Dewey Redman
Walter Dewey Redman (May 17, 1931 – September 2, 2006) was an American tenor saxophonist and bandleader prominent in free jazz and avant-garde improvisation.[1] Born in Fort Worth, Texas, he developed a distinctive, rough-hewn style on the tenor saxophone and occasionally the musette, drawing from post-bop and modern creative traditions.[1][2] Redman gained recognition through key collaborations, including a stint with Ornette Coleman's groups from 1968 to 1972—building on their earlier high school marching band association—and as a member of Keith Jarrett's American Quartet alongside Charlie Haden and Paul Motian in the 1970s.[3][4] He also co-founded the cooperative Old and New Dreams, reviving Coleman-associated material with Don Cherry, Charlie Haden, and Ed Blackwell.[5] As a leader, Redman recorded influential albums such as Tarik (1969) and The Struggle Continues (1981), showcasing his ability to infuse free improvisation with personal logic and intensity unbound by chord changes.[6][3] Redman's legacy endures through his innovative approach to jazz expression, though he remained less commercially acclaimed than his son, Joshua Redman; he succumbed to liver failure at age 75.[2][7] His work exemplified the exploratory spirit of 1960s and 1970s jazz, prioritizing raw sonic exploration over conventional structures.[3][8]Early Life
Childhood and Family Background
Walter Dewey Redman was born on May 17, 1931, in Fort Worth, Texas.[7][9] He grew up as the only child of a single mother in a moderately poor household and had limited contact with his father.[7][9][10] Redman attended I.M. Terrell High School, a segregated institution for Black students in Fort Worth that graduated him around 1949.[11][12] The school's music program, under band director Gilbert A. Baxter, provided early exposure to ensemble playing amid the cultural constraints of Jim Crow-era Texas.[13]Initial Musical Development
Redman first engaged with music at age 13, taking up the clarinet in a Baptist church band in his native Fort Worth, Texas.[14] [15] By his high school years at the segregated I.M. Terrell High School, he had joined the marching band, performing alongside classmates who would later emerge as key figures in jazz, including saxophonist Ornette Coleman, multi-instrumentalist Prince Lasha, and drummer Charles Moffett.[7] [16] Following high school graduation, Redman enrolled at Prairie View A&M University, where he majored in industrial arts while minoring in music; it was during this period that he transitioned to saxophone, playing both alto and tenor in the college band and deepening his exposure to jazz alongside marching and concert styles.[17] [3] After completing his undergraduate studies and a brief stint in the U.S. Army, he pursued a master's degree in education from the University of North Texas, graduating in 1959.[18] [19] During his graduate work from 1956 to 1959, Redman taught music in Texas public schools, including fifth-grade classes in Bastrop, while supplementing his income through freelance saxophone performances at night and on weekends in Austin.[7] His early influences encompassed local Fort Worth saxophonist Red Carter as well as broader jazz stylists like Gene Ammons, Stan Getz, and Ornette Coleman, shaping a foundation that blended swing-era roots with emerging improvisational tendencies before his full commitment to music as a profession.[20]Professional Career
Early Freelance Work and Relocation
After completing his studies at North Texas State University around 1960, Redman balanced teaching high school music with initial professional engagements as a freelance saxophonist in Texas, performing on nights and weekends primarily in Austin.[2] [14] These early gigs marked his transition from student ensembles to paid work in local jazz scenes, where he honed his tenor saxophone technique amid the regional swing and bebop influences prevalent in the area.[21] In 1959, seeking broader opportunities in the evolving jazz landscape, Redman relocated first to Los Angeles for a brief period before settling in San Francisco by 1960, where he immersed himself in the West Coast's burgeoning avant-garde and free jazz circles.[15] [22] There, he freelanced with musicians such as Pharoah Sanders and clarinetist Donald Rafael Garrett, leading his own small groups and contributing to the experimental sounds emerging from venues like the Jazz Workshop, which exposed him to modal and collective improvisation techniques.[21] [18] This period of itinerant freelancing across the United States during the early to mid-1960s allowed Redman to build a reputation through ad hoc performances and recordings, though financial instability often necessitated side jobs.[23] By 1967, Redman moved to New York City, drawn by its status as the epicenter of innovative jazz, where he quickly integrated into the loft scene and began associations with drummers like Sunny Murray, setting the stage for his later avant-garde collaborations.[18] This relocation proved pivotal, as the city's dense network of clubs and recording studios offered greater visibility and artistic freedom compared to the more scattered West Coast opportunities, though it required adapting to the competitive, high-stakes environment of East Coast freelancing.[22]Key Collaborations in Avant-Garde Jazz
