Haiku | |
Type: | Studio |
Artist: | Don Ellis |
Cover: | Haiku (album).jpg |
Released: | 1974 |
Recorded: | June 1–4, 1973 |
Genre: | Jazz |
Length: | 37:51 |
Label: | MPS/BASF MC 25341 |
Producer: | Don Ellis |
Chronology: | Don Ellis |
Prev Title: | Soaring |
Prev Year: | 1973 |
Next Title: | Music from Other Galaxies and Planets |
Next Year: | 1977 |
Haiku is an album by trumpeter/bandleader Don Ellis recorded in 1973 and released on the MPS label.[1]
Scott Yanow of Allmusic said "This album is a very different Don Ellis record. Rather than using a big band, the trumpeter is well showcased while backed by a large string section on ten moody originals ...much of the music is quite mellow. A definite change of pace".
On All About Jazz, John Kelman observed "Haiku finds Ellis in largely lyrical territory with a core quintet and varying configurations of a 12-piece string orchestra. Some tracks work better than others, but all point to a musical mind unencumbered by convention, even as he aimed, on other albums, for greater commercial success ...A tad inconsistent, perhaps, but Haiku still possesses more charm than syrup; an alternate, lyrical, and more deeply introspective view of the usually more boisterous Ellis—signaling, perhaps, a new direction that, sadly, he'd not be around long enough to explore further.."[2]
The Guardian's John Fordham noted "This 1973 recording with a strings ensemble is very different from his adventurous work with mind-boggling time signatures in the 60s. But an Ellis venture is never without surprises. All the segments are inspired by haiku, and they reflect that form's brevity. ...The leader's unique brass sound embraced technical security, classical purity and an old jazz-brass swagger, and if some of the music gets a little Disney, it's an object lesson in orchestral writing for improvisers."[3]
All compositions by Don Ellis