First released in 1976 on the storied Muse label at the height of his exploratory powers, Cosmos Nucleus captures Carlos Garnett thinking big - in both concept and orchestration. Recorded with a 20‑plus‑piece ensemble bristling with horns, brass and percussion, the album feels less like a standard saxophonist’s date and more like a self‑contained universe, a deliberate attempt to fuse spiritual jazz, electric groove and large‑scale writing into one radiant, turbulent whole. Long a sought‑after title for collectors, it now returns in a carefully restored reissue that finally does justice to its breadth and intensity.
Across six originals in roughly 46 minutes, Garnett extends the electric lessons of mid‑’70s Miles Davis while remaining firmly in his own lane. Opener “Saxy” plants a flag immediately: crunchy, era‑specific rhythm guitar and churning percussion set up a thick, syncopated bed, over which Garnett’s tenor enters with a raw, Pharoah Sanders‑like cry that keeps threatening to spill beyond the bar lines. The title track, “Cosmos Nucleus,” unfolds as a multi‑section suite, shifting from tight horn fanfares to open, modal vamps and back again, with Garnett switching between tenor and soprano, shaping the ensemble dynamics like a preacher who also wrote the hymnbook. Throughout, his writing favours bold, declarative themes and dense ensemble voicings that can suddenly crack open into space for solos, before snapping back into sharply punched figures.
A major part of the album’s fascination lies in its personnel. A remarkably young Kenny Kirkland makes one of his earliest recorded appearances here on electric piano, several years before his better‑known work with Miroslav Vitous, Wynton Marsalis and Sting. You can already hear the mix of harmonic daring and rhythmic bite that would later make him so distinctive: voicings that tilt the harmony toward the cosmic, fleet runs that push the band forward, comping that alternates between Fender‑Rhodes shimmer and percussive jabs. Around him, the expanded horn sections - seven trumpets, three trombones, eight saxophones according to one account - give Garnett an almost Sun Ra‑like canvas to play with, allowing him to stage call‑and‑response battles, massed shout choruses and sudden, vertiginous drops to near‑silence.