Lawrence of Newark cover

Lawrence of Newark

Released

After leaving Blue Note and spending a couple of years in drummer Tony Williams’ band Lifetime, Larry Young signed with the indie label Perception and in 1973 released this wild album of spaced-out jams with dubby, psychedelic production, electrified trumpet and sax, guest sax solos from a pseudonymous Pharoah Sanders, cello, James “Blood” Ulmer on guitar, and about nine percussionists. It’s a beautiful record that fits snugly alongside early ’70s work by Sanders, Herbie Hancock’s Mwandishi, Miles Davis and others. Unfortunately, the label went under a few months after it came out, and it was effectively lost for decades. Since being reissued on CD in the early 2000s, and again since, it’s finally gotten the respect it deserves. Free playing from the horns, dense polyrhythmic grooves, and Young’s dreamlike organ make it both an artifact of a particular progressive era in jazz and rock, and weirdly timeless.

Phil Freeman

Organist Young was in a wildly creative zone in the late ’60s and early ’70s; he played on Miles Davis’s Bitches Brew, the first three albums by drummer Tony Williams’ Lifetime, and the Carlos Santana/John McLaughlin spiritual guitar summit Love Devotion Surrender. This unjustly obscure 1973 album crosses contemporaneous work by saxophonist Pharoah Sanders (who guests, albeit pseudonymously) with Davis’s On The Corner; Young, guitarist James “Blood” Ulmer, bassist Juini Booth, Cedric Lawson on electric piano, and a roomful of percussionists create a swirling, psychedelic, at times dubby cloud of space-jazz that’s more atmospheric than tune-based, but utterly mesmerizing.

Phil Freeman

Suggestions
The Afterlife cover

The Afterlife

The Comet Is Coming
Back East cover

Back East

Joshua Redman
lena cover

lena

Anna Högberg Attack
Revés / Yosoy cover

Revés / Yosoy

Café Tacuba
Urban Bushmen cover

Urban Bushmen

Art Ensemble of Chicago
Live at Birdland cover

Live at Birdland

John Coltrane
No New York cover

No New York

Various Artists
Last Desert cover

Last Desert

Liberty Ellman