pryso, if one can only have one album with Dolphy as leader this is the one. Classic recording which is generally considered to be his greatest. Amazing lineup playing perhaps the most coherent (non-bs) example of music in all of “avant-garde” jazz:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=ln8naZpOJ0oThe first use of the bass clarinet in jazz was in the context of big band arrangements where it’s distinctive tone color can be exploited very much like it can be in a symphony orchestra. Duke Ellington did this better than anyone who wrote for jazz orchestra. His great baritonist Harry Carney was also a fine bass clarinetist and was featured on the instrument in some of Duke’s arrangements. “A Tone Paralell To Harlem” is one of Duke’s best known “suites”. Check out Harry Carney on bass clarinet @ 8:35:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=k2x5ukuGPEEBill Holman, another (more contemporary) great big band orchestrator featured the bass clarinet on his arrangement of the beatiful Jimmy Rowels ballad “The Peacocks”:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=eKv91DFhgS4Joe Temperley served as the low reed guy in Wynton’s JALC band until his recent unfortunate passing. Wonderful bass clarinetist:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=M9uFP5vPSmIAnother player with “avant-garde” leanings. Have never been a fan of his tenor playing, but enjoy his bass clarinet:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=akz87TT1c5wAnd, of course, the funkiest bass clarinetist ever, Bennie Maupin on one of the funkiest and possibly best “fusion” recordings ever, Herbie Hancock’s “Headhunters”. Love this record:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=mZy7v_-ss74