Heard on Impulse!: Ten Impulse Records Releases You Must Own

Fellow Blogcritic Stephen V. Funk last week wrote an informative, fascinating, and musically intriguing post about Impulse! Records, the great jazz label that represented the vanguard of the music in the sixties and early seventies. The label was celebrating its 45th anniversary, Funk pointed out; wouldn't this be a great time to avoid the standard cliches of best-ofs and messy compilations, instead releasing on CD some of the hundreds of Impulse! recordings that have never been digitally remastered? To make his point, he listed several examples of the best and most interesting still-not-on-CD albums.

It's a great list, and one that needed to be made. And yet, as I found myself poring over it and...um...going about my favorite not-quite-legitimate methods of acquiring music on the Internet, it occurred to me that some people might need a refresher (or an introduction outright) to the excellent material that IS available from Impulse! on CD. Thus I present my companion article to Funk's: Ten Impulse Records Releases Any Jazz Fan Should Own.

The criteria I set for myself were very few. The material had to be originally released on Impulse, of course; it has to currently be in print on CD today; it has to be in my library; and, most challenging, every musician can appear only once on the list as a leader. There is one reason and one reason only for this last: because if I just made a list of the ten best albums on Impulse!, period, at least half would all be John Coltrane records. Which is fine, but it doesn't give you the sense of great richness, variety, and originality that you could find in the Impulse! spectrum.

I did NOT make it a criterion that the records not come out later than 1972. But as I look at the list, none of them do, even though Impulse! has released records since then and continues to do so today. It just so happens that most of the classic and most important Impulse! releases came in those first eleven years of the label's life. It can't help it, and neither can I.

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Article Author: Michael J. West

Michael J. West is a writer, editor, and dilettante jazz critic in Washington, D.C. In addition to BlogCritics, he writes for JazzTimes, Washington City Paper, and AllAboutJazz.com. He occasionally writes at Pop Musicology, too. He's very cute. …

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Article comments

  • 1 - Mark Saleski

    Jul 02, 2006 at 10:56 pm

    interesting list. i just picked up Attica Blues a few months ago. it sort of reminded me of a jazz version of Parliament.

    A Love Supreme: killer. one of those records you can never tire of.

  • 2 - Michael J. West

    Jul 02, 2006 at 11:02 pm

    A jazz version of Parliament, that's good! I had thought of it more like a free version of On the Corner.

  • 3 - Bliffle

    Jul 03, 2006 at 1:05 am

    I must confess that I've never found coltrane listenable: reminds me of my own miserable practice sessions before I gave up the sax. Sold "love supreme" CD ten years ago in a garage sale.

  • 4 - Michael J. West

    Jul 03, 2006 at 1:27 am

    I must confess that I've never found coltrane listenable

    I hope you're not religious, Bliffle, because I'm preety sure calling Trane "unlistenable" carries mandatory time in Hell.

  • 5 - Stephen V Funk

    Jul 05, 2006 at 12:52 pm

    I know it's sacrilege, but I think if I could have only one John Coltrane Impulse! album it would be "Crescent"....

  • 6 - Michael J. West

    Jul 05, 2006 at 1:07 pm

    Sacrilege, yes, but understandable. Hell, my one Coltrane Impulse! album might actually be Ascension. (Bliffle, if you thought A Love Supreme was unlistenable....)

  • 7 - godoggo

    Jul 05, 2006 at 7:44 pm

    My choice would be Stellar Regions. I'm weird.

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