Song X

{{For|the song|Mirror Ball (Neil Young album)}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=May 2025}}

{{Infobox album

| name = Song X

| type = studio

| artist = Pat Metheny and Ornette Coleman

| cover = Songxmethenycoleman.jpg|border=yes

| alt =

| released = April 14, 1986

| recorded = December 12–14, 1985

| venue =

| studio = Power Station, New York City

| genre = Free jazz

| length = {{Duration|m=48|s=39}}

| label = Geffen

| producer = Pat Metheny

| chronology = Pat Metheny

| prev_title = The Falcon and the Snowman

| prev_year = 1984

| next_title = Still Life (Talking)

| next_year = 1987

| misc = {{Extra chronology

| artist = Ornette Coleman

| type = studio

| prev_title = Prime Design/Time Design

| prev_year = 1985

| title = Song X

| year = 1985

| next_title = In All Languages

| next_year = 1987

}}

{{Extra album cover

| header = Alternate cover

| type = studio

| cover = Song X 20th Anniversary Edition.jpg

| border =

| alt =

| caption = 20th anniversary edition cover

}}

}}

Song X is a collaborative studio album by jazz guitarist Pat Metheny and saxophonist Ornette Coleman. It is a free jazz record that was produced in a three-day recording session in 1985.{{cite web|last=Jackson|first=Grant|date=April 26, 2013|url=https://www.npr.org/2010/07/30/15124540/pat-metheny-on-piano-jazz|title=Pat Metheny On Piano Jazz|publisher=NPR|access-date=November 28, 2013}} The album was released in 1986 by Geffen Records.{{cite news |author= | agency=Associated Press | place=New Haven |date=June 20, 1986 |title=Convention Falls As Metheny, Coleman Team Up |url={{GBurl|YoQ_AAAAIBAJ|pg=PA10}} |work=Portsmouth Daily Times |publication-place=Portsmouth, Ohio |pages=TV4 | publisher=Portsmouth Times Publishing Company |access-date=2025-03-06 |via=Google Books}}{{cite magazine |author= |date=May 10, 1986|title=Top Jazz Albums |pages=43|url={{GBurl|8CQEAAAAMBAJ|pg=PA43}}|magazine=Billboard|volume=99|issue=18|location=New York|publisher=Billboard Publications, Inc.|issn=0006-2510|access-date=2025-03-06|via=Google Books}}

Background

Metheny was a longtime admirer of the saxophonist, recording Coleman compositions on Bright Size Life (1976), 80/81 (1980), and Rejoicing (1984) (which features Coleman alumni Charlie Haden and Billy Higgins). During the three weeks leading up to the recording, Coleman and Metheny spent "between 6 and 12 hours a day every day, playing, hanging out and talking, trying to come up with a vocabulary for this particular session ... that would be different."{{Cite book|title=Warner Brothers Music Show 137 (WMBS 137); Lyle Mays: The Interview with music from the Lyle Mays LP (GHS 24097) / Pat Metheny: The Interview with music from the Pat Metheny/Ornette Coleman LP Song X (GHS 24096)|publisher=Geffen Records |year=1986 |location=USA |type=Vinyl LP}}

  • {{cite web |title=Lyle Mays / Pat Metheny – Interviews With Lyle Mays And Pat Metheny |website=Discogs |date=1986 |url=https://www.discogs.com/Lyle-Mays-Pat-Metheny-Interviews-With-Lyle-Mays-And-Pat-Metheny/release/1545687}}

Coleman's saxophone tone, when combined with a saxophone preset on Metheny's Synclavier guitar synthesizer, created an "ensemble blend [that] was surprising to both of us."

