Free Jazz
Free jazz breaks established rules to explore unpredictable sound territories. Born in the 1960s with Ornette Coleman, John Coltrane, and Cecil Taylor, this approach favors spontaneity, raw energy, and pure emotion.
Pieces transform into true musical conversations, without a fixed structure.
An experience to live to feel the music in all its power, without barriers or a safety net.
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Tokyo
Released: September 26, 2025 Genres: Jazz/Blues and Free Jazz Label: ECM RECORDS Format: CD -
Love Is Here - The Complete Paris 1975 ORTF Recordings
Released: September 19, 2025 Genres: Jazz/Blues and Free Jazz Label: ELEMENTAL MUSIC Format: CD -
Nueva Timba
Released: September 19, 2025 Genres: Jazz/Blues and Free Jazz Label: BLUE NOTE Format: CD
Free jazz: when total improvisation sets vinyl ablaze
A rupture born in late-1950s New York
Free jazz is not merely a subgenre, it is an aesthetic detonation that shattered the harmonic frameworks of traditional jazz. At the dawn of the 1960s, Ornette Coleman took the stage at the Five Spot with his piano-less quartet and his white plastic alto saxophone, leaving audiences and critics alike utterly stunned. His album The Shape of Jazz to Come (Atlantic, 1959) and the manifesto-like Free Jazz: A Collective Improvisation (Atlantic, 1961) laid the groundwork for a music in which collective improvisation breaks free from chord changes. In their wake, Cecil Taylor pushed the piano to unprecedented percussive extremes on Unit Structures (Blue Note, 1966), while Albert Ayler made his tenor scream like never before on Spiritual Unity (ESP-Disk, 1965).
Visionary labels and the essential records to own
Free jazz owes a great deal to the fearless labels that took a chance on music widely deemed difficult. ESP-Disk, founded by Bernard Stollman in 1964, remains the quintessential free jazz label: Albert Ayler's Spiritual Unity, Don Cherry's Where Is Brooklyn?, and Sun Ra's earliest recordings sit alongside Pharaoh Sanders. Impulse! Records, driven by Bob Thiele, delivered John Coltrane's monumental Ascension (1966), a 40-minute free mass featuring a furious double quartet. In France, the BYG Actuel label captured the finest of the avant-garde (Art Ensemble of Chicago, Archie Shepp, Don Cherry) in the late 1960s. For the collector, hunting down a well-preserved original ESP-Disk pressing or an Impulse! with the iconic orange-and-black spine is a passionate quest, and that is precisely where Vinyles.com proves invaluable as a price comparison tool across specialist record dealers.
