean, it's an easy mission and a hard one, easy in the sense that

you're on your own mission, you're not trying to ... you're not worried about being

judged by some other people's conditions, so that's good. But then you have to

really challenge yourself. You have to really challenge yourself to ... so you can see

that thing and you're able to manipulate that thing. It's very interesting.

ML: Man, I keep looking at your drums. I wanted to ask you about ... In

realms of the drums themselves and harmolodics, were there certain things that

Ornette ... Anything harmolodic or anything drum specific ... You have your own

sound universe.

DC: Well, you know what, he brought me up in a totally Harmolodic way.

ML: Right.

DC: You know? So, I was interested in drums and always liked his

drummers and always watched them. Took some drum lessons, but then we

started playing together. He said, "Alright, you're another instrument. Don't worry

about the role of the drums. You know ... We are equal soloists."

ML: Right.

DC: So, alright, I'm eight years old.


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ML: Right.

DC: So that's how I approached it. You know, now, obviously, in terms of ...

the drums having that rhythmic role, he said, "Yeah, the drums have that rhythmic

role. But you can keep a pulse by what you're playing. You don't have to keep time

to keep a pulse". That's the key right there.

ML: Yeah.

DC: You know, and you can still keep a pulse in terms of that aspect of the

drums. You know? But you can do it by any ideas what you play, how you play it,

your approach. It's different ways to do it, without it just being strictly a time

thing. You know. Nothing wrong with being time as part of it. But you're not

bound by that, where you have to ... You know what that's like. You're the train

and that's the track you're on. You're just on that track, regardless. You know,

you're not worried about ... You got to stay on that track. If you know where you're

going, then you just know where you're going. You don't have to worry about the

train being on the track. You know where you're going. And you can hear it, like

when he plays, it's all there. I mean the tempo, swing, it's all there. You know. And

if he wanted to break that up into something else, he would break it up into

something else. And it had its own tempo and swing. You know, so. But just

because that's the way I came up, I assumed that's how you're supposed to play the

drums. You know. So yeah, for me, if I play with somebody, I'm naturally going to

start playing with them. As opposed to maybe just holding the tempo, keeping
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time. It's just how I hear it. And so, without really knowing it, I just came up in a

harmolodic way- of learning the instrument.

DC: But then, I didn't work as hard as he worked. I mean, he worked so

hard. So even though he's going into the properties of sound, you're going into

that, but you're also a master of playing your instrument. because to me that it's an

instrument. You know what I mean? Instrument meaning, it's a tool to get you

some place. It's a tool you're using. You know what I mean? You always say don't

let the instrument play you, you know? And so, that's what it is, it's an instrument.

And so, you use that instrument to get to where you're trying to get to. So, the

drums, they're just an instrument now.

DC: One thing nice about the drums though, because that's probably one of

the most ancient musical devices. People used it for so many different things. It's

like, going to Cuba. You know. The nice thing about it is, being in a really different

culture. It's just a good thing to experience, being in a different culture. Seeing

how the musicians respond in that video. It's like, you've given them ... Like we

were saying, they now find themselves in the environment, and you're playing with

them, and they can just be.

ML: And they seem to be really happy. The positivity is palpable in the

video.

DC: You know? They're really happy to be there. To be in that situation.

ML: They're free of all that you have to do this, you have to do that.
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DC: Yeah, yeah. I know. I think, you know, that's the reason why I had to be

there a lot. Because, if you don't experience that thing, there's no way for you to

know it.

ML: Yeah.

DC: You know. You've got to experience. Like, if you hadn't been in here

with my father, someone can tell you about it on paper, or you can read about it,

but when you experience it, it then is possible. Then that world that somebody's

talking about, you're in that world now all of a sudden. Or you're outside of your

normal thing, and your eyes are now more open, or your senses are more open to

things. And so, yeah that was good. Because, they were open to come on the

journey, so to speak. And it opened more and more as we played, so the more

open it became. You know. So that okay, they didn't have to stay locked in to

something, you know. And then we could now have conversations, and it can

move around the room, and we can come back. So, they absorbed it, you know.

