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  1. Sonny's Time Now is an album by American free jazz drummer Sunny Murray, his first as a leader. It was recorded in New York City on November 17, 1965 and first released on LeRoi Jones ' Jihad label. It was later reissued on the DIW and Skokiaan labels. The album features Albert Ayler and Don Cherry, with whom Murray had recorded and ...

  2. 23 de sept. de 2022 · Don Cherry - cornet Albert Ayler - tenor saxophone Henry Grimes - bass Lewis Worrell - bass Sunny Murray - drums Leroi Jones - voice (#3) 1 Virtue - 00:00 2 Justice - 11:08 3 Black Art (poem...

  3. En 1965, Murray pasó a grabar sus propias composiciones bajo su propio nombre, comenzando «Sonny’s Time Now», junto a Don Cherry, Henry Grimes y Lewis Worrell.

  4. Cornet, trumpet, wood flute, tambura, gamelan. Donald Eugene Cherry (November 18, 1936 – October 19, 1995) [1] was an American jazz trumpeter. Beginning in the late 1950s, he had a long tenure performing in the bands of saxophonist Ornette Coleman, including on the pioneering free jazz albums The Shape of Jazz to Come (1959) and Free Jazz: A ...

  5. Sonny Murray * – Sonny's Time Now. More images. Tracklist. Virtue. Justice Part 1. Justice Part 2. Black Art (W/LeRoy Jones, Reading) Credits (5) Henry Grimes. Bass. Louis Worrell * Bass. Sonny Murray * Percussion. Albert Ayler. Tenor Saxophone. Don Cherry. Trumpet. Versions. Filter by. Format. Labels & Companies. Country. Year. 10 versions.

  6. Murray's own recordings were more faithful to free jazz than most of the pioneers of the genre: Sunny's Time Now (november 1965), with the stellar cast of Albert Ayler, trumpeter Don Cherry and bassists Henry Grimes and Lewis Worrell unleashed in the jams Virtue and Justice ; Sunny Murray Quintet (july 1966), featuring trumpet, saxophone, bass a...

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Sunny_MurraySunny Murray - Wikipedia

    Murray went on to record his own compositions under his own name, beginning in 1965 with Sonny's Time Now, which was released on Leroi Jones 's Jihad label. The album features Ayler, Don Cherry, Henry Grimes, and Lewis Worrell, as well as Jones, who recites his poem "Black Art". [11] (