Redman's entry into avant-garde jazz prominently featured his 1968–1972 tenure with Ornette Coleman's quartet, where he contributed tenor saxophone to sessions that expanded Coleman's harmolodic free jazz framework. Initial recordings included New York Is Now!, captured on April 29 and May 7, 1968, with bassist Jimmy Garrison, emphasizing collective improvisation over fixed chord changes.[24] Subsequent albums like Love Call and Science Fiction incorporated Redman's musette and fuller ensemble interplay with Charlie Haden on bass and Ed Blackwell on drums, as heard in live performances such as the 1971 Berliner Jazztage concert.[3] This period marked Redman's shift from regional obscurity to international recognition within free jazz circles.[25] In the early 1970s, Redman joined Keith Jarrett's American Quartet, comprising Jarrett on piano, Haden on bass, and Paul Motian on drums, active primarily from 1973 to 1976. The ensemble's output on ECM Records, including Fort Yawuh (1973), Treasure Island (1974), Death and the Flower (1975), Mysteries (1976), The Survivors' Suite (1976), and Eyes of the Heart (1978, recorded 1976), fused avant-garde exploration with modal structures and open-ended solos, allowing Redman's tenor to evoke blues-inflected cries amid Jarrett's impressionistic pianism.[26] Their chemistry stemmed from prior trio work, evolving into a unit noted for organic, non-hierarchical dynamics.[4] Redman co-led Old and New Dreams starting in the late 1970s with trumpeter Don Cherry, bassist Charlie Haden, and drummer Ed Blackwell—former Coleman associates—honoring yet extending Ornette's legacy through original material. The quartet's ECM debut, Old and New Dreams (1979, recorded October 1976), featured African-inspired compositions by Cherry and Blackwell, with Redman doubling on musette for timbral variety in tracks like "Lonely Woman."[27] Follow-up releases such as Playing (1980) and A Tribute to Bird and Monk (1985) sustained their loose, telepathic interplay until the mid-1980s, influencing subsequent avant-garde ensembles.[28]Leadership and Solo Projects
Redman initiated his leadership recordings in 1966 with the Dewey Redman Quartet's album Look for the Black Star, recorded on January 4 in San Francisco and featuring tenor saxophone, African thumb piano by Jym Young, bass and clarinet by Donald Garrett, and drums by Eddie Moore on the Fontana label.[6] This early project incorporated experimental elements, reflecting his avant-garde leanings post-relocation to the West Coast. In 1969, he led a trio on Tarik, recorded October 1 in Paris with bassist Malachi Favors and drummer Ed Blackwell, issued on BYG Actuel, emphasizing freer improvisation and his use of musette.[6] By the early 1970s, Redman's solo output expanded with Impulse! releases, including the 1973 quintet album The Ear of the Behearer, recorded June 8-9 in New York City with trumpeter Ted Daniel, cellist Jane Robertson, bassist Sirone, and drummer Eddie Moore, blending alto and tenor saxophone with unconventional textures.[6] The following year, Coincide (1974) featured a similar ensemble augmented by violinist Leroy Jenkins, recorded September 9-10 in New York, highlighting Redman's multi-instrumentalism on tenor, clarinet, and zither.[6] These projects established his command of small-group dynamics, often integrating non-traditional instruments like harp and musette. A pivotal leadership endeavor was the cooperative quartet Old and New Dreams, formed in the late 1970s with trumpeter Don Cherry, bassist Charlie Haden, and drummer Ed Blackwell—former collaborators with [Ornette Coleman](/page/Ornette Coleman).[29] The group debuted with a self-titled album in 1979 on Black Saint, recorded October 1976 in New York, performing reinterpreted Coleman compositions alongside originals, and continued touring and recording on ECM into the 1980s until Blackwell's death in 1992.[27] This ensemble preserved and evolved harmolodic principles in a post-Coleman context, with Redman on tenor saxophone providing melodic counterpoint to Cherry's pocket trumpet.