They absorbed it, in terms of just the Harmolodic, you know, sort of, energy. So,

that's what I'm kind of, interested in doing with that. I'm going to go to some other

places, and just start Harmolodic bands.

ML: Yeah!

DC: You know? Cause ...

ML: Almost like an ambassador. You set up Harmolodics in different parts

of the world.
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DC: Exactly. You got to get that energy. That energies got to go. And then,

even Cuba, you know. It's not like, do that and then leave, I'm going to be going

back and forth there, keeping it ongoing, you know. Ongoing. In the meanwhile,

like I said, I'm trying to take this harmolodic, all these lessons, and put it into

some sort of format. So that people can get into it, you know. And really, it's just a

device, you know, to open the door and let you see that, you know, you're just in a

room. It's just a device to get you out the room.

ML: Yeah.

DC: You know, it's not like you have to play like him, or sound like him, or

be a jazz musician, you know. It's just a device to get you out the norm. But it's got

lots of ways to try to get you out of that norm. It's hard to get out the norm you

know.

ML: Yeah.

DC: But, you know, it's a way to maybe help find the door, to open the door.

And like, okay, that means there's something else. Just the fact that there's a door.

You know because, when you think this is the whole world, this is the whole

world.

ML: Yeah.

DC: So, I'm going to try to provide something ...

ML: It really feels like it's the logical next step. Like, for, you know, for the

philosophy, for it to open up and be spread out around the world.


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DC: Yeah, yeah. Because it's just unlocking that energy. You know. And

then where it goes is where it goes. You know. It's like, if everybody is now

weighed down with the same thing, we got to start to unlock that thing, you know.

And let that energy out, because jazz, I don't think it was meant to be what it has

become.

ML: Yeah.

DC: You know. It was something that was just growing. I mean, that was

where it was at that time, that person came with their energy, and they took that

sound, and that way of doing things, and moved it. Then that person moved it.

Then that person moved it. You know? So, it's moving. Wasn't meant to just get

chopped, and then institutionalized. You know, it got chopped because it got too

powerful. It was getting too powerful. You know, consciousness of black people in

the USA got chopped because it was getting too powerful.

ML: It's like a friend of mine told me, whoever controls Africa, controls the

world.

DC: Mm-hmm (affirmative)-

ML: Right? And, my wife is from Zimbabwe and I spent a few weeks in

South Africa and Zimbabwe at the turn of the year. And, I saw a choice, like the

South African segregation thing is so deep.

ML: And I wonder, I'm real curious now about the musicians that I met in ...

The African musicians that I've met, how much they'd be open to harmolodics.

DC: I have a way to find out. I'm going to Senegal.


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ML: (laughing) Alright!

DC: I'm going to start band over there. I'm going to hit Senegal first,

Nigeria, Ghana, South Africa, Ethiopia. But we'll start with Senegal. Yeah, yeah.

ML: Cool.

DC: Yeah. And you know, I met some musicians. Because my mother has a

house there.

ML: In Senegal?

DC: In Senegal. She has a house there. And so, I haven't been in a little

while. But when I went ... You know, I met some musicians the last time, which

was a few years ago. Then I played with some musicians over here who came for a

program.

ML: In regard to your own craft, we only played together that one time at

Bern’s memorial.

DC: Yeah, yeah. Well. And that comes from my father's and my mother's

energy.

Matt Lavelle: Yeah.

DC: Being just, those type of people. Where it was just, real.

ML: Yeah.

DC: You know, you know. And, in that way, so natural and free flowing. So,

it's like, you know, you can be easy going, and intense at the same time.

ML: There was one time, I was a foot messenger, when I was studying with

Ornette, and I got so demoralized. I was out on the streets, grinding. And it was
176

raining, I was just having the worst day... And I was like, "You know what, I got to

find some way to ... I need to change direction because I'm going really dark. So, I

just stopped, and I just called Ornette on the phone. I didn't even know what I was

going to talk about. Right away, he got into deep spirituality and he said, "The soul

is eternal".

