Home » Jazz Articles » Year in Review » John Kelman's Best of 2007
John Kelman's Best of 2007
Jazz New Releases
  ![]() David Torn Prezens (ECM)  |    ![]() Michael Brecker Pilgrimage (Heads Up)  |    ![]() Dave Douglas & Keystone Moonshine (Greenleaf)  |  
  ![]() Scott Colley Architect of the Silent Moment (Cam Jazz)  |   ![]() Supersilent 8 (Rune Grammofon)  |    ![]() John Abercrombie The Third Quartet (ECM)  |  
  ![]() Sinikka Langeland Starflowers (ECM)  |   ![]() Chris Potter Follow the Red Line (Sunnyside)  |    ![]() Frisell/Chamberlain Townsend/Martine Floratone (Blue Note)  |  
  ![]() John Scofield This Meets That (Emarcy)  |   ![]() David Liebman Group Blues All Ways (OmniTone)  |    ![]() Steve Khan Borrowed Time (Tone Center)  |  
Reissues/Historical Releases
  ![]() Miles Davis The Complete On The Corner Sessions (Sony/Legacy)  |    ![]() Bennie Maupin The Jewel in the Lotus (ECM)  |   ![]() Donald Fagen The Nightfly Trilogy (Reprise)  |  
  ![]() Oregon Out of the Woods / Roots in the Sky (Collector's Choice)  |    ![]() Hugh Hopper Hopper Tunity Box (Cuneiform)  |    ![]() Egg The Civil Surface (Esoteric)  |  
Progressive/Fusion/Other
  ![]() Eivind Aarset Sonic Codex (Jazzland)  |    ![]() Alan Pasqua The Antisocial Club (Cryptogramophone)  |    ![]() Alex Machacek / Jeff Sipe / Matt Garrison Improvision (Abstract Logix)  |  
  ![]() Asaf Sirkis & The Inner Noise The Song Within (SAM Productions)  |    ![]() Fripp & Eno Beyond Even (1992-2006) (DGM)  |    ![]() Rachel Unthank & The Winterset The Bairns (Rabble Rouser)  |  
New Discoveries
  ![]() One Shot Ewaz Vader (Le Triton)  |    ![]() Delta Saxophone Quartet Dedicated to You...But You Weren't Listening (MoonJune)  |    ![]() Gwilym Simcock Perception (Basho)  |  
  ![]() Daniel Bernard Roumain Etudes 4 violin & electronix (Thirsty Ear)  |    ![]() Michael Harrison Revelation: Music in Pure Intonation (Cantaloupe Music)  |    ![]() Erdem Helvacioglu Altered Realities (New Albion)  |  
Tags
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
		All About Jazz has been a pillar of jazz since 1995, championing it as an art form and, more importantly, supporting the musicians who make it. Our enduring commitment has made "AAJ" one of the most culturally important websites of its kind, read by hundreds of thousands of fans, musicians and industry figures every month.
		

































					
					
				
				
				
			
						
						
			
			
			
			
			
			
			
			