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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Joyous, early Ornette
Ornette Coleman's tunes on this early album are bouncy and melodic. The overall mood is up-beat and optimistic. Purists will prefer "The Shape of Jazz to Come" and other recordings by his more austere pianoless quartet recorded a few years later. But for me the piano and bass playing fairly conventional jazz changes behind Ornette and Don Cherry...
Published on August 30, 2000 by Jonathan Mayhew

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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A Good Start For Ornette, But Not For You
"Somethin' Else" might have been a good start for Ornette Coleman's recording career, but it is not the best place to start your Ornette Coleman CD collection. The tunes are good, and 3/4 of his classic Atlantic quartet (Ornette, Don Cherry and Billy Higgins) are present, but the album lacks musical cohesion. This is laregly due to the inclusion of piano in...
Published on July 18, 2000 by Michael B. Richman


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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Joyous, early Ornette, August 30, 2000
By 
This review is from: Something Else (Audio CD)
Ornette Coleman's tunes on this early album are bouncy and melodic. The overall mood is up-beat and optimistic. Purists will prefer "The Shape of Jazz to Come" and other recordings by his more austere pianoless quartet recorded a few years later. But for me the piano and bass playing fairly conventional jazz changes behind Ornette and Don Cherry "works"-- even if it really shouldn't. And Billy Higgins' light touch on the drums adds just the right tone: I can picture him smiling as he plays. "The Blessing" has become a jazz standard, and all the quirky melodies stay in your head for a long while. This should be in your Ornette collection, whether it is the first or last recording of his you buy.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This is a severely underrated album, October 4, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Something Else (Audio CD)
The piano sounds fine! This is rediculous. In fact, you hardly notice it. It's very low in the mix. What a great album! All the tunes are his, the saxaphone playing is excellent (incredibly smooth). The notes Coleman puts together on this album are definitely strange, but the overall effect is not overwhelming cacophony, like found on Free Jazz. In fact, it's an incredibly straight forward album. Coleman was an innovator, but sometimes you just want to relax and take a break from his edgier music, regardless of how innovative it may have been. In summary- the songs are relatively simple, but certainly not boring. The sax playing is EXCELLENT. I like it better than "shape of jazz to come" which, i think, is an overproduced album. What is that crappy treble sound in Atlantic Jazz recordings? Anyway, you won't find it on this album.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A Good Start For Ornette, But Not For You, July 18, 2000
This review is from: Something Else (Audio CD)
"Somethin' Else" might have been a good start for Ornette Coleman's recording career, but it is not the best place to start your Ornette Coleman CD collection. The tunes are good, and 3/4 of his classic Atlantic quartet (Ornette, Don Cherry and Billy Higgins) are present, but the album lacks musical cohesion. This is laregly due to the inclusion of piano in the group. While Paul Bley may have been able to accompany Ornette on some level, Walter Norris does not, and piano in general was not well-suited to Ornette's music. In fact, I'm not sure he ever recorded with a piano player again until recently with Geri Allen on the "Sound Museum" sessions. Ornette fans will certainly want to get this, but others should have a dozen other Ornette CDs under their belt before this one.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A breakthrough disc, March 18, 2002
This review is from: Something Else (Audio CD)
I had this for years on tape, mislaid it, & now just got the CD. It's automatically a very important album because it's Coleman's first as a leader; but I'd never thought of it as a first-rank Coleman album--of his two Contemporary discs, probably I'd give the 2nd, _Tomorrow Is the Question_, the edge, & unquestionably the Atlantics are the peak of Coleman's early career. However, revisiting the disc I'm reminded of how sheerly enjoyable it is, & I think it deserves the full 5 stars. The "sound" of the disc is a surprisingly effective blend of brisk West-Coast swing & Coleman's already completely wayward, unorthodox sax. Don Cherry plays a normal trumpet (with a pronounced Miles Davis inflection) rather than the oddball "pocket trumpet" that sounds so marvellously alien on the Atlantics--he sounds basically like a confident bopper but already makes a few lateral swerves that suggest his future musical direction.

Reviewers often blame the comparative conservatism of the music here on the presence of Walter Norris, a fine bop pianist but hardly a necessary presence given Coleman's later preference for pianoless ensembles. (Norris is reported in Litweiler's bio of Coleman as having been rather mystified by Coleman & Cherry's frequently ignoring the chord changes they'd decided on for the tunes during their improvisations.) But to criticize Norris is to miss the point: Coleman's music here is much more closely tied to bop orthodoxy than it would be in the following years. Tunes like "Chippie" & "Angel Voice" are straightahead "I Got Rhythm" variants, despite their nicely individual melodies ("Angel Voice" for instance has a calypso tinge to its A section). Even more surprising, "Jayne" turns out to be a variation on "Out of Nowhere", a Parker favourite. This last instance is certainly enough to scotch the idea that Coleman was ignoring standard 32-bar structures or chord changes.

Anyway, why need we judge the music on how "advanced" it is? Sure, Ornette never sounded like this again, but it's still a solid, grooving jazz date. & it's got some of Coleman's greatest tunes on it--"The Blessing", "Invisible", "Chippie", "The Sphynx", "When Will the Blues Leave?"...all classics. The album is mostly uptempo swingers, carried along by Billy Higgins' springy drumming--it's a delight to listen to.

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good place to start, July 21, 2000
A Kid's Review
This review is from: Something Else (Audio CD)
I am a huge Ornette Coleman fan and I agree with the other reviewers in that this is not his finest work, especially since the piano sounds out of place in his music.