The album features bassist Charlie Haden (a frequent Coleman collaborator who'd also played on 80/81), Jack DeJohnette on drums, and Coleman's son Denardo on drums and various percussion instruments. It was recorded at The Power Station in New York City between December 12 and December 14, 1985. A remixed and remastered version was issued on CD in August 2005, titled Song X: Twentieth Anniversary. Six unreleased tracks were added prior to the original eight songs.{{cite web |last1=Jurek |first1=Thom |title=Song X [Twentieth Anniversary Edition] - Ornette Coleman, Pat Metheny {{!}} Release Info |url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/release/song-x-twentieth-anniversary-edition--mr0000838168 |website=AllMusic |access-date=28 September 2023 |language=en}}

Critical reception

{{Music ratings

| rev1 = AllMusic

| rev1Score = {{Rating|3.5|5}}{{cite web |last1=Olewnick |first1=Brian |title=Pat Metheny, Ornette Coleman - Song X Album Reviews, Songs & More {{!}} AllMusic |url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/song-x-mw0000188388 |website=AllMusic |access-date=28 September 2023 |language=en}}

| rev2 = Blender

| rev2Score = {{Rating|4|5}}

| rev3 = DownBeat

| rev3Score = {{Rating|5|5}}

| rev4 = Entertainment Weekly

| rev4Score = A−{{cite magazine|last=Blumenfeld|first=Larry|date=August 12, 2005|page=833|url=http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,1090035,00.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070706044928/http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,1090035,00.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=July 6, 2007|title=Jazz 101|magazine=Entertainment Weekly|location=New York|access-date=November 28, 2013}}

| rev5 = The Guardian

| rev5Score = {{Rating|4|5}}{{cite news|last=Fordham|first=John|date=September 22, 2005|url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2005/sep/23/jazz.shopping1|title=CD: Ornette Coleman/ Pat Metheny, Song X|newspaper=The Guardian|location=London|access-date=November 28, 2013}}

| rev6 = Mojo

| rev6Score = {{Rating|4|5}}

| rev7 = The Penguin Guide to Jazz

| rev7Score = {{Rating|4|4}}

| rev8 = The Rolling Stone Album Guide

| rev8Score = {{Rating|5|5}}{{cite book|title=The Rolling Stone Album Guide|year=1992|last1=DeCurtis|first1=Anthony|author-link1=Anthony DeCurtis|last2=Henke|first2=James|last3=George-Warren|first3=Holly|page=152|publisher=Random House|isbn=0679737294|edition=3rd}}

| rev9 = The Village Voice

| rev9Score = A

}}

Reviewing Song X in 1986 for The Village Voice, Robert Christgau deemed it Coleman's best album of unadulterated jazz since the early 1970s and believed Metheny's mild mannered style of jazz kept the music uncluttered compared to some of Coleman's recent work. "No rock moves, and no funk, harmolodic or otherwise", Christgau added. "It's all sweet lyricism, sonic comedy, and headlong invention."{{cite news|last=Christgau|first=Robert|author-link=Robert Christgau|date=September 2, 1986|url=http://www.robertchristgau.com/xg/cg/cgv9-86.php|title=Christgau's Consumer Guide|newspaper=The Village Voice|location=New York|access-date=November 28, 2013}} DownBeat magazine hailed the album as "a remarkable union of the true and the new, a fusion of the bedrock human sound of Ornette's alto with the sometimes jarring, mostly bracing electronic capabilities of Pat's guitar-synth".{{cite journal|title=Review: Song X|journal=DownBeat|location=Chicago|date=August 1986}} Jon Pareles wrote in The New York Times that the experiment succeeded because both artists were masterful melodists, finding the record "less tangled and more directly songful than Mr. Coleman's recent albums with Prime Time".{{cite news|last=Pareles|first=Jon|author-link=Jon Pareles|date=April 20, 1986|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1986/04/20/arts/jazz-s-odd-couple-join-forces-to-make-splendid-melody.html|title=Jazz's Odd Couple Join Forces to Make Splendid Melody|newspaper=The New York Times|access-date=November 28, 2013}} Song X was voted the nineteenth best album of 1986 in The Village Voice{{'}}s annual Pazz & Jop critics poll.{{cite news|newspaper=The Village Voice|location=New York|url=http://www.robertchristgau.com/xg/pnj/pjres86.php|title=The 1986 Pazz & Jop Critics Poll|date=March 3, 1987}}

