Max Roach
We Insist! Max Roach's Freedom Now Suite


5.0
classic

Review

by SandwichBubble USER (84 Reviews)
May 30th, 2020 | 33 replies


Release Date: 1960 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Man, I really like this album…

But why’d he have to go and make it all political?

I mean sure, being released in 1960, drummer Max Roach would obviously have some very important things on his mind. This was a year of awakening for many people in the United States, a year when the calls for civil rights for all people could not just be ignored or trounced by sheer numbers. Releasing a politically-minded jazz record in 1960 was a good business decision for the time, I suppose.

If I’m speaking honestly, I don’t see how anyone can listen to this today and not immediately see it as completely dated and of-its-time. I mean, protest music? In this day and age? I’d like to think we’ve come a long way as a society, to the point where we wouldn’t even need to protest.

Sure, the performances are all amazing: Abbey Lincoln’s booming voice could cause anyone’s spine to chill in dumbfounded awe, the drums are class (as one would expect from a legendary drummer like Max Roach), the brass + woodwind mesh perfectly capturing the feelings of strife and dejection. Yes, all these things work in the favor of the album’s very clear message and moving lyrical content. But man, what a bummer to listen to it now: in the year 2020. It truly makes me thankful we live in a better society now. All thanks to people like Mr. Roach of course, but it’s hard to disconnect myself from our current times. You’d really have to put yourself back in time to understand what a protest really was.

Speaking of protest, I’ve been meaning to ask something: what’s with that third track, “Triptych”? For those unaware, it’s a suite split into three parts: Prayer, Protest, and Peace. I get the first and third piece, but the Protest passage? This doesn’t sound like any protest I’ve ever heard! Every protest I’ve ever witnessed is a calm affair, usually lasting a few hours. People quietly sit in a still position, the police watches from a safe distance, and in the end: compromise. So what’s with all the noise, Max? Why does this passage from 1961 that's meant to sound like a civil rights protest sound so… loud? I mean, I wasn’t there of course. But I heard that the quiet, nonviolent protests of the 1960s were what really got the people out the door.

But while this album may seem outdated in our modern times, I can still enjoy how quaint this album is in hindsight. Though, I can’t help but feel that it would’ve been so much more timeless without the political overtones. You know: calls for liberation, protesting, heritage, anger.

All that.



Recent reviews by this author
The Cure Songs of a Lost WorldFaune Des Fantômes
Beirut HadselSoft Water Middle Ground
Animal Collective Isn’t It Now?Deeper Careful!
user ratings (66)
4
excellent
related reviews

Percussion Bitter Sweet
trending jazz albums


Comments:Add a Comment 
SandwichBubble
May 30th 2020


13849 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Has someone already done this before?

Am I a plagiarist?

Dewinged
Staff Reviewer
May 30th 2020


32191 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Nah, you're a good man, and this album is incredible.

SandwichBubble
May 30th 2020


13849 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Thank you and it is. Probably the best jazz album ever, no joke.

I'm sure this review will be met with the poise I've come to expect from the eclectic set of wacky characters that inhabit sputnikmusic.com.

wildinferno2010
May 30th 2020


1927 Comments


Max Roach sputnik discog is tiny. Maybe it's a decent cross-section of his stuff as bandleader idk.

Review makes me want to listen to the album.

JustJoe.
May 30th 2020


10944 Comments


heard this back in the day when i was all jazzy & it’s real great stuff if i recall correctly

JustJoe.
May 30th 2020


10944 Comments


have a pos on the house you breaded bastard

parksungjoon
May 30th 2020


47231 Comments


> But why’d he have to go and make it all political?


classic

too bad gyromania and those other users have bad taste so theyll never read this

wildinferno2010
May 30th 2020


1927 Comments


Oh goddamn it I read this completely unironically the first time. I dunno if I'm just getting dumber or if sput irony is just on a whole other level than what I'm used, but I am missing it every fucking time.

Pos'd

Zig
May 30th 2020


2752 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Will definitely check this

AsleepInTheBack
Staff Reviewer
May 30th 2020


10453 Comments


Great write up boyo

SandwichBubble
May 30th 2020


13849 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Thanks all, album is very very good.

"other users have bad taste so theyll never read this"

Good point, guess I've got nothing to worry about after all.

mynameischan
Staff Reviewer
May 30th 2020


2407 Comments


love this review. well done

GhandhiLion
May 30th 2020


17678 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Wow ironic jazz review

SandwichBubble
May 30th 2020


13849 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Yeah, ain't I a stinker?

Nice 5.0 by the way

Supercoolguy64
May 31st 2020


11853 Comments


Epic

parksungjoon
May 31st 2020


47231 Comments


form a posse lynch whoever negged

SandwichBubble
May 31st 2020


13849 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

I, for one, welcome any and all neg ghosts with open arms.

Honestly, I already had a mutual on RYM not get the obvious correlation. So maybe the ghost just skimmed or something.

Or they just don't like me, which is much more plausible.

50iL
June 2nd 2020


5398 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Awesome album, good review! I dig the subversion of expectation, sardonicism, and irony. Well done.

botulist
June 2nd 2020


751 Comments


lincoln’s vox on Triptych are incredible

TVC15
November 11th 2020


11375 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Based review



You have to be logged in to post a comment. Login | Create a Profile





STAFF & CONTRIBUTORS // CONTACT US

Bands: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z


Site Copyright 2005-2023 Sputnikmusic.com
All Album Reviews Displayed With Permission of Authors | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy