Saturday, May 26, 2007

Clifford Jordan & The Magic Triangle: Firm Roots (1975)


Clifford Jordan was a fine inside/outside player who somehow held his own with Eric Dolphy in the 1964 Charles Mingus Sextet. Jordan had his own sound on tenor almost from the start. He gigged around Chicago with Max Roach, Sonny Stitt, and some R&B groups before moving to New York in 1957. Jordan immediately made a strong impression, leading three albums for Blue Note (including a meeting with fellow tenor John Gilmore) and touring with Horace Silver (1957-1958), J.J. Johnson (1959-1960), Kenny Dorham (1961-1962), and Max Roach (1962-1964). After performing in Europe with Mingus and Dolphy, Jordan worked mostly as a leader but tended to be overlooked since he was not overly influential or a pacesetter in the avant-garde. A reliable player, Clifford Jordan toured Europe several times, was in a quartet headed by Cedar Walton in 1974-1975, and during his last years, led a big band. He recorded as a leader for Blue Note, Riverside, Jazzland, Atlantic (a little-known album of Leadbelly tunes), Vortex, Strata-East, Muse, SteepleChase, Criss Cross, Bee Hive, DIW, Milestone, and Mapleshade. ~ Scott Yanow, All Music Guide

OK, so maybe Glass Bead Games or Night Of The Mark VII is my favorite recordings, but Clifford Jordan, Cedar Walton, Sam Jones and Billy Higgins also did some truly inspired albums for SteepleChase in the mid-70s!

7 comments:

Nunne said...

http://www.megaupload.com/?d=OI5SWXKD

hideo said...

thanks for this beaut (and the Dickerson)!

jb said...

Great record. Thanks.

Jazz-Nekko said...

Nunne,

cheers for this Jordan outing!

For your information, whilst Jordan spent some time in New York, he remained a Chicago resident for all of his life. He remained actitve on the near north side of Chicago for many years - he is a Chicago-son jazz star - not New York!

Cheers,

JN

Reza said...

Hi nunne ..Mark VII posted @ mine :)

rm said...

Thank you!!

llamf said...

Nice one! I remember there is an album by Cedar Walton with the same title en roughly the same tracks (http://www.discogs.com/Cedar-Walton-Firm-Roots/release/1745309). Never got to listen to it though... Does anybody know the story behind this?

Keep up the good work!