- Oct 9, 2006
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Just a heads up, there's a great documentary series on Netflix right now called Ken Burns: Jazz.
Spans jazz from its inception to its current incarnation. Really, really well done, highly recommended for anyone who knows about, or wants to learn about, jazz.
Impulse Records was one of the most storied and important jazz labels of the 1960s – a haven for different generations of forward thinking musicians as reflected by its slogan (“The New Wave of Jazz is on…”). In “Impulse-ive Moods,” the latest episode of his “Across 135th Street” program, Jeff “Chairman” Mao selects a few personal favorites from the label’s catalog. While the spiritual big poppa of Impulse artists, John Coltrane, is of course represented (with Live at Birdland’s “Your Lady”), so too is the work of his collaborators (Elvin Jones & Jimmy Garrison’s baritone-sax heavy “Half and Half”) and the new breed experimentalists Trane mentored (Albert Ayler’s meditative “Our Prayer”; Archie Shepp’s take on Duke Ellington’s “Prelude to a Kiss”). Elsewhere, Yusef Lateef springs Middle Eastern sounds on a receptive South Philly crowd, Charles (“Such nimble fingers” – [emoji]169[/emoji] Guru) Mingus drops that bass to the delight of Gang Starr Foundation fans, Roy Haynes snaps skulls and snares, and Pharoah Sanders spreads love the Impulse way.