However, if you are getting into free jazz, this is an album that is more straight ahead and less "out" than later work.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars classic embryonic Ornette--leave Walter alone!, December 16, 2005
This review is from: Something Else (Audio CD)
Great tunes that we're all still playing more than 40 years later. This is one of the seminal early albums that spawned some of his later, even more memorable work a few years later: Shape of Jazz to Come, This is Our Music, Change of the Century, etc. The approach to chordless playing isn't as refined as it would become later on, but, it's good to keep in mind that a lot of the tunes Ornette was writing at the time were based on popular tune harmonies like I Got Rhythm and Out of Nowhere. If you ask me, Ornette hadn't fully abandoned traditional harmony at the time of this recording. Hence, Walter Norris' piano playing, while retrospectively incongruous with the kind of chordless playing that has defined most of Ornette's career, fits fine for my ears in the context of this recording. While I don't think he would have sat well with Broken Shadows or Beauty is a Rare Thing, Norris' bop lines sound good here. Check out some of the bop influence in Don Cherry's blowing too!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Tense debut, September 1, 2005
By 
Michael Stack (North Chelmsford, MA USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Something Else (Audio CD)
Ornette Coleman generated quite a stir when he appeared on the jazz scene, although listening to his debut record nearly fifty years later, it's actually quite difficult to understand. "Something Else!!!!" actually sounds quite conventional and tame to modern ears, certainly not like the leap forward that his Atlantic debut, "The Shape of Jazz to Come" was.

A lot of this probably has to do with the band-- while Coleman (playing his trademark white plastic alto sax) is accompanied by his then-usual frontline partner Don Cherry on trumpet, his rhythm section-- pianist Walter Norris, bassist Don Payne, and drummer Billy Higgins-- play within conventional constraints. Higgins' place in this is actually quite interesting to hear, given how advanced his drumming would be on that Atlantic debut. As a result of this conventional rhythm section performance, there are implied changes on the pieces. Coleman plays far more conventionally than he usually does, and when he does venture into his style of bending the notes or trying to force the rhythm section to follow him (as on "Jayne"), they don't. Net result-- Coleman introduces tension when playing the way that makes sense to him, and as a leader, he (and to a lesser extent, Cherry) is in total opposition to the rest of the band.

The music itself is decent enough-- most of the pieces are blues forms of some sort or another, somewhat advanced at times, but by and large pretty straightforward, and its pleasant enough, but similar to Cecil Taylor's early records, there's little indication of what advancements he'd make in the very near future. Coleman has indicated in books that the songs on here were written several years beforehand-- if this is the case, it explains their relative unadvanced state. Still, it's a quite listenable record, and it's a decent album, but it's better as a historical document than anything else. Interested parties in Coleman's music are encouraged to check out his work on Atlantic first (in particular "The Shape of Jazz to Come") before coming to look for this album.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Refreshing Stuff., July 6, 2009
By 
Earsby (Norman, OK United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Something Else (Audio CD)
This early Ornette release begins with the upbeat, positive and groundbreaking "Invisible". Considering Something Else was released in February of 1958--and it is every bit as new-sounding now as it was then, only less revolutionary--Something Else serves notice to the jazz world that Ornette and his band were coming to wedge a free-jazz bomb into contemporary jazz. Jazz was beginning to fragment with the modality of Kinda Blue just around the corner and the Bebop movement and the cool jazz just starting. So Jazz was becoming ever more elitist on one side (Ornette's side) and yet earning a resurgence in popularity amongst the masses with the cool jazz movement. It would be more than 10 years before Miles would go electric and then play the free jazz he was earlier discounting.

Still, Something Else swings its butt off, and there is possibly some of the most enjoyable, and accessible music by Ornette on this early release.
"The Blessing" is a bit more laid back but still full of light. Then there's the up-tempo bossa tune "Jayne" which also moves back into the center of Ornette's universe with more free solo finery and becomes more straight ahead music. Don Payne's bass, is providing a steady beat and underpinning, that role would later be filled by Charlie Haden, but Payne captures the proceedings exceedingly well and grounds the band, creating an accesible backdrop. Billy Higgin's drumming is sweet, his ride cymbal is always driving the proceedings, and Ornette's sax is continually speaking as if he were a bringer of good news to a crowd of people eager to be made to smile.

"Chippie" moves in stride, creating the window from the bop tradition into the free-jazz 60s tradition. Uptempo and energizing, I could see myself listening to this on a Sunday morning and enjoying the promise of the day ahead. "The Disguise is another up-tempo tune with a nice unison horn/drums intro. The band is tight and they run like an animal all on the same page. "Angel Voice" has a similar but slower intro that is a bit more syncopated and involves some harmonizing rather than unison lines. They go back into the jazz swing and these guys won't be denied. This is really refreshing stuff.

"Alpha" Is a really interesting tune featuring Don Cherry's Trumpet more in the front of the melody. Another cool tune. They tell the story with the intro, melody, then they each comment with their solos. Same with "When Will The Blues Leave?" "The Sphinx" utilizes a slightly different perhaps more middle-Eastern tonality, but overall, as with all the tunes, there is a cohesion this band exhibits that makes one wish you could go back in time and hear them playing this at a club in NYC. But for now, this great classic will have to work.. The healing power of music.

The whole album is great. 5 stars.
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0 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Gave CD as gift, January 6, 2009
This review is from: Something Else (Audio CD)
Everything was as described and shipped quickly. My boyfriend loves jazz music and was very excited to receive this gift and expand his jazz collection.
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Something Else
Something Else by Ornette Coleman (Audio CD - 1991)
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