{{About|the album|telecommunications signaling|Tone dialing}} {{Use mdy dates|date=May 2025}} {{Infobox album | name = Tone Dialing | type = Album | artist = [[Ornette Coleman]] | cover = Tone Dialing (album).jpg | alt = | released = September 26, 1995 | recorded = 1995 | venue = | studio = | genre = [[Jazz]] | length = 66:01 | label = [[Harmolodics|Harmolodic]]/[[Verve Records|Verve]] | producer = Denardo Coleman | chronology = [[Ornette Coleman]] | prev_title = [[Virgin Beauty]] | prev_year = 1988 | next_title = [[Colors: Live from Leipzig]] | next_year = 1996 }} '''''Tone Dialing''''' is an album recorded in 1995 by the American jazz composer and saxophonist [[Ornette Coleman]] and his [[Prime Time (band)|Prime Time]] ensemble. It was released in September 1995 by Coleman's [[Harmolodics|Harmolodic]] record label, in partnership with [[Verve Records|Verve]]/[[PolyGram]].<ref name="Coleman discography">{{Cite web | title=Ornette Coleman discography | url=http://www.jazzdisco.org/ornette-coleman/catalog/#verve-harmolodic-527483-2 | accessdate=November 28, 2011 | work=Jazz Discography Project}}</ref><ref name="billboard">{{Cite magazine | title=Harmolodic Label Is Pure Coleman | last=Macnie | first=Jim | magazine=[[Billboard (magazine)|Billboard]] | pages=1, 84 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6Q0EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PP3 | date=September 16, 1995 | publisher=BPI Communications | issn=0006-2510 | accessdate=August 10, 2012}}</ref> It was the Harmolodic label's first release, and "the first disc fully devoted to Coleman's music in eight years."<ref name="billboard" />
Regarding the album title, Coleman, in an interview, commented: "Information comes to people in the form of tone dialing. When you speak of something you speak in the tone of what it means to you. Sending a fax is tone dialing. When someone reads something you wrote, that's tone dialing... These songs were written so that the musicians would be able to express their views about the information they were using."<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1995/09/29/style/IHT-musical-tone-dialing-with-ornette-coleman.html |title=Musical Tone Dialing With Ornette Coleman |last=Zwerin |first=Mike |date=September 29, 1995 |website=New York Times |access-date=February 19, 2022}}</ref>
In a separate interview, Coleman stated: "When you hear the guitar, the bass, and everyone else play what is called their tone dialing sounds, they are not so much playing different notes as they are playing their own tones, a form of the notes they have been given in the clef that they read. Basically, what you are doing in harmolodics is relying on the basic information that goes into composing, playing, and improvising on forms... Your information may be limited, but the way you use the information doesn't have to be limited. Your tone will cause you to change any note to the way you hear it. Your relationship to your tone is based on your emotions. If it wasn't, everybody would sound the same. When you play something and you hear you own tone, that's tone dialing. That's you. If you create music just from the concept of your own tone, you will be doing something no one else has discovered."<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.pointofdeparture.org/archives/PoD-6/PoD6TheTurnaround.html |title=Dialing Up Ornette |last=Shoemaker |first=Bill |website=Point of Departure |date=July 2006 |access-date=February 19, 2022}}</ref>
==Reception== {{Music ratings | rev1 = [[AllMusic]] | rev1Score = {{rating|4|5}}<ref name="Allmusic"/> | rev2= [[Christgau's Consumer Guide]] | rev2Score={{Rating-Christgau|A-}}<ref>{{cite web |title=Robert Christgau: CG: Ornette Coleman |url=http://robertchristgau.com/get_artist.php?name=ornette+coleman |website=robertchristgau.com |accessdate=24 July 2019}}</ref> | rev3 = [[Tom Hull (critic)|Tom Hull]] | rev3Score = B+<ref>{{cite web|last=Hull|first=Tom|author-link=Tom Hull (critic)|date=n.d.|url=http://www.tomhull.com/ocston/nm/shop/jazz-40s.html|title=Jazz (1940–50s) (Reference)|website=tomhull.com|accessdate=March 4, 2020}}</ref> | rev4 = [[Rolling Stone]] | rev4Score = {{rating|4|5}}<ref name="rs">{{cite magazine |url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-album-reviews/tone-dialing-189264 |title=Tone Dialing |last=Fricke |first=David |date=December 14, 1995 |magazine=Rolling Stone |access-date=February 19, 2022}}</ref> }} The [[AllMusic]] review by [[Scott Yanow]] awarded the album 4 stars, stating, "despite the inclusion of one obnoxious rap, this free funk set is well worth picking up by open-minded listeners".<ref name="Allmusic">Yanow, S. [http://www.allmusic.com/album/tone-dialing-r224424 Allmusic Review] accessed November 28, 2011</ref>
In a review for [[Rolling Stone]], David Fricke stated: "''Tone Dialing''... is a record of high spirits and lively, colliding ideas, like the raucous cross talk of a Mississippi roadhouse combo and the breathless locomotion of an African high-life orchestra. For all of the old free-jazz notions attached to Coleman's music since the late '50s, he and Prime Time now cook with a force akin to that of George Clinton and P-Funk's: jamming in tongues with unity of spirit... despite almost 40 years of rejection and misunderstanding of his music, even by old fans who consider the Prime Time concept a sellout to electric pop, Coleman is still... dancing in his head. There's plenty of room for the rest of us."<ref name="rs"/>
Writing for Jelly, Glenn Brooks commented: "''Tone Dialing''... is just plain fun... if you have any interest in Ornette's music, this album is a great place to start... it is complex, challenging and sometimes chaotic. But it is also – more so – just fresh fun funky jazz."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.jellyroll.com/03/ornette.html |title=Ornette Coleman & Prime Time |last=Brooks |first=Glenn |website=Jelly |access-date=February 19, 2022}}</ref>
==Track listing== :''All compositions by Ornette Coleman except as indicated'' # "Street Blues" – 4:58 # "Search for Life" – 7:32 # "Guadalupe" – 4:10 # "Bach Prelude" ([[Johann Sebastian Bach]]) – 5:40 # "Sound Is Everywhere" – 3:34 # "Miguel's Fortune" – 6:04 # "La Capella" – 4:32 # "O.A.C." – 2:47 # "If I Knew as Much About You (As You Know About Me)" – 2:36 # "When Will I See You Again" – 2:46 # "Kathelin Gray" (Coleman, [[Pat Metheny]]) – 4:41 # "Badal" – 4:42 # "Tone Dialing" – 1:45 # "Family Reunion" – 4:07 # "Local Instinct" – 2:56 # "Ying Yang" – 2:56
==Personnel== *[[Ornette Coleman]] – [[alto saxophone]], trumpet, violin *Dave Bryant – keyboards *Chris Rosenberg, Ken Wessel – guitar *[[Brad Jones (bassist)|Bradley Jones]], Al MacDowell – [[electric bass|bass]] *[[Chris Walker (musician)|Chris Walker]] – bass, keyboards *[[Denardo Coleman]] – drums *[[Badal Roy]] – [[tabla]], percussion *Avenda Khadija, Moishe Nalm – vocals
==References== {{reflist}} {{Ornette Coleman}} {{Authority control}}
[[Category:1995 albums]] [[Category:Ornette Coleman albums]] [[Category:Verve Records albums]]