
Among the many rarities I’ve come across in this journey to review all things ECM, few are as intriguing as the 10-part “ECM Special” series released in Japan on Trio Records throughout the 1970s. The tracks on this inaugural album, all recorded in the earliest part of that decade, exude the energy of an unlocked room. The compilation gathers music from a formative stretch in ECM’s history, but its deeper fascination lies in the way it catches artists at the edges of statements they were still learning how to make. These are not simply leftovers, alternates, or marginalia, but apertures into manners of completion. Thus, the album offers a small constellation of provisional illuminations, each track carrying the charge of musicians moving through the half-lit corridor between impulse and form.
The Japanese liner notes deepen the sense of this release as both a historical document and a carefully considered act of transmission. Manfred Eicher contributes a brief but telling note of thanks to Trio, giving the label his blessing not only for preserving ECM’s commitment to sound quality but also for helping introduce its artists to Japanese listeners with the seriousness and care their music deserved. Hisamatsu Noguchi’s accompanying history of the label situates the compilation at an especially early stage in ECM’s development: his note that ECM had released only about 20 LPs by that point reminds us how close this music still was to the label’s origins. “Over the last three years or so,” he writes, “the musically rich jazz records released by ECM have, in no small measure, also served as a warning to existing jazz records that have become bogged down in commercialism.” In that formulation, ECM emerges not simply as a new label with a distinctive aesthetic but as a corrective pressure within the broader jazz marketplace, insisting on space, intention, and fidelity at a time when such values could feel imperiled. Noguchi extends that idea in his praise of Eicher for providing his musicians with “a concert-like setting […] in which to realize their pure intentions and musical plans.”
And yet, the first track on the album is not an “ECM” track at all, though it comes with a relevant provenance in tow. In February 1972, Chick Corea formed the first iteration of Return to Forever with Stanley Clarke, Joe Farrell, Airto Moreira, and Flora Purim, recording the band’s eponymous ECM debut under the production of Manfred Eicher. During this same period, Corea and Clarke were also working with Stan Getz in a group that included Tony Williams, and on March 3, 1972, that ensemble recorded Captain Marvel for Columbia. The album included several Corea compositions, among them “Captain Marvel” and “500 Miles High.” Because of label entanglements, with Return to Forever associated with ECM in Europe and the Getz/Corea project issued by Columbia in the United States, later reissues and compilations sometimes drew these worlds into partial alignment. On ECM Special I, this music carries the feeling of a border crossing, jazz history folding its passport into a paper crane and sending it over several oceans at once.
Featuring Corea on electric piano, Farrell on flute, Clarke on electric bass, and Moreira on percussion, “Captain Marvel” bursts forward with radiant, forthright energy. The Return to Forever identity is unmistakable. Clarke’s bass does not merely propel the tune. It persuades it, shoulders it, gives it a muscular itinerary and a gleaming set of wheels. Everything interlocks with rare confidence, the groove sustained by an internal combustion that never clots or dims. Farrell’s flute surveys the whole journey from a height of untroubled clarity, while Corea’s solo reaches outward with quicksilver assurance, threading brightness through the piece’s open frame. The result is evangelically kinetic, a song with its windows flung open to the luxurious irresponsibility of motion.
In light of all this extroverted velocity, “Seven II,” an unreleased take from Paul Bley’s Open, To Love. This version offers a more compact reading of the Carla Bley tune, turning toward realms of infolding affection. Bley’s touch seems to ask questions that the piano answers only in fragments, with the gravity of a mind reluctant to flatten feeling into explanation. Dissonant turns open small fissures in the lyric surface. Improvisational asides appear and disappear with the delicacy of thoughts glimpsed in profile. Moments of friction and concentrated resistance somehow grant the music its most lucid affirmations. By the final bluesy flourish, the piece has bowed to its own interior turbulence.
“Georgian Bay,” from Conception Vessel, features bandleader Paul Motian on drums, Charlie Haden on bass, and Sam Brown on guitar. It is a richly flowing track that surrenders itself to fluctuations of astonishing clarity. The music feels hyper-real in its depiction of time and place, yet the longer one listens, the more unreachable its world becomes. Brown’s arpeggios ripple with patient luminosity, Motian’s cymbals and percussion scatter points of mineral brightness, and Haden’s bass moves through the piece with lyrical sinew and grave freedom. The track evokes a landscape without illustrating it, which is always the harder and more mysterious achievement. Its minimal means generate an immense field of suggestion. Nothing is overdrawn, yet everything seems haunted by a fullness just outside the frame.
