| 1. Part I | 26:01 | |
| 2. Part II A | 14:54 | |
| 3. Part II B | 18:14 | |
| 4. Part II C | 6:56 |
Concert recorded at Koln on January 24, 1975.
Keith Jarrett, Piano.
One of the major jazz pianists of the past 40 years, Keith Jarrett has had a wide-ranging and very productive career. Jarrett, who began playing piano when he was three and was considered a child prodigy, was a member of Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers (1965), the very popular Charles Lloyd Quartet (1966-68) and Miles Davis' fusion band (1969-72), three very different groups but all rewarding experiences. Although he had to play electric keyboards in the latter, after leaving Davis, Jarrett chose to stick exclusively to acoustic piano.
While he led a pair of notable combos in the 1970s, an American group with tenor-saxophonist Dewey Redman and a European counterpart with Jan Garbarek, Jarrett became famous for his solo concerts. Improvising freely, Jarrett utilized bluesy ideas, repetition and logical development expertly while being very spontaneous. Of his solo piano recordings, The Koln Concert is considered his masterpiece. Full of inventive ideas and constant surprises, Jarrett performs two lengthy solos (the 41-minute closer is divided into three parts) without ever running out of ideas.
This historic and very musical set features a jazz master at his best.
-Scott Yanow