I ended part one of my August album roundup by talking about how much I love the new release on NoBusiness Records, Dave Burrell / Sam Woodyard —The Lost Session, Paris 1979. Repeated listening to that album inspired me to check out more Dave Burrell records I had not heard before, and I discovered that NoBusiness has released several notable Dave Burrell albums I want to share with you.
First, let me tell you about NoBusiness Records, founded by Danas Mikailionis and Valerij Anosov in 2008. The roots of NoBusiness are in a jazz record store named Thelonious in Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania. From there, Mikailionis and Anosov started putting on concerts featuring jazz players, among them Mats Gustafsson. Gustafsson suggested they start a record label, and since then, they’ve released over 230 titles, Gustafsson’s Vilnius Explosion being their first.
NoBusiness’s back catalogue contains a compelling mix of archival releases, and they keep an active calendar of new albums out every year. I first came to know of NoBusiness from their fantastic series of Sam Rivers archival records, which are highly recommended. Their albums have excellent artwork and informative liner notes. Spend some time at the label’s Bandcamp page; I recently enjoyed the better part of an afternoon just browsing, and it felt wonderfully like checking out titles in a record store! So check out my last post for thoughts on the great Burrell/Sam Woodyard release, one of the year’s albums (it easily made my Francis Davis’ mid-year ballot for archival albums). Now here are the other NoBusiness albums featuring the great Dave Burrell:
Marion Brown / Dave Burrell – Live at the Black Musicians’ Conference, 1981
(released November 10, 2018; Recorded at the Black Musicians’ Conference, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Massachusetts, April 10, 1981)
Marion Brown – alto saxophone
Dave Burrell – piano
I love every Marion Brown record I’ve ever heard. To me, Marion Brown, along with Miles Davis and only a few other musicians, does something akin to magic—Brown can convey raw emotion with the subtle command of phrasing, timbre, and vulnerability, a kind of fragility conveyed through sound. When I hear Marion Brown, no matter what I’m doing, I need to stop and just listen.
So I was quite excited to see NoBusiness released this date, a duet set of Brown with Dave Burrell, recorded live at the Black Musicians’ Conference in 1981. When they recorded this set, Burrell and Brown already had a long-standing musical partnership. Burrell was there when Brown recorded his first album, Juba-Lee, in 1966, and his Impulse! debut, Three for Shepp. I also highly recommend the Brown DWI album Live In Japan (also called 79118 Live), where Burrell lifts up every tune.
This 1981 set does not have the greatest audio, but that does not interfere with the power of the music. What’s remarkable to me is that a set of music that includes originals by Brown, like “La Placita,” by Burrell (such as “Punaluu Peter”), and two covers of Billy Strayhorn (“My Little Brown Book” and “Lush Life”) feels so much of a piece, like a unified artistic and conceptual whole. I think it’s a testament to two musicians whose aesthetic reaches deeply into jazz experimentalism and is equally grounded in jazz history, and they bring that all together here.
Dave Burrell, Bob Stewart – The Crave
(Recorded live at the Kölner Stadtgarten, Cologne, Germany on June 13, 1994)
Dave Burrell – piano
Bob Stewart – tuba
Next, we jump to 1994, and the unusual meeting of Burrell’s piano with tuba, played by Bob Stewart. One of the joys of the 1979 duets with Sam Woodyard is how Burrell’s music, composed for the opera Windward Passages, embodies the rollicking joy of ragtime and early jazz. So it’s unsurprising that Burrell embraces the music of Jelly Roll Morton here. The program is half Morton originals and half tunes by Burrell, but the music is seamlessly blended into a wonderfully relistenable program. For me, the highlight is the opening tune, where we hear what makes Burrell’s keyboard sound so special – his playing is rhythmically assured, with crisply articulated lines, and the potential at any moment for the music can go anywhere in jazz history. With Stewart’s sly tuba in support, The Crave is a simmering delight.
Dave Burrell, Steve Swell – Turning Point
(released May 1, 2014; Recorded live at the Rosenbach Museum and Library of the Free Library of Philadelphia, PA, on January 19, 2013, by Steve Swell)
Dave Burrell – piano
Steve Swell – trombone
Finally, we have another album of duets, here with Burrell’s piano joined by Steve Swell’s trombone. One thing I never knew about Dave Burrell was the wealth of material he composed related to his research on the Civil War. In this interview published in JazzTimes in 2012, Burrell explains that growing up in Hawaii, he didn’t have much connection to the the history of the Civil War, and researching those stories in Philadelphia’s Rosenbach archives inspired the composition of five books of songs devoted to that subject. A year after that interview, Burrell recorded the third collection in this series before a live audience at the Rosenbach, released in 2014 by NoBusiness as Turning Point. The whole album is terrific, and what’s more, it does not sound like anything I’ve ever heard before with its intermingling of 19th-century melodic strains and modern harmonies. The absolute highlight is placed in the middle of the album, the solo piano performance, “Paradox of Freedom.” When music reaches these heights, its power is essentially indescribable, but what you’ll hear is a tune built on the formation of a simple blues riff that builds to a devastating climax at 6:20, where Burrell plays monolithic block chords over and over that hit with the power of a sledgehammer. It’s one of the most powerful solo performances I’ve ever heard – listen.
OK, that’s a primer of just a few records from the magnificent Dave Burrell. Also, take note that he’s very much still active (I regret missing him in Poughkeepsie last year), so if you have the chance to see him live, go!
Finally, if you have the chance tune into my radio show, Where Is Brooklyn?, I’ll be playing tracks all of these Dave Burrell records – it airs this Saturday 8/30/25, 2AM Eastern time, at WVKR Vassar College, 91.3FM in the Hudson Valley and wvkr.org on the web.