In The Penguin Guide to Jazz (2004), Richard Cook and Brian Morton said the more adventurous recordings on Song X showcased the jubilant playing between Coleman and Metheny, who not only "powered his way through Coleman's itinerary with utter conviction, he set up opportunities for the saxophonist to resolve and created a fusion with which Coleman's often impenetrable Prime Time bands had failed to come to terms."Richard Cook and Brian Morton, The Penguin Guide to Jazz on CD, 7th ed. (Penguin, 2004), p. 1114. In a review of the album's 2005 reissue, Christgau wrote in Blender that all six bonus tracks were "strong enough to justify kicking off with them, and the perfect warm-up to an album Metheny was right to construct exactly as he did."{{cite journal|last=Christgau|first=Robert|date=September 2005|url=http://www.robertchristgau.com/xg/cdrev/metheny-ble.php|title=Pat Metheny/Ornette Coleman: 'Song X'|journal=Blender|location=New York|access-date=November 28, 2013}} In his list for 2005 Pazz & Jop poll, he named its twentieth anniversary edition the sixteenth best album of the year.{{cite news|last=Christgau|first=Robert|date=February 7, 2006|url=http://www.robertchristgau.com/xg/pnj/deans05.php|title=Pazz & Jop 2005: Dean's List|newspaper=The Village Voice|access-date=November 28, 2013}}

Track listing

{{Track listing

| all_writing = Ornette Coleman except where noted

| headline = Side one:

| title1 = Song X

| length1 = 5:38

| title2 = Mob Job

| length2 = 4:13

| title3 = Endangered Species

| writer3 = Coleman, Metheny

| length3 = 13:19

}}

{{Track listing

| headline = Side two:

| title1 = Video Games

| length1 = 5:21

| title2 = Kathelin Gray

| writer2 = Coleman, Metheny

| length2 = 4:15

| title3 = Trigonometry

| writer3 = Coleman, Metheny

| length3 = 5:09

| title4 = Song X Duo

| writer4 = Coleman, Metheny

| length4 = 3:08

| title5 = Long Time No See

| length5 = 7:36

}}

{{Track listing

|headline = Song X: Twentieth Anniversary (2005)

| title1 = Police People

| length1 = 4:57

| title2 = All of Us

| length2 = 0:15

| title3 = The Good Life

| length3 = 3:25

| title4 = Word from Bird

| length4 = 3:48

| title5 = Compute

| length5 = 2:03

| title6 = The Veil

| length6 = 3:42

| title7 = Song X

| length7 = 5:38

| title8 = Mob Job

| length8 = 4:13

| title9 = Endangered Species

| length9 = 13:19

| title10 = Video Games

| length10 = 5:21

| title11 = Kathelin Gray

| length11 = 4:15

| title12 = Trigonometry

| length12 = 5:09

| title13 = Song X Duo

| length13 = 3:08

| title14 = Long Time No See

| length14 = 7:36

}}

Note

  • Tracks 1–6 are unreleased new tracks.

Personnel

Technical

  • Pat Metheny – producer
  • David Oakes, Niki Gatos – assistant producer (original release)
  • Jan-Erik Kongshaug – recording (original release)
  • Jan-Erik Kongshaug, Rob Eaton – mixing (original release)
  • Jon Goldberger – assistant engineer (original release)
  • Peter Karam – remixing 2005 (CD reissue)
  • Bob Ludwig – mastering at Masterdisk, NYC, USA (original release)
  • Ted Jensen – remastering 2005 at Sterling Sound, NYC, USA (CD reissue)
  • David A. Cantor – photography (original release)
  • Norman Moore – design (original release)
  • Doyle Partners – redesign 2005 (CD reissue)

Charts

class="wikitable"
align="left"|Year

!align="left"|Chart{{cite web|url=http://www.allmusic.com/album/song-x-mw0000188388/awards|title=Song X – Pat Metheny – Awards|website=Allmusic|access-date=November 28, 2013}}

!align="center"|Position

align="left"|1986

|align="left"|Billboard Top Jazz Albums

|align="center"|9

References

{{Reflist}}