The Freedom Rider Explained

The Freedom Rider
Type:Album
Artist:Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers
Cover:The Freedom Rider.jpg
Released:February 1964[1]
Recorded:February 12, 18 and May 27, 1961
Studio:Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs
Genre:Jazz
Length:54:01 (CD reissue)
Label:Blue Note Records
Producer:Alfred Lion
Prev Title:Pisces
Prev Year:1961
Next Title:Roots & Herbs
Next Year:1961

The Freedom Rider is an album by jazz drummer Art Blakey and his group the Jazz Messengers, recorded in 1961 and released in 1964 by Blue Note Records. Continuing Blakey's distinct brand of hard bop, this album features compositions from Wayne Shorter, Lee Morgan, Blakey himself, and Kenny Dorham, a former Jazz Messenger. This was the final album by this particular edition of the Jazz Messengers, who had been together for 18 months, as Lee Morgan left after this album and was replaced by Freddie Hubbard.

The title track is a seven-and-a-half-minute solo drum composition by Blakey that combines swing, Latin American and African rhythmic influences, and is named in honor of the Freedom Riders - activists who participated in American Civil Rights Movement Freedom Rides beginning in 1961.[2]

In 2019, to celebrate the 100th Anniversary of Art Blakey’s birth, The Freedom Rider was one of five albums to be reissued in LP special editions by Blue Note Records, as a Vinyl Me, Please exclusive with new liner notes by Evan Haga.[3] [2]

Track listing

  1. "Tell It Like It Is" (Shorter)  - 7:53
  2. "The Freedom Rider" (Blakey)  - 7:25
  3. "El Toro" (Shorter)  - 6:20
  4. "Petty Larceny" (Morgan)  - 6:14
  5. "Blue Lace" (Morgan)  - 5:59

Bonus tracks on CD reissue:

  1. "Uptight" (Morgan)  - 6:12
  2. "Pisces" (Morgan)  - 6:52
  3. "Blue Ching" (Kenny Dorham)  - 6:43

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. Liner notes by Michael Cuscuna to 2015 Japanese SHM-CD reissue
  2. Web site: Haga. Evan . Art Blakey’s Civil Rights Jazz: The Liner Notes For Our New Edition Of ‘The Freedom Rider’ . 27 August 2019 . Vinyl Me, Please . 6 April 2024.
  3. Web site: Art Blakey at 100 . 11 October 2019 . . 6 April 2024.