Label:
Delmark Records – DS-430
Format:
Vinyl, LP, Album / Country: US / Released: 1975
Style:
Free Jazz
Recorded October
10 & 11, 1972 at P.S. Studios, Chicago.
Artwork
By [Cover] – Graphica Studios, Chicago
Design
[Cover], Photography By [Cover] – Earl McGhee
Producer,
Supervised By – Robert G. Koester
Recorded
By – Paul Serrano
A1
- Ballad For New Souls ................................................................ 4:32
A2
- Things To Come From Those Now Gone ................................. 4:03
A3
- How Are You? ........................................................................... 4:33
A4
- In Retrospect .............................................................................
3:41
A5
- Ballad For Lost Souls ................................................................ 5:50
B1
- 1 And 4 Plus 2 And 7 ................................................................. 9:58
B2
- March Of The Transients ........................................................... 6:09
Muhal
Richard Abrams – piano, composed
Edwin
Daugherty – alto/tenor saxophone (tracks: A2, B2)
Richard
Brown – tenor saxophone (track: A4)
Wallace
McMillan – flute, alto saxophone (tracks: A1, A2, B2)
Emanuel
Cranshaw – vibraphone (tracks: A3, A5)
Reggie
Willis – bass (tracks: A2, B2)
Rufus
Reid – bass (tracks: A3, A4, A5)
Steve
McCall – drums, percussion (tracks: A2, B1)
Wilbur
Campbell – drums, percussion (tracks: A2, B2)
Ella
Jackson – vocal (track: A3)
Pianist
Muhal Richard Abrams will forever be remembered as a cofounder of Chicago's
venerated Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM). While
his leadership in the organization is admirable (he was president almost
continuously from 1965 to 1977), Abrams was a musical innovator as well. Things
to Come from Those Now Gone was his third album for Delmark. It’s the last to be reissued by the label and
remains one of Abrams most eclectic offerings. As if in deference to his
position as educator the gathering of players on hand for the date is largely
made up of AACM students. Abrams makes use of the musicians’ blossoming talents
in a broad variety of harmonic and melodic ways. Featuring the talents of
reedist Richard Brown, bassist Rufus Reid, drummer Steve McCall, and others,
the album is extremely varied, featuring different combinations of instruments
on each of the seven tracks. Abrams and company often dwell on elegiac musings
rooted in the blues, early jazz, and gospel, but there is also some ferocious
free jazz interplay at times. The pianist's playing is often contemplative,
filled with open spaces and spare chords; when he does pick up the pace,
though, Abrams produces material that fits nicely into the great bop-colored
traditions in much the same way the Art Ensemble of Chicago's music does.
Undoubtedly a sign of how fresh this album sounded when it was originally
released, the music here is timeless.
_ by Tad Hendrickson
50
Years of AACM - Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians
If
you find it, buy this album!