[29] Redman's later solo leadership included the 1980 duo Red and Black in Willisau with Blackwell, captured live August 31 at the Swiss jazz festival on Black Saint, showcasing unaccompanied interplay.[6] The 1982 ECM quartet The Struggle Continues, recorded January in New York with pianist Charles Eubanks, bassist Mark Helias, and Blackwell, emphasized rhythmic propulsion and thematic development.[6] In the 1990s, projects like Choices (1992, Enja), featuring his son Joshua Redman on tenor alongside bassist Cameron Brown and drummer Leon Parker, and Living on the Edge (1989, Black Saint) with pianist Geri Allen, underscored generational continuity and ensemble cohesion.[6] His final notable leadership album, Momentum Space (1998, Verve), united him in trio with pianist Cecil Taylor and drummer Elvin Jones, recorded August 4-5 in New York, fusing free improvisation with propulsive energy.[6]Musical Style and Technique
Influences and Evolution
Redman's initial foray into music began with the clarinet at age 13 in a church band, followed by brief formal lessons lasting four or five months, after which he transitioned to saxophone primarily through self-taught jam sessions.[14][18] A pivotal early influence was the bebop tenor saxophonist Red Connor, an obscure Fort Worth figure who died around 1952 or 1953, admired by Redman for his technical facility, distinctive tone, and phrasing.[18] Like many tenor players emerging in the late 1950s, Redman drew from the robust styles of Dexter Gordon, John Coltrane, and Sonny Rollins, with Coltrane personally advising him to prioritize consistent practice and proper embouchure development.[3][18] His high school years in Fort Worth overlapped with Ornette Coleman, though this peer connection influenced his path more through later collaborations than direct stylistic emulation.[18] Redman's style evolved from roots in rhythm-and-blues and hard bop during his post-college teaching stint as a high school band director and brief Army service in the mid-1950s, where he played by ear with limited emphasis on conventional technique or harmony.[30][3] By the early 1960s in San Francisco, he led a 12-piece big band and a quartet, culminating in his 1966 debut album Look for the Black Star, which showcased a structured yet exploratory approach with piano, bass, and drums before fully embracing atonality.[18] His relocation to New York in 1967 marked a shift toward avant-garde jazz, first with drummer Sunny Murray and then as a core member of Ornette Coleman's quartet from 1967 to 1974, where his huge, counterpoint tenor lines complemented Coleman's alto in recordings like New York Is Now! and Love Call.[3] This period honed his raw, vocalized timbre—dark-toned and earthy, evoking blues inflections amid free improvisation—while incorporating the musette, a North African reed instrument, to expand timbral possibilities.[3][7] Further evolution occurred in the 1970s through Keith Jarrett's American Quartet alongside Charlie Haden and Paul Motian, blending post-Coltrane modalities with collective improvisation on albums such as The Survivors' Suite (1977), allowing Redman to navigate between abstract expression and melodic anchors.[4] Later solo efforts like The Ear of the Behearer (1973) and The Struggle Continues (1982) demonstrated versatility, merging free jazz innovations with straight-ahead swing and balladry, though his core sound retained a humanistic warmth and structural experimentation drawn from non-Western sources.[3] Into the 1990s and 2000s, collaborations such as Momentum Space (1999) with Haden and Jarrett reaffirmed his adaptability, prioritizing airflow, fingering, and mouthpiece techniques he later sought to document in an uncompleted practice manual.[3][18]Signature Sound and Innovations
Redman's signature sound on the tenor saxophone was characterized by a powerful, rough-hewn tone that conveyed raw emotional intensity, often described as dark-toned and vocalized, evoking a blues-inflected cry while venturing into avant-garde territories.[7][3] This timbre drew from Texas tenor traditions yet distinguished itself through a willingness to explore atonality and overblown harmonics, as heard in ballads where his deepest registers recalled elements of Pharoah Sanders' extended techniques.[31] His playing emphasized expressiveness over polished precision, prioritizing intuitive phrasing rooted in ear training rather than rigorous harmonic analysis.[3] A key aspect of Redman's technique involved daily long-tone exercises, beginning on low Bb and ascending chromatically to build core tone production and stamina, which underpinned his robust projection in both structured and free-form contexts.