Eternal Rhythm | ||||
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Live album by | ||||
Released | 1969 | |||
Recorded | November 11–12, 1968 | |||
Venue | Berlin Jazz Festival | |||
Genre | Avant-garde jazz, jazz fusion, gamelan | |||
Length | 41:32 | |||
Label | MPS | |||
Producer | Joachim E. Berendt | |||
Don Cherry chronology | ||||
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Eternal Rhythm is a 1969 album by American jazz musician Don Cherry. [1] It was recorded live at the Berlin Jazz Festival in November 1968. [2]
In 2022, the Ezz-thetics label reissued the album along with Where Is Brooklyn? on the compilation Where Is Brooklyn? & Eternal Rhythm Revisited, [3] albeit shortened by more than three minutes.
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Tom Hull – on the Web | B+ [5] |
The AllMusic review by Brian Olewnick awarded the album 5 stars stating "Eternal Rhythm is Don Cherry's masterwork and one of the single finest recordings from the jazz avant-garde of the 1960s. It is required listening". [4]
In a review for The Quietus , Jennifer Lucy Allan called the album "the connecting piece between the pace, tension and excitement of Cherry's free jazz playing in Ornette Coleman's groups, and the relaxed invitation to international and folk forms of rhythm that came later." She commented: "I hear this album as movement between moments, and am lifted from my seat with sheer joy, any time I hear the marching theme land 12 minutes into Part One, after the frenetic generations of the rhythm section and Sonny Sharrock's guitar are batted away by Cherry's trumpet herald, and the band falls into step for a few brief and triumphant turns around the parade ground." [6]
1. "Eternal Rhythm Part I" – 17:49 (Don Cherry)
2. "Eternal Rhythm Part II" – 23:40 (Cherry)