Dogon A.D. cover

Dogon A.D.

Released

Alto saxophonist Julius Hemphill’s debut album, self-released in 1972 on his own Mbari label, then reissued five years later on Arista, is a stark, sometimes frightening masterpiece. On the opening title piece, Hemphill and trumpeter Baikida Carroll march to Philip Wilson’s militaristic beat, driven on by Abdul Wadud’s fierce cello. The saxophonist, like Ornette Coleman born in Fort Worth, Texas (they attended the same high school, eight years apart), is similarly driven to explode and embrace the blues at once, but he’s got a theatrical flair that turns avant-garde jazz into ecstatic ritual.

Phil Freeman

Recommended by

Suggestions
Fish & Steel cover

Fish & Steel

Per-Åke Holmlander, Mats Äleklint, Paal Nilssen-Love
Starship Africa cover

Starship Africa

Creation Rebel
Live in Vilnius cover

Live in Vilnius

David S. Ware Quartet
Parlando cover

Parlando

Christopher Clarino
Spirits Aloft cover

Spirits Aloft

Rashied Ali, Henry Grimes
Last Exit cover

Last Exit

Last Exit
lena cover

lena

Anna Högberg Attack
Glitter Wolf cover

Glitter Wolf

Allison Miller's Boom Tic Boom