DC: So, that was just his normal way of going, you know? And so, but as you

reach for something, and you get there, that makes you want to keep going. That's

the thing, you know, that's the push, you know. And that's a good thing. Yeah,

because, you know, then you start having a conversation with yourself, and then

that expands to other people, and you know, that's that movement, that's that

movement.
177

15: Kenny Wessel

Kenny Wessel was previously mentioned in my discussion of the guitar in

Harmolodics. Wessel teaches where I work at Michiko rehearsal studios in Times

Square, New York City. Our conversations quickly became centered around

Ornette after I told him I worked with Bern Nix and asked him about Coleman’s

great piece “Kathelin Gray.” As I was closing the section on the guitar, he offered to

discuss Harmolodics by phone. We had the interview on the evening of February

5th, 2018. Wessel was very generous with his perspective and took me deep into the

laboratory with Coleman. Prime Time has been largely misunderstood, and Wessel

shows how it was the most harmolodic of all of Coleman’s projects.

Matt Lavelle: So Prime time collaborated with Pat Metheny?

Kenny Wessel: Yes, in 1988 at the Montreux Jazz Festival. Metheny was the

guest artist at the festival so he was sitting in with different bands. It was after

Song X. Metheny wanted to sit in with the band.

ML: How did you and Chris feel about Metheny sitting in?

KW: I'm a fan so I was cool with it. Metheny had a lot of equipment

ML: Did Prime Time have roadies?

KW: There were three guys that helped set up and run the show and work

the monitors.
178

ML: So, you were with Ornette for 12 years 1988 to 2000. You guys

performed Skies of America with Prime Time.

KW: Yes, We did that several times.

ML: I know of one bootleg of one of these performances. Prime Time played

through the entire Symphony or interludes or?

KW: It was orchestrated. Ornette got together with John Giordano. A

conductor from Texas with the Houston Symphony. They figured out how to have

us play with the orchestra. There were times when we played ourselves, other

times the Orchestra played by themselves, and sometimes the orchestra held out

chords and we would be blowing over that. Ornette put some thought into it. It’s a

great piece. It was a lot of stuff from the original recording, but he worked in new

material for Prime Time. Tunes like “Compute” and “Spelling the Alphabet.”

ML: I was watching a prime-time concert in Lugano and in the third part

there was an extremely fast tempo for you and Chris to play over. It sounded like it

might have been very difficult to play lines at that speed.

KW: I would shed that Melody at home like crazy with the metronome. I

would get it to where I think Ornette would want it. Then as soon as I got it in

rehearsal, he would want it to be much faster.

ML: Beyond the metronome.

KW: I would try to execute the notes. Like Ornette or like the saxophone. I

tried to play the pitches that he wrote, and Chris started doing these gestures,

running his hands up the strings fast and down doing a gestural approximation of
179

what the line was. To be honest with you I think Chris got closer to the spirit of the

song than I did. I was always way behind Ornette. He was always faster. Chris had

the shape of it. It was sort of like hearing Don Cherry. The quartet with Don

Cherry was playing while I was in Prime Time, where we did a couple of tunes with

them and when we were on the same bill. I went to some rehearsals just to check

out that quartet with Charlie and Billy and Don. I remember one-time Ornette had

this new music, typical Ornette with fast sinewy lines. They were trying to pull it

together as a new tune. Ornette said, “Hey Don, let me hear you play that melody

by yourself.” Don played it, and it sounded terrible. He was missing notes and

flubbing. Ornette said, “Okay let's play it together again.” They played it again and

Don's chops were not in good shape. He had problems with drugs and his health

and stuff. But the way he was playing, he was hitting all the right gestures at the

right time. When they played together it sounded really great. It sounded like the

old records, though by himself it didn't sound good at all. It was an interesting

lesson for me. It wasn't always about the pitches and the right articulation, it was

more about the feeling, the shape, and the gestures.

ML: Ornette didn’t give him a hard time, interesting. In 70s Prime Time

Bern was the melody guy and Ellerbee was like a rock and disco guy. At the Prime

Time reunion Lincoln Center, it looked like Denardo booked the two different

Prime Times. The Bern version seemed to have a 70s vibe and you guys had an 80's

and 90's thing. Did you and Chris choose your own territory or did Ornette try to

steer you into different positions like Bern and Ellerbee?