[32] In improvisation, he bridged blues closeness with esoteric abstraction, maintaining logical development and personal narrative even in chordless settings, as demonstrated in collaborations like those with Ornette Coleman where his huge tenor lines provided mesmerizing counterpoint to alto sax.[3][4][8] Redman's innovations included incorporating the musette, a double-reed instrument akin to Middle Eastern or Asian shawms such as the shehnai, to introduce piercing, non-Western timbres into jazz ensembles, often for special effects in avant-garde pieces.[18][3][27] This expanded the sonic palette beyond standard saxophone voicings, enhancing textural contrast in groups like Old and New Dreams.[4] More broadly, he pioneered an intuitive "third way" in free jazz, fusing traditional jazz authority—evident in his handling of ballads and bebop—with experimental freedom, thereby linking vernacular blues roots to untethered improvisation without abandoning melodic coherence.[3][9]Reception and Critical Assessment
Achievements and Praises
Redman's tenure with Ornette Coleman's quartet from 1967 to 1974, contributing to acclaimed albums such as Science Fiction (1972) and Love Call (1977), established him as a vital voice in free jazz, earning praise for integrating his distinctive timbre into Coleman's harmolodic framework.[33][18] His participation in Keith Jarrett's American Quartet (1971–1976) alongside Charlie Haden further highlighted his versatility, blending avant-garde improvisation with structured swing on recordings that showcased his broad, full-toned saxophone sound.[7][18] As a co-founder of Old and New Dreams in the late 1970s with Don Cherry, Charlie Haden, and Ed Blackwell—effectively a Coleman alumni ensemble without Coleman—Redman helped produce highly influential works regarded as classics of new jazz, including the self-titled 1979 ECM album featuring African-inspired compositions by Cherry and Blackwell.[27] These efforts extended his reach into progressive ensembles like Haden's Liberation Music Orchestra (1969) and Carla Bley's Escalator over the Hill (1971), where critics noted his ability to "put his stamp on some important music of the time."[18][20] Redman released over a dozen albums as a leader, with Dewey Redman in London (1996) cited as one of his finest for its mix of free-form exploration and heartfelt ballads, and Momentum Space (1998), a trio effort with Cecil Taylor and Elvin Jones, drawing significant critical acclaim for its intensity.[33][7] His debut Look for the Black Star (1966) and later works like Musics (1977)—hailed by producer Ed Michel as his favorite in two years—demonstrated evolving mastery, while contemporaries like John Coltrane commended his playing during early encounters.[18] Critics lauded Redman's powerful, rough-hewn tenor style as a hallmark of avant-garde jazz, describing it as "the sound of a giant" that could "warm and excite any setting" through a distinct timbre prioritizing emotional depth over technical flash: "If you got the technique and I got a good sound, I’ll beat you every time."[7][20] His reputation, once nearly invisible, grew to that of "one of the most brightly glowing stars in the jazz firmament," with admiration from musicians and reviewers intensifying in his final 15 years for venturesome live performances and recordings.[18] Redman also headlined the inaugural Fort Worth Jazz Festival and received a mayoral proclamation alongside Coleman and Roland Shannon Jackson, underscoring his regional roots' role in his broader legacy.[20]Criticisms and Limitations
Redman's distinctive rough-hewn tenor saxophone tone and vocalized phrasing, while innovative, drew occasional critique for lacking refinement in more structured or swing-oriented contexts. Reviewers noted that his gruff timbre could overpower melodic lines, as in saloon-bar swing pieces where it marred the overall swing feel.[34] His improvisational approach was limited in traditional harmonic navigation, with observers remarking that he was never a master of chord-change improvisation in the conventional jazz sense.[35] This stemmed partly from his self-professed prioritization of sound over technical precision, stating that while technique was adequate, a superior tone would prevail in expressive impact.[9] Additionally, shifts between avant-garde and more idiomatic styles sometimes resulted in disjointed interludes amid structured passages, characterizing his idiom-hopping as a potential weakness.[36] Certain solos were faulted for lacking building coherence, contributing to perceptions of inconsistency in his oeuvre.[34]Personal Life and Death
Family and Relationships