“Strings” is an unusual track, with Chick Corea improvising on the internal strings of the piano. Brief, kinetic, molecular, and intricate, it feels torn from the instrument’s hidden nervous system. The piano becomes a cabinet of bones and metallic dreams from which Corea coaxes a dense concentration of gesture and possibility. Drawn from the archives of the Piano Improvisations duology, the piece has the quality of a private experiment that accidentally opens onto metaphysics. In less than a handful of minutes, it suggests that an instrument is never singular. It is a society of concealed mechanisms waiting for a sufficiently curious intelligence to disturb its sleep.
“Brujo II,” from the vicinity of Trios/Solos, brings together Ralph Towner on 12-string guitar, Glen Moore on bass, and Colin Walcott on tabla. The track begins with sparkling guitar, then Walcott’s tabla gives the music traction while Moore’s arco bass draws its shapes into audible being. The chemistry is sometimes looser than what ultimately made it onto the album, yet that looseness has its own revealing quality, a sense of musicians finding the floor as they walk across it. Towner’s guitar glints with prismatic discipline, Walcott supplies an earthy centrifugal pull, and Moore’s lines turn the surrounding space into a darkened planetarium. The piece feels exploratory in the truest sense, testing how much unknown territory an ensemble’s shared breath can hold.
“Counterphonymic,” a track that fell by the wayside of Facing You, is a brief improvised piece with a twisted, jazzy flavor that refuses to stand still. Its rhythms falter yet lurch onward with a strange uprightness, producing an anxious but satisfying momentum. One might call it drunken, were it not for the crystal-clear intentionality beneath the surface. Keith Jarrett’s phrasing keeps slipping through trapdoors of its own devising, yet every stumble becomes a decision retroactively revealed as necessary. The piece is full of crooked intelligence, a miniature theater of imbalance in which poise is achieved by declining all conventional forms of poise.
“Bruremarsj,” with Jan Garbarek on tenor saxophone, Arild Andersen on bass, and Edward Vesala on drums, comes from Triptykon. A traditional tune, it works beautifully through proudly air-filled lungs, carrying a heartfelt and playful quality. Garbarek’s tone has a rural austerity that does not exclude tenderness. Andersen’s bass grounds the piece with quiet conviction, while Vesala’s drums complicate the path without disturbing its communal spirit. The track feels unified in a way that does not require polish. Its open grain is the point.
“Noon Song II,” an outtake from Piano Improvisations Vol. 1, shifts between lyrical reverie and upbeat dance with an almost mercurial sense of character. Corea moves between inwardness and buoyancy without making either feel stable for long. The piece keeps discovering new rooms inside itself, some intimate, some vividly animated, each entered with the fluency of an artist for whom improvisation is not wandering but instantaneous architecture. Its beauty lies in the way tenderness can suddenly acquire a pulse and motion can suddenly turn reflective. Corea lets moods infiltrate one another until the distinction between them begins to blur.
Taken as a whole, ECM Special I offers a timely glimpse into the recorded and performing process during a foundational period in ECM’s history. Yet its value extends beyond historical curiosity. The album reveals that the periphery of a catalog can contain some of its most charged material, precisely because these performances have not been embalmed by canonical expectation. They show musicians shaping sound at the edge of decision, making art before art has fully recognized itself in the mirror.
The deepest pleasure of this collection is that it refuses the museum logic of secondary material. Rather than asking us to treat these pieces as supplements to more authoritative albums, it invites us to imagine creation itself as an incomplete archive, a series of rooms opening behind the rooms we thought were barred from entry. In that sense, ECM Special I teaches that music’s most profound revelations may not arrive as monuments. Sometimes they appear as side doors, pencil marks, fragments saved by accident, faint signals from the workshop of becoming. And perhaps the life we call finished is also only another take, preserved on some impossible label, waiting for an unknown listener to lower the needle and hear, beneath all our official versions, the trembling master we never knew we had recorded.













































































