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Third World-Underground (1974)

Dollar Brand / Don Cherry / Carlos Ward

Format CD
Grade New

Release Date: Friday 11st September, 2026

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Product Information

Artist

Title

Third World-Underground (1974)

Format

CD

Label

Country

Europe

Year

2026

Genre

Grade

NEW

Catalogue Number

WWSCD125

Barcode

3700604785071

Comments

CD Reissue with Original Japanese Artwork and a 4 Page Booklet including New Bilingual Liner Notes PRE ORDER EXPECTED 11/09/26

Product Information

Title

Third World-Underground (1974)

Format

CD

Country

Europe

Year

Epic

Grade

NEW

Catalogue Number

WWSCD125

Barcode

3700604785071

Comments

CD Reissue with Original Japanese Artwork and a 4 Page Booklet including New Bilingual Liner Notes PRE ORDER EXPECTED 11/09/26
SKU: VT1782989720925
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  • Description

    Wewantsounds is honoured to announce the first-ever international release of the legendary collaboration between Abdullah Ibrahim (Dollar Brand) and Don Cherry, featuring Carlos Ward. Following Ibrahim’s recent passing, this long-awaited edition now stands as a timely tribute to his profound legacy. Recorded live in 1972 at Jazzhus Montmartre in Copenhagen, this highly sought-after album was originally released exclusively in Japan in 1974 on the cult jazz label Trio Records via its revered Nadja imprint. An essential chapter in the musicians’ discographies, the performance skilfully blends jazz with rich South African rhythms and global influences. This definitive reissue features fully remastered audio, the original artwork, and a booklet with new bilingual liner notes by Jacques Denis.


    The Third World-Underground captures a rare convergence of three singular musical voices: Don Cherry’s nomadic imagination, Abdullah Ibrahim’s deeply rooted South African lyricism, and Carlos Ward’s muscular alto saxophone. By 1972 when this magical album was recorded, Cherry and Ibrahim had already spent a decade redefining jazz by pushing beyond its foundations and embracing a broader, global musical language.

    Cherry—who had helped revolutionise jazz alongside Ornette Coleman—was in constant search of new musical pathways. Drawing inspiration from the traditional sounds of Turkey, India, Africa, and beyond, he cultivated a fluid, borderless approach that expanded far beyond the trumpet, incorporating voice, percussion, and communal improvisation into his work. Ibrahim brought an equally profound sensibility. A spiritual heir to Duke Ellington, shaped by Cape Town gospel, township jive, and the emotional weight of exile, he transformed the piano into an instrument capable of both celebration and lament.

    Having first crossed paths in the mid-1960s, the musicians shared a deep mutual affinity that culminated in this performance. Recording under a name that reflected the era’s growing decolonization movements, the trio created a fearless, boundary-defying statement across seven hypnotic pieces, including “Don’s Song” and “Bra Joe From Kilimanjaro.” The music unfolds as a continuous conversation: Ibrahim’s cyclical piano figures provide an emotional foundation while Cherry and Ward drift, soar, and chant in ecstatic unison, searching collectively for new ground.
    Originally released in Japan in 1974 on Trio Records, the album was never reissued on vinyl, gradually attaining cult status among collectors and fans of Don Cherry and Dollar Brand alike. As Jacques Denis writes in the new liner notes, “More than half a century later, the music in this album, emancipated from all preordained order, still surprises, offering a delight of the present moment that lingers long after the needle leaves the groove.”

    Freed from convention, The Third World-Underground remains a restless and deeply human work of collective discovery whose resonance continues to unfold with every listen.

  • Track List

    Don's Song [7.36]

    Cherry [12.12]

    Bra Joe From Kilimanjaro [7.47]

    Jabulani-Easter Joy [5.28]

    Waya-Wa-Egoli [3.20]

    Swazi [1.37]

    Wayeah-Wayeah-O [2.03]

  • Grading Definition

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