

Roach, Max: Percussion Bitter Sweet (Vinyl LP)
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Percussion Bitter Sweet, released in 1961 on Impulse! Records, is one of preeminent jazz drummer Max Roach’s most politically charged and musically expansive recordings.
Recorded over a number of days in August in 1961, the album reflects Roach’s deepening engagement with themes of social justice and Pan-African identity. The ensemble features Booker Little, Julian Priester, Eric Dolphy, Mal Waldron, Abbey Lincoln, and more, alongside Roach’s own commanding blend of cymbal textures, mallets, and explosive rhythmic detail. The inclusion of vocalist Lincoln — Roach’s artistic and political partner at the time — adds urgency and emotional power to the project’s most pointed statements.
While not formally structured as a suite, the album’s six tracks move fluidly between spiritual lament, militant swing, and improvisational abstraction. The opening piece, “Garvey’s Ghost”, sets the tone with Afro-Caribbean rhythmic undercurrents, while “Mendacity” takes aim at hypocrisy with biting horn lines and Lincoln’s dramatic delivery. Elsewhere, “Mama” and “Praise For A Martyr” explore personal and collective grief through dynamic interplay and modal intensity.
The Verve Vault series is always mastered from analogue tapes and pressed on 180g vinyl at Optimal.
- Garvey's Ghost
- Mama
- Tender Warriors
- Praise For A Martyr
- Mendacity
- Man From South Africa

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