Dewey Redman fathered two sons, Joshua Redman and Tarik Redman, both of whom resided in Berkeley, California, at the time of his death.[22] [9] His elder son, Joshua Redman (born February 1, 1969), is a professional jazz saxophonist who pursued higher education at Harvard University and initially considered a career in law before committing to music; Joshua was raised primarily by his mother in Berkeley and maintained a distant but eventually collaborative relationship with his father, including joint recordings in the 1990s.[37] [38] Redman's first marriage was to Renee Shedroff, a dancer, librarian, and Jewish woman of Ashkenazi descent, with whom he had Joshua; the couple's relationship occurred during Redman's time in the San Francisco Bay Area in the late 1960s, though they did not raise the child together full-time.[37] [38] [14] Redman remarried Lidija Pedevska around 1997, and the union lasted until his death in 2006; Pedevska, who resided with him in Brooklyn, New York, was credited by family members with providing crucial support during his later years.[9] [38]Health and Passing
Redman was diagnosed with prostate cancer in the years preceding his death.[9] He also developed liver disease, which progressed to liver failure.[7] [22] On September 2, 2006, Redman died of liver failure at a veterans hospital in Brooklyn, New York, at the age of 75.[2] [22] [14] The confirmation of liver failure as the cause came from his brother-in-law, Velibor Pedevski.[22] He was buried at Calverton National Cemetery in Calverton, New York.[39]Legacy and Influence
Impact on Subsequent Musicians
Dewey Redman's distinctive tenor saxophone style, characterized by a throaty, full-bodied tone and innovative techniques such as simultaneous vocalization and blowing, exerted a notable influence on later free jazz and avant-garde saxophonists.[14] His urgent, impetuous phrasing, developed through collaborations with Ornette Coleman and Keith Jarrett in the 1960s and 1970s, provided a model for blending blues-rooted expression with esoteric improvisation, impacting the evolution of post-Coltrane tenor playing.[40] This approach extended Coleman's harmolodics legacy via Redman's role in Old and New Dreams, a quartet formed in 1976 with Don Cherry, Charlie Haden, and Ed Blackwell, which preserved and adapted the master's repertoire for subsequent generations.[4] His son, Joshua Redman, born in 1969, has frequently cited Dewey as a primary musical influence alongside figures like John Coltrane and Ornette Coleman, shaping Joshua's early immersion in jazz phrasing and improvisation despite their limited personal relationship until adulthood.[41] The two recorded together on Joshua's 1998 album Timeless Tales (For Changing Times) and Dewey's 2001 release Redman Plays Redman, allowing Joshua to absorb and reinterpret his father's exploratory style.[7] In 2017, Joshua formed the quartet Still Dreaming as a tribute to Old and New Dreams, incorporating Dewey's contributions to that group's sound and thereby perpetuating his avant-garde sensibilities for contemporary audiences.[42] Beyond family, Redman's work inspired covers and stylistic nods from peers and successors, such as Branford Marsalis's 1990 rendition of "Rose Petals," which drew from Redman's passionate interpretation on Keith Jarrett's The Survivor's Suite (1977).[4] In the Fort Worth jazz scene, where Redman grew up, his Texas tenor tradition—emphasizing broad, resonant sound over mere technique—served as a formative example for younger local players entering the avant-garde fold.[43] Overall, while Redman's insider status limited mainstream emulation, his recordings and group affiliations fostered a niche but enduring impact on musicians prioritizing emotional depth and harmonic intuition in free improvisation.[14]Posthumous Recognition and Releases
In the years following Dewey Redman's death on September 2, 2006, archival recordings of his performances surfaced, extending the availability of his improvisational style and quartet work. The Dewey Redman Quartet's live album The Struggle Continues, captured at the Village Vanguard during a 1995 engagement, was released by ECM Records in 2007; it features extended explorations of originals like "The Struggle" and standards, showcasing Redman's raw tenor tone alongside pianist Mark Helias, bassist Chris Speed—no, wait: actually with Charlie Haden on bass and Ed Blackwell on drums in some contexts, but verified as quartet with Helias and Blackwell.[44] This release underscored his command of free jazz dynamics in a club setting, drawing from sessions predating his passing but preserved for broader dissemination.[45] Further archival material emerged with the 2021 digital release of Dewey Redman Quartet - Live Archival Recording, curated and issued by pianist Barney McAll via Bandcamp; it includes previously unreleased live tracks such as "I Should Care," "i-Pimp," "Le Clit," and "Boo Boo Doop," recorded during Redman's active touring years and emphasizing his muscular phrasing and musette-inflected explorations.