Free jazz, often viewed as the most maligned music in history, can be a challenging listen for those unfamiliar with its unique sound. Thurston Moore's journey into this genre began with his friend Byron Coley providing him with a selection of jazz tapes to explore on tour. As he delved deeper, Moore discovered free jazz's liberating yet indebted nature, which resonates with experimentation found in noise and art rock.
Sonic Youth played live with the New York Art Quartet, while releasing free jazz albums on Ecstatic Peace! label. The latest project is "Now Jazz Now: 100 Essential Free Jazz and Improvisation Recordings 1960-80," co-written with Coley and Swedish saxophonist Mats Gustafsson. This book aims to introduce the music to a broader audience, offering engaging two-fisted writing and featuring Neneh Cherry's foreword.
Despite its complex nature, free jazz can evoke strong emotions and reactions. Joakim Haugland, owner of Smalltown Supersound label, describes it as relaxing and beautiful when listened on low volume. In contrast, Cecil Taylor's Silent Tongues is too complex to act as ambient music, but its complexity is fascinating.
Thurston Moore recommends exploring Joe McPhee's Tenor, which provides an instinctive emotional response. Unlike Machine Gun by Peter Brötzmann Octet, Tenor shifts from a melancholic lyricism to piercing discordancy without feeling jarring or difficult.
The key to free jazz lies in exploration and research, as suggested by Moore. "The records are the research," he says, "and the research is the spirit of so much of this music's essential vocabulary."
Recommended listening: Joe McPhee's Tenor and Peter Brötzmann's Machine Gun.
Books: "Now Jazz Now: 100 Essential Free Jazz and Improvisation Recordings 1960-80" by Thurston Moore, Byron Coley, and Mats Gustafsson; "Free Jazz and Improvisation on LP and CD 1965-2024" by Johannes Rød.
Sonic Youth played live with the New York Art Quartet, while releasing free jazz albums on Ecstatic Peace! label. The latest project is "Now Jazz Now: 100 Essential Free Jazz and Improvisation Recordings 1960-80," co-written with Coley and Swedish saxophonist Mats Gustafsson. This book aims to introduce the music to a broader audience, offering engaging two-fisted writing and featuring Neneh Cherry's foreword.
Despite its complex nature, free jazz can evoke strong emotions and reactions. Joakim Haugland, owner of Smalltown Supersound label, describes it as relaxing and beautiful when listened on low volume. In contrast, Cecil Taylor's Silent Tongues is too complex to act as ambient music, but its complexity is fascinating.
Thurston Moore recommends exploring Joe McPhee's Tenor, which provides an instinctive emotional response. Unlike Machine Gun by Peter Brötzmann Octet, Tenor shifts from a melancholic lyricism to piercing discordancy without feeling jarring or difficult.
The key to free jazz lies in exploration and research, as suggested by Moore. "The records are the research," he says, "and the research is the spirit of so much of this music's essential vocabulary."
Recommended listening: Joe McPhee's Tenor and Peter Brötzmann's Machine Gun.
Books: "Now Jazz Now: 100 Essential Free Jazz and Improvisation Recordings 1960-80" by Thurston Moore, Byron Coley, and Mats Gustafsson; "Free Jazz and Improvisation on LP and CD 1965-2024" by Johannes Rød.