Phase One cover
Released

This album was recorded in February 1971, one of the Art Ensemble’s final projects before leaving Paris to return to the US. Like several of their other albums from this era — People In Sorrow, Reese and the Smooth Ones, Tutankhamun — it consists of two side-long pieces. “Ohnedaruth,” which was the spiritual name Alice Coltrane bestowed upon her husband John after his death, begins slowly, drawing the listener in with soft percussion and bass, but once it kicks off properly it’s a high-energy, 20-minute sprint, with Malachi Favors and Famoudou Don Moye (a relatively recent addition to the band) laying down a hard-swinging groove as the horns, particularly trumpeter Lester Bowie, go off. The second side, “Lebert Aaly” (a jumbled version of “Albert Ayler”) never develops a groove; instead, the horns moan back and forth across the sonic field like lost livestock, with percussion rattling ominously. In the piece’s final third, a gently struck xylophone adds a note of tenderness.

Phil Freeman

Recommended by

Suggestions
Renunciation cover

Renunciation

David S. Ware Quartet
Funky Donkey, Vols. 1 & 2 cover

Funky Donkey, Vols. 1 & 2

Luther Thomas, Saint Louis Creative Ensemble, Human Arts Ensemble
Nohome cover

Nohome

Nohome
Playing cover

Playing

Charlie Haden, Ed Blackwell, Don Cherry, Dewey Redman
End to Slavery cover

End to Slavery

Eugene Chadbourne
Open the Gates cover

Open the Gates

Irreversible Entanglements
Woodcuts cover

Woodcuts

Paal Nilssen-Love, Peter Brötzmann
93696 cover

93696

Liturgy
Bonita cover

Bonita

Sidsel Endresen, Stian Westerhus
Life Goes On cover

Life Goes On

Carla Bley, Andy Sheppard, Steve Swallow