180

KW: He did that occasionally. He would give one of us chords to play, or I

want you to play this rhythmic figure, lock in with this person, and the other

person he might give a countermelody, or he would play the melody with him.

Chris was more the Rhythm guy and I was the Counterpoint Melody guy. After

rehearsing with the 70s guys it really seems that they were coming from an R&B

place. Our Prime Time was more jazz, more interaction and less funky. We were

more abstract. it's just a feeling I had after hanging out with both Prime Times.

Those guys are so funky.

ML: So, you and Badal Roy joined Prime Time on the same day.

Wessel: True, we started a band writing music together back then, and still

play together. I was still playing straight-ahead jazz on the side too when Prime

Time wasn’t working. I would be running to a gig at the 55 bar after an 8-hour

rehearsal with Ornette. I would say, okay that's the other side of the brain I have to

access now.

ML: I heard about Marathon rehearsals with Ornette from Bern.

KW: 6 to 8 hours, but Al McDowell was in both Prime Times and he said

what he did in the second Prime Time was nothing compared to what he did

during the first. Ornette would hire a chef so that they wouldn't even have to

leave. They wouldn't break, the chef would be cooking while they were playing. 12

or 13 hours was typical. I would be in the studio nine or ten hours. I would get

there at 12 or 1 and we would finish at 10. The call would be for noon, and maybe

one or two guys would get started. At least 7 hours was not unusual. The chef
181

happened with the old group. Those guys even lived together in Paris for 6

months, rehearsing the whole time.

ML: When I was studying with Ornette, he told me to quit all the bands I

was in and move in. That's when I blinked, and I couldn't do it. Those intensives

that you guys experienced, I only experienced about six or seven of those.

KW: You got the vibe. The rehearsals were like classes, you're in school with

Ornette. He might be talking about why a half-step is really a fifth. What is an A

and B? You would say it's a whole step. He would say no, it's a flat fifth. What's the

fifth of D? (A) What's the minor third of A-flat? (B) What’s D and A flat? (flat five!)

KW: He would work these intervallic relationships. I wouldn't take him

serious at first, but he kept doing that for years with us. He'd say what's E and F,

you would say a half step, he would say no it's a sixth. At a certain point, I thought

I would either lose my mind or figure out a way to understand this. I wanted to

find some sense in this, he's serious about this. One of the things he would say, he

would quote Buckminster Fuller, “If you think there's such a thing as up and down

your living in the Dark Ages.” A and B is a whole step, but A is also the fifth of D, A

is also the seventh of B, the second of A. It also has all these properties and

relationships. If you don't see those relationships, you just limit your

understanding of A and B as a whole step, and you're losing some possible

connections and information that you can use in your playing. Ornette heard this

stuff and understood it intellectually, all these different references. When I hear A

and B maybe I can use a D and A flat chord. It gives you other information and
182

other pathways. One of the things that I feel is important in understanding

harmolodics is that Ornette was always trying to generate more information from

the information that was there. More relationships from the simple relationships.

He never spoke about anything more complicated than the intervals from 1 to 8.

Major Minor triads, Seventh chords, Major scales. He never talked about altered

scales or half whole diminished or a flat 13. He used simple pieces of things and put

them together in very unusual ways. That’s why he liked playing over Prime Time

because there was so much information. there was so much information that we

were presenting all the time with all of these people playing simultaneously,

Ornette was just floating over the top synthesizing our lines into his own stuff.

One time I told Ornette that I really enjoyed a concert by the quartet, and

he said, “yeah that's just tombstoning.” The promoters wanted him to do stuff from

the old days. Nobody liked Prime Time. We were expensive, We were a loud

group, dissonant, the critics didn't like us, the promoters didn't like us. Some

people did, but I think a lot of people preferred the acoustic quartet. He wanted to

play with Prime Time, that was his concept. All that counter information

happening at the same time. His ear was pretty incredible. He could hear stuff and

generate lines based on what we were playing. I could always hear it. He just

picked up that line or that motive.