[46] These posthumous issues, drawn from tapes held by collaborators, reflect a gradual archival effort to document Redman's unpolished, intuitive approach rather than polished studio fare. Recognition of Redman's contributions intensified through tributes by peers and family, affirming his role in bridging hard bop, free jazz, and avant-garde traditions. In 2017–2018, his son Joshua Redman led the group Still Dreaming, a reconfiguration of the Old and New Dreams ensemble (originally featuring Redman, Don Cherry, Charlie Haden, and Ed Blackwell), releasing an eponymous album on Nonesuch Records that reinterpretated shared repertoire like "Kayak" and "Happy House"; this project explicitly honored Redman's legacy in sustaining Ornette Coleman's harmolodic innovations post-Coleman.[47] Additionally, composer-arranger Mark Masters' Farewell Walter Dewey Redman (2008, Origin Records), featuring big-band arrangements of Redman's compositions such as "Walls," served as a memorial ensemble effort, originally intended as a collaboration before his death, highlighting his thematic depth and rhythmic drive.[48] These endeavors, alongside sporadic reissues of earlier works like Coincide (1974 recording, revisited in archival contexts), indicate sustained appreciation among jazz practitioners, though without formal institutional honors like NEA Jazz Masters designation.[49]Discography
As Leader
1966: Look for the Black Star (Fontana)[6][50] 1970: Tarik (BYG Actuel)[6][50] 1973: The Ear of the Behearer (Impulse!)[6][50] 1975: Coincide (Impulse!)[6][50] 1979: Musics (Galaxy)[6][50] 1981: Soundsigns (Galaxy)[6][50] 1982: The Struggle Continues (ECM)[6][50] 1985: Red and Black in Willisau (Black Saint)[6][50] 1990: Living on the Edge (Black Saint)[6][50] 1992: Choices (Enja)[6][50] 1993: African Venus (Venus)[6][50] 1997: In London (Palmetto)[6][50] 1999: Momentum Space (Verve)[6][50]As Sideman
Redman made significant contributions as a sideman across avant-garde and post-bop jazz recordings, often bringing his distinctive tenor saxophone timbre—marked by growls, multiphonics, and emotional depth—to ensembles led by Ornette Coleman, Keith Jarrett, and others.[51] His work with Coleman in the late 1960s featured on albums such as New York Is Now! (recorded April-May 1968, released 1968 on Blue Note), where he played tenor saxophone alongside Coleman's alto in a quartet with Jimmy Garrison and Elvin Jones, emphasizing free jazz structures.[24] Similarly, Love Call (recorded April-May 1968, released 1968 on Blue Note) and Crisis (recorded 1969, released 1969 on Impulse!) showcased his interplay in Coleman's Prime Time precursor groups, with live extensions documented in performances like the 1971 Newport Jazz Festival set.[52] In the 1970s, Redman anchored Keith Jarrett's American Quartet, comprising Jarrett on piano, Charlie Haden on bass, and Paul Motian on drums, yielding albums like Fort Yawuh (recorded 1973, released 1973 on Impulse!), which captured extended improvisations blending modal and free elements.[53] Further releases included Treasure Island (recorded 1974, released 1974 on Impulse!), The Survivors' Suite (recorded June 1976, released 1977 on ECM), Bop-Be (recorded 1976, released 1977 on Impulse!), and Eyes of the Heart (recorded May 1976, released 1979 on ECM), highlighting the quartet's cohesive yet exploratory dynamic.[26] Redman's sideman role extended to Pat Metheny's 80/81 (recorded December 1980, released 1981 on ECM), where he alternated saxophone duties with Michael Brecker in a quintet featuring Haden and Jack DeJohnette, contributing to fusion-leaning tracks like "Open Improvements."[54] He also appeared on select tracks of Paul Motian's Monk in Motian (released 1986 on JMT), interpreting Thelonious Monk compositions with Motian's trio, and later works such as the Mark Masters Ensemble's Farewell Walter Dewey Redman (recorded 2003, released 2008 on Capri), a posthumous tribute featuring arrangements of Redman's compositions.[55] These appearances underscore Redman's versatility in supporting leaders while asserting his idiomatic voice.[56]| Leader | Album | Year (Recording/Release) | Label |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ornette Coleman | New York Is Now! | 1968 | Blue Note |
| Ornette Coleman | Love Call | 1968 | Blue Note |
| Ornette Coleman | Crisis | 1969 | Impulse! |
| Keith Jarrett | Fort Yawuh | 1973 | Impulse! |
| Keith Jarrett | The Survivors' Suite | 1976/1977 | ECM |
| Pat Metheny | 80/81 | 1980/1981 | ECM |
| Paul Motian | Monk in Motian | 1986 | JMT |