Daily best music in the world: Ronald Shannon Jackson with Albert Ayler

Ronald Shannon Jackson playing with Albert Ayler on the Live at Slug’s Saloon album, recorded in 1966. Jackson wasn’t recorded a lot at this stage of his career, and it’s really interesting to hear him do the same relentless rolling thing we heard him do on a giant Sonor set in the 80s. Clearly he’s more technically able than some other avant-garde drummers of the period— people who may have been going for an emotional intensity that was beyond their capabilities. Jackson also has a stronger sense of pulse than most of them— it’s like listening to a mediocre bass player with weak harmonic sense play this music (another common situation), and then listening to Gary Peacock play it. It’s like oh, this guy is playing off a pulse. He’s a real drummer.

Jackson plays with real power, and he’s obviously a strong listener. It reminds me a lot of Jack Dejohnette playing avant-garde. There’s just a different quality when a real technically and musically able drummer does this kind of thing. There’s more energy and more evident creativity happening; more melodic awareness.

He is awesome playing with Cecil Taylor a dozen years later, too. Cecil can be kind of punishing to me; Jackson humanizes him.

2 thoughts on “Daily best music in the world: Ronald Shannon Jackson with Albert Ayler

  1. Thank you. Made me pull out his Modern Drummer feature from March 1984, probably the one that made you buy Paiste Rudes. He was a strong influence on me for a while and I regret that I never told him while he was still alive.

  2. Such a great interview– I excerpted it here, for anyone else interested.

    I hadn't listened to this Slug's record before– it's pretty remarkable, just for Jackson. I've listened to a lot of Ayler in the past, but kind of gave up on having any drumming interest in it, beyond Sunny's basic thing.

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