
Blank Forms Editions
Don Cherry - The Summer House Sessions
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In
1968,
Don
Cherry
had
already
established
himself
as
one
of
the
leading
voices
of
the
avant-garde.
Having
pioneered
free
jazz
as
a
member
of
Ornette
Coleman’s
classic
quartet,
and
with
a
high
profile
collaboration
with
John
Coltrane
under
his
belt,
the
globetrotting
jazz
trumpeter
settled
in
Sweden
with
his
partner
Moki
and
her
daughter
Neneh.
There,
he
assembled
a
group
of
Swedish
musicians
and
led
a
series
of
weekly
workshops
at
the
ABF,
or
Workers’
Educational
Association,
from
February
to
April
of
1968,
with
lessons
on
extended
forms
of
improvisation
including
breathing,
drones,
Turkish
rhythms,
overtones,
silence,
natural
voices,
and
Indian
scales.
That
summer,
saxophonist
and
recording
engineer
Göran
Freese
who
later
recorded
Don’s
classic
Organic
Music
Society
and
Eternal
Now
LPs
invited
Don,
members
of
his
two
working
bands,
and
a
Turkish
drummer
to
his
summer
house
in
Kummelnäs,
just
outside
of
Stockholm,
for
a
series
of
rehearsals
and
jam
sessions
that
put
the
prior
months’
workshops
into
practice.
Long
relegated
to
the
status
of
a
mysterious
footnote
in
Don’s
sessionography,
tapes
from
this
session,
as
well
as
one
professionally
mixed
tape
intended
for
release,
were
recently
found
in
the
vaults
of
the
Swedish
Jazz
Archive,
and
the
lost
Summer
House
Sessions
are
finally
available
over
fifty
years
after
they
were
recorded.
On
July
20,
the
musicians
gathered
at
Freese’s
summer
house
included
Bernt
Rosengren
(tenor
saxophone,
flutes,
clarinet),
Tommy
Koverhult
(tenor
saxophone,
flutes),
Leif
Wennerström
(drums),
and
Torbjörn
Hultcrantz
(bass)
from
Don’s
Swedish
group;
Jacques
Thollot
(drums)
and
Kent
Carter
(bass)
from
his
newly
formed
international
band
New
York
Total
Music
Company;
Bülent
Ates
(hand
drum,
drums),
who
was
visiting
from
Turkey;
and
Don
(pocket
trumpet,
flutes,
percussion)
himself.
Lacking
a
common
language,
the
players
used
music
as
their
common
means
of
communication.
In
this
way,
these
frenetic
and
freewheeling
sessions
anticipate
Don’s
turn
to
more
explicitly
pan-
ethnic
expression,
preceding
his
epochal
Eternal
Rhythm
dates
by
four
months.
The
octet,
comprising
musicians
from
America,
France,
Sweden,
and
Turkey,
was
a
perfect
vehicle
for
Don’s
budding
pursuit
of
“collage
music,”
a
concept
inspired
in
part
by
the
shortwave
radio
on
which
Don
listened
to
sounds
from
around
the
world.
Using
the
collage
metaphor,
Don
eliminated
solos
and
the
introduction
of
tunes,
transforming
a
wealth
of
melodies,
sounds,
and
rhythms
into
poetic
suites
of
different
moods
and
changing
forms.
The
Summer
House
Sessions
ensemble
joyously
layers
manifold
cultural
idioms,
traversing
the
airy
peaks
and
serene
valleys
of
Cherry’s
earthly
vision.
In
the
Swedish
Jazz
Archive
quite
a
few
other
recordings
from
the
same
day
were
to
be
found.
Some
of
the
highlights
are
heard
as
bonus
material
on
the
CD
edition
of
this
album.
The
octet
is
augmented
by
producer
and
saxophone
player
Gunnar
Lindqvist,
who
led
the
Swedish
free
jazz
orchestra
G.L.
Unit
on
the
album
Orangutang,
and
drummer
Sune
Spångberg,
who
recorded
with
Albert
Ayler
in
1962.
The
bonus
CD
also
includes
a
track
without
Cherry
featuring
Jacques
Thollot
joined
by
five
Swedes
including
Lindqvist,
Tommy
Koverhult,
Sune
Spångberg,
and
others.
With
liner
notes
by
Magnus
Nygren
and
album
art
featuring
a
cover
painting
by
Moki
Cherry:
Untitled,
ca.
1967–68.
Track
list:
1.
Summer
House
Sessions
2.
Summer
House
Sessions.
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