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  1. "Comin' and Goin'" – 4:41. "Lakota Song" (Traditional) – 4:23. "Water" – 5:40. "Custer Gets It" – 3:02. "Malinyea" (Don Cherry) – 4:15. Personnel. Jim Pepper – tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, vocals. Nana Vasconcelos – percussion, vocals. Don Cherry – trumpet (tracks 3 & 9) Kenny Werner – piano (tracks 1, 3–5 & 7–9)

    • 44:14
    • 1983
    • May 12, June 22 & 23 and August 17, 1983, Eurosound Studios and Quadrosonic Studios, New York City
    • Crossover Jazz/Native American music
  2. Donald Eugene Cherry (November 18, 1936 – October 19, 1995) [1] was an American jazz trumpeter. Beginning in the late 1950s, he had a long tenure performing in the bands of saxophonist Ornette Coleman, including on the pioneering free jazz albums The Shape of Jazz to Come (1959) and Free Jazz: A Collective Improvisation (1960).

  3. The other video was introduced by Don Cherry, an essential figure in Pepper’s life. Cherry, a very unconventional power in the world of jazz, intersected with Pepper’s career at several critical junctures. One of the songs Cherry planted throughout Europe was “Witchi Tia To.”.

    • Cristil
  4. Complete Communion is a 1966 album by American jazz composer Don Cherry, his debut as a bandleader and his first release on Blue Note Records . Each side of the original LP were suites, side-long compositions [2] working with several themes.

    • May 1966
  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jim_PepperJim Pepper - Wikipedia

    In his own projects, Pepper recorded with Don Cherry, Naná Vasconcelos, Collin Walcott, Kenny Werner, John Scofield, Ed Schuller, Hamid Drake, and many others. His CD Comin' and Goin' (1984) is the definitive statement of Pepper's unique "American Indian jazz" with nine songs played by four different line-ups.

  6. 5. Feb. 2024 · Comin' And Goin' opens with an eight minute treatment of Witchi Tia To and closes with a version of Don Cherry's Malinyea, and the various line-ups he employed on the nine tracks included musicians who were then, and later, among the biggest in jazz: guitarists Bill Frisell and John Scofield, percussionist Nana Vasconcelos, sitar ...

  7. The tour was organized by Don Cherry (Afro-American and Choctaw), an influential figure in jazz and world music. The collaboration between Pepper and Cherry conjoined two trickster traditions, Coyote and the Signifyin(g) Monkey. Lymphoma ended Pepper's life in 1992 when, according to all accounts, he was on the cusp of international fame. Since ...