ML: I heard Haden say he couldn’t get Ornette away from Prime Time. Do

You consider yourself Harmolodic today?


183

KW: Definitely. He opened my ears up. He opened my approach to music

up. The way I write. The way I lead a band. The way I think and listen. He had a

big impact on me. I’m grateful. He knocked me out of my comfort zone for a long

time.

ML: Bern had this running joke about Harmolodics anonymous.

KW: Yeah, when we met, he said welcome to Harmolodics anonymous.

Bern had a complicated relationship with Prime Time.

ML: Bern Described a type of psychological warfare, that sometimes

bordered on manipulation. So how did Prime Time reach a conclusion?

KW: I never really knew that it was over. We were touring like crazy in the

beginning. Three weeks in Europe. Three weeks in the states. As time went on the

tours became shorter. A long tour would be a week. He became more selective

about what he was accepting. We were never finished, we just stopped working.

We were still part of the family. I still feel like I'm part of this Harmolodic family.

ML: Do you have students in Harmolodics?

KW: Some. I’ve done a bunch of workshops, some in Europe. I’ll force it on

some of my straight-ahead students.

ML: I started my chapter on Ornette and the guitar with Blood.

KW: He made a Harmolodic guitar chart if I can find it.

ML: Song X is like bomb in the middle.

KW: I think it’s a great record, Metheny was an Ornette fan. He had his

triadic thing. One thing though, Pat said he wrote the chords, but they sound like
184

Ornette chords. I was around Ornette enough to know how he put chords

together, and how he puts his tunes together. It’s possible that he may have

suggested a couple of things if Ornette was reading the chords off, but then I could

have said the same thing. There were a couple times I would say hey Ornette how

about a B-flat there? He wouldn't come in with the chords written. He would have

a melody and compose a chord progression there, so I would imagine that's what

happened on “Kathelin Gray.”

ML: The live version of “Kathelin Gray” that I heard you guys play was

totally different from any other version I’ve heard.

KW: He would change things and change chords from rehearsal to the next.

He wasn’t married to it.

ML: This has been extraordinarily helpful, I really appreciate this Kenny.
185

SECTION V: Conclusion

One of the goals in writing my thesis has been to challenge the idea that

Ornette Coleman did not know what he was doing. Suspicious of the rules of

Western harmony as a teenager, Coleman spent his entire life investigating how

music and sound function from his perspective, the way he heard music. All

evidence shows that Coleman may have spent more time playing in search of

answers than any other jazz musician. The evidence also shows that he knew

exactly what he was doing. He didn’t find his voice and then speak it for the rest of

his life. His entire life was a musical vision quest. He was never content to just find

and then document the answers to his questions through music. There were

always more questions to ask and answer, always new music to find and play, just

around the corner. Composing was intrinsic to his process, and evidence shows he

spent a great deal of time writing as well. Over and over, from recording to

concert, he continually searched for the musically unknown. In his later years I

witnessed him pick up the alto saxophone on several occasions and try to

improvise something completely new with a great deal of conviction, as if he were

on stage at the Five Spot with Miles Davis and John Coltrane in the front row.

Ornette was still going for it after decades years of doing just that. When he wasn’t

playing music, the search into the unknown continued as he would endlessly
186

question and discuss the mysteries of life, constantly in awe of birth, death, love,

and sex and how all of it related to music. His process came to be called

Harmolodics as I have shown. In time Coleman’s process became more and more a

spiritual practice. His honesty, fearlessness, and humble dedication to his own

identity changed the jazz world forever. Coleman didn’t invent the term free jazz,

but his arrival in New York and the attention he received opened the doors that

countless musicians have gone through ever since. Today in 2019 there are

hundreds, maybe thousands of serious musicians that are engaged in committed

improvisation, especially in New York City. All of them exist by way of Coleman’s

successful mission as the great metaphysical inventor in jazz history. Coleman

knew he would find things in his quest, and he knew how to look. Along the way

he formed key alliances with musician’s that became pillars in his story. Don

Cherry, Charlie Haden, David Izenzon, Charnett Moffett, Jamaaladeen Tacuma,

Billy Higgins, Ed Blackwell, Charles Moffett, Bern Nix, Kenny Wessel, and Denardo

Coleman will forever be known for their part in Coleman’s story. A story that

didn’t just change music but changed the world. Ornette Coleman’s music will

continue to change lives for centuries to come.


