Music / Sangam is one of DON CHERRY’s rarest and most visionary recordings with Indian tabla virtuoso LATIF KHAN. Unearthed, Remastered for vinyl from original tapes, and ready to blow your mind! Re-issued by Heavenly Sweetness including liner notes and never-before-seen photos from the recording session.

Masterpiece!!!

Cat No: HS015VL
Release date: 5 December 2025
Format: LP
Country: India, France, USA

Music / Sangam is one of DON CHERRY’s rarest and most visionary recordings with Indian tabla virtuoso LATIF KHAN. Unearthed, Remastered for vinyl from original tapes, and ready to blow your mind! Re-issued by Heavenly Sweetness including liner notes and never-before-seen photos from the recording session.

Masterpiece!!!

 17,3

In stock (ready to ship)

In stock

Listen to: Music / Sangam

0:00
0:00
1. Untitled / Inspiration from home
05:45
2. Air Mail
07:13
3. One Dance
04:44
4. Rhtyhm 58 1/4
03:23
5. Sangam
13:21

Item Description

A New 2025 Vinyl Master for the Reissue of This Forgotten Don Cherry Album Recorded in Paris in 1978. One of the rarest records by the trumpeter — and one of his major works, known only to the “happy few” who own the original vinyl. A summit meeting with Indian percussionist Latif Khan, produced by Martin Meissonnier and Pierre Lattès.

Don Cherry, armed with a voracious musical appetite and boundless imagination, first made a name for himself — though not always fully understood — alongside Ornette Coleman, playing trumpet or cornet. In Los Angeles and then New York, he stood at the heart of a revolutionary approach to improvisation based on melody rather than harmony, later baptized “Free Jazz,” the final structural development of American jazz.
Over time, he became a champion of improbable fusions — gradually integrating into his style a whole array of “exotic” instruments, and more importantly, the cultures from which they originated. Among them: India, Brazil, Africa, Indonesia, and even China.

The time had come for the emergence of “world music”: in hindsight, a patchwork rich in imagination and seduction, but once the novelty wore off, often lacking in substance. In Don Cherry’s case, however, the commitment ran deep — tied to his personal engagement with a global vision of art and the human condition. Nothing anecdotal.

One might speculate on how his family background shaped this extraordinary openness of spirit. But the talent? That was entirely his own.
Ustad Ahmed Latif Khan, from the Delhi gharana (a musical lineage), was part of a new generation of accompanists — percussionists, sarangi players, flutists, etc. — who had extended both the technical and conceptual possibilities of their predecessors to gain recognition as soloists and soon to venture onto the international scene.

Among them, Latif stood out for his taste for irregular, highly syncopated rhythmic patterns — rich in variety and originality.
Don and Latif had never met before the recording session, but the two quickly recognized one another as kindred spirits — calm, focused… and full of laughter.

Don clearly knew what he wanted to create, and nothing seemed to pose a challenge for Latif, who grasped the American’s intentions immediately, warmed up his fingers at astonishing speed, and with his perfect pitch, naturally took on the role of tuning Don’s diverse instrument collection to match whatever was found in the studio — from concert piano and Hammond B3 organ to chromatic orchestral timpani.