187

TRANSCRIPTIONS AND ANALYSIS

16. Kathelin Gray

“Kathelin Gray” was recorded on the album Song X released in December of

1985. It was recorded again by Ornette in 1995 with Prime Time on the album Tone

Dialing. It’s been recorded as many as nine times by others, as a type of

Harmolodic ballad. Coleman doesn’t solo but repeats the melody a second time for

Pat Metheny to solo over. Kenny Wessel who played the piece with Coleman and

provided insight, provided me with a copy of his personal lead sheet with chords

dictated to him from Coleman, please see page 193. I also used Pat Metheny’s

transcription from his personal fakebook as well as a transcription I found online

by James Mahone and a fourth transcription by Stephen Rush. I debated with Rush

over the key of the piece. I transcribed Charlie Haden’s bass line.

Key points that I discovered through analysis:

1- Coleman played his music based on knowledge of Western harmony and

a simultaneous need to not be bound by established rules. He said that what he

really wanted more than anything was to be able to play whatever he felt without

having to worry about whether it was right or wrong.


188

2- Ornette does use conventional harmony to an extent, on his own terms.

Sound and idea resolution are practiced, but proper voice leading is irrelevant.

4-He wants the music to be in a constant state of becoming and give the

listener just enough to hold on to.

5- “Kathelin Gray” works based on the strength of the ideas delivered with

emotional expression. Metheny and Haden are essential to this. I will discuss the

use of chords throughout. Metheny and Haden used them, while Ornette and the

melody were the core focus. Metheny adds chords, and Haden outlines chords

using roots and 5ths. I have broken the piece down into four sections. Please see

pages 192-195.

Section A (8 bars)

1- A 2-5-1 progression in A Major begins the piece and Ornette told Stephen

Rush there was a 2-5-1 present. It is only a starting point. An A Maj chord returns

in measure 6.

2- At the end of measure 5, Metheny adds a C Maj chord that Haden uses

on both choruses.

3- The melody in measures 6 and 7 are direct outlines of minor chords.

While Ornette told Kenny there was an A Maj at measure 7, both Metheny and
189

Haden play C#-, which is also in the melody. Kenny said that while these chords

were the ones Ornette gave them, he would change them all the time and in 3

months they might be told 3 different chords.

4-. Kenny also said the piece is more about the movement of a 4th and

section A measures 2, 4, 5, and 6 move up a 4th

Section B (8 bars)

1- In measure 7 Metheny plays F#-7b5 B7 and E- in place of Coleman’s G-

2- Measures 2-4 have more 4th movement

3-In measures 1-4 Haden uses Coleman’s chords and in measures 5-8 he

uses the Metheny chords.

3- Measures 2 and 3 are a whole step apart

4- Ornette frequently uses the third of the chord as the melody note. See

measures 2,3, 4 and 5

5- Section B is 3 ideas strung together


190

Section C (10 bars)

1- In measures 4-10 the melody is an outline of the Coleman chords

2-Measures 1-4 Haden plays both the Ornette and Metheny chords

3-In measures 9 and 10 Metheny adds rising 4th’s (Eb7 and F) Is he trying to

resolve the harmony to end the section?

Section D (7 bars)

1-In Measures 1 and 2 Haden uses the Metheny chords

2- In measures 5 and 6 Metheny adds chords to connect the melodic

phrases using the melody note as a b5 in 5 and a +5 in 6.

3- 4th movement continues in bars 1 3 and 4.

4- Measures 5-7 use Chord function II V III V I

5- the 33-bar piece that started in A ends in Ab

Previously discussed pianist and keyboardist Dave Bryant recorded a second

version of “Kathelin Gray.” He toured with Prime Time for five years before Tone

Dialing was recorded in Harlem. Their collaboration on the piece began with

Coleman handing him the lead sheet and telling him it was his feature. They
191

rehearsed the piece at Coleman’s Rivington St studio in the Bowery, when writer

Kathlin Gray herself arrived, who was in a relationship with Johnny Dolphin.

Bryant believes the reason Ornette chose to re-record the piece after the

version with Pat Metheny on Song X was that Metheny was taking composer co-

credit for adding the chords that he included in the Pat Metheny fakebook.

Coleman wrote out a new lead sheet and told Dave that he wanted to work out the

changes, and they spent several days working on the composition as a duo before

the full band rehearsal. By recording without Metheny present, Bryant believes

Coleman reclaimed the tune. He would change the chords at any given time,

confirmed by Kenny Wessel and Bern Nix. Bryant’s lead sheet contains the notes

dictated to bassist Al MacDowell, encircled above the measures. Of further interest

is that on the Coleman-Bryant lead sheet all three clefs are listed, including the

Harmolodic clef. Bryant’s lead sheet has all half notes with bar lines separating

melodic episodes without rests, serving as a guide or blueprint to learn the tune by

playing it. Bryant suggested that the guitar parts might have completely different

rhythmic notation.
192

Kathelin Gray Lead Sheet from Coleman from David Bryant


193

Kathelin Gray A
194

Kathelin Gray B
195

Kathelin Gray C
196

Kathelin Gray D
197

Klactoveedsedstene
198
199
200
201
202
203
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DISCOGRAPHY: COMMERCIAL ALBUMS

Something Else!!!! (Contemporary, 1958)

Tomorrow Is the Question! (Contemporary, 1959)

The Shape of Jazz to Come (Atlantic, 1959)

Change of the Century (Atlantic, 1959)

This Is Our Music (Atlantic, 1960)

Free Jazz (Atlantic, 1960)

Ornette! (Atlantic, 1961)

Ornette on Tenor (Atlantic, 1961)

The Art of the Improvisers (Atlantic, 1959-61 [1970])

Twins (Atlantic, 1961 [1971])

To Whom Who Keeps a Record (Atlantic, 1959-60 [1975])

Town Hall, 1962 (ESP Disk, released 1965)

Chappaqua Suite (Columbia, 1965)

An Evening with Ornette Coleman (Polydor International, 1965)

Who's Crazy Vol. 1 & 2 (1965)

The Paris Concert (1965)

Live at the Tivoli (1965)

At the "Golden Circle" Vol. 1 & 2 (Blue Note, 1965)

The Empty Foxhole (Blue Note, 1966)

The Music of Ornette Coleman - Forms & Sounds (1967)


280

The Unprecedented Music of Ornette Coleman (1968)

Live in Milano 1968 (1968)

New York Is Now! (Blue Note, 1968)

Love Call (Blue Note, 1968)

Ornette at 12 (Impulse! 1968)

Crisis (Impulse! 1969)

Friends and Neighbors: Live at Prince Street (Flying Dutchman, 1970)

Broken Shadows (Columbia, 1971)

Science Fiction (Columbia, 1971)

European Concert (1971)

The Belgrade Concert (1971)

Skies of America (Columbia, 1972)

Dancing in Your Head (A&M, 1976)

Body Meta (Artists House, 1976)

Soapsuds, Soapsuds (Artists House, 1977)

Of Human Feelings (Antilles, 1982)

Opening the Caravan of Dreams (Caravan of Dreams, 1983)

Prime Design/Time Design (Caravan of Dreams, 1983)

Song X (Geffen, 1986)

In All Languages (Caravan of Dreams, 1987)

Live at Jazzbuehne Berlin (1988)

Virgin Beauty (Portrait, 1988)


281

Naked Lunch (Milan, 1991)

Tone Dialing (Harmolodic/Verve, 1995)

Sound Museum: Hidden Man (Harmolodic/Verve, 1996)

Sound Museum: Three Women (Harmolodic/Verve, 1996)

Colors: Live from Leipzig (Harmolodic/Verve, 1997)

Sound Grammar (Sound Grammar, 2006)

Croydon Concert (Free Factory, 2008)

Live in Paris 1971 (Jazz Row, 2008)

The 1987 Hamburg Concert (Ais, 2011)

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