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John Coltrane

John William Coltrane (September 23, 1926 – July 17, 1967) was an American jazz saxophonist, bandleader and composer. He is among the most influential and acclaimed figures in the history of jazz and 20th-century music.

John Coltrane
Coltrane in 1963
Background information
Birth nameJohn William Coltrane
Born(1926-09-23)September 23, 1926
Hamlet, North Carolina, U.S.
DiedJuly 17, 1967(1967-07-17) (aged 40)
Huntington, New York, U.S.
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • Musician
  • composer
  • bandleader
Instrument(s)
Years active1945–1967
Labels
WebsiteJohnColtrane.com
Military career
Allegiance United States
Service/branch United States Navy
Years of service1945–1946
Rank Seaman first class
Unit Naval Station Pearl Harbor
Pacific Fleet Ceremonial Band
Battles/wars
Awards American Campaign Medal
Asiatic–Pacific Campaign Medal
World War II Victory Medal

John Coltrane
Venerated in
Canonized1982, San Francisco by African Orthodox Church
Major shrineSt. John Coltrane Church, 2097 Turk Blvd, San Francisco, CA 94115
FeastDecember 8 (AOC)

Born and raised in North Carolina, Coltrane moved to Philadelphia after graduating high school, where he studied music. Working in the bebop and hard bop idioms early in his career, Coltrane helped pioneer the use of modes and was one of the players at the forefront of free jazz. He led at least fifty recording sessions and appeared on many albums by other musicians, including trumpeter Miles Davis and pianist Thelonious Monk. Over the course of his career, Coltrane's music took on an increasingly spiritual dimension, as exemplified on his most acclaimed album A Love Supreme (1965) and others.[1] Decades after his death, Coltrane remains influential, and he has received numerous posthumous awards, including a special Pulitzer Prize, and was canonized by the African Orthodox Church.[2]

His second wife was pianist and harpist Alice Coltrane. The couple had three children: John Jr.[3] (1964–1982), a bassist; Ravi (born 1965), a saxophonist; and Oran (born 1967), a saxophonist, guitarist, drummer and singer.[4][5][6]

Biography

1926–1945: Early life

 
Coltrane's first recordings were made when he was a sailor.

Coltrane was born in his parents' apartment at 200 Hamlet Avenue in Hamlet, North Carolina, on September 23, 1926.[7] His father was John R. Coltrane[8] and his mother was Alice Blair.[9] He grew up in High Point, North Carolina and attended William Penn High School. While in high school, Coltrane played clarinet and alto horn in a community band[10] before switching to the saxophone by the fall of 1940, after being influenced by the likes of Lester Young and Johnny Hodges.[11][12] Beginning in December 1938, his father, aunt, and grandparents died within a few months of one another, leaving him to be raised by his mother and a close cousin.[13] In June 1943, shortly after graduating from high school, Coltrane and his family moved to Philadelphia, where he got a job at a sugar refinery. In September that year, his 17th birthday, his mother bought him his first saxophone, an alto.[9] From 1944 to 1945, Coltrane took saxophone lessons at the Ornstein School of Music with Mike Guerra.[14] From early to mid-1945, he had his first professional work: a "cocktail lounge trio" with piano and guitar.[15]

An important moment in the progression of Coltrane's musical development occurred on June 5, 1945, when he saw Charlie Parker perform for the first time. In a DownBeat magazine article in 1960 he recalled: “the first time I heard Bird play, it hit me right between the eyes.”

1945–1946: Military service

To avoid being drafted by the Army, Coltrane enlisted in the Navy on August 6, 1945, the day the first U.S. atomic bomb was dropped on Japan.[16] He was trained as an apprentice seaman at Sampson Naval Training Station in upstate New York before he was shipped to Pearl Harbor,[16] where he was stationed at Manana Barracks,[17] the largest posting of African American servicemen in the world.[18] By the time he got to Hawaii in late 1945, the Navy was downsizing. Coltrane's musical talent was recognized, and he became one of the few Navy men to serve as a musician without having been granted musician's rating when he joined the Melody Masters, the base swing band.[16] Because the Melody Masters was an all-white band, Coltrane was treated as a guest performer to avoid alerting superior officers of his participation in the band.[19] He continued to perform other duties when not playing with the band, including kitchen and security details. By the end of his service, he had assumed a leadership role in the band. His first recordings, an informal session in Hawaii with Navy musicians, occurred on July 13, 1946.[20] He played alto saxophone on a selection of jazz standards and bebop tunes.[21] He was officially discharged from the Navy on August 8, 1946. He was awarded the American Campaign Medal, Asiatic–Pacific Campaign Medal and the World War II Victory Medal.

1946–1954: Immediate post-war career

After being discharged from the Navy as a seaman first class in August 1946, Coltrane returned to Philadelphia, where he "plunged into the heady excitement of the new music and the blossoming bebop scene."[22] Coltrane used the G.I. Bill to enroll at the Granoff School of Music, where he studied music theory with jazz guitarist and composer Dennis Sandole.[23] Coltrane would continue to be under Sandole's tutelage from 1946 into the early 1950s.[24] Coltrane also took saxophone lessons with Matthew Rastelli, a saxophone teacher at Granoff once a week for about two or three years, but the lessons stopped when Coltrane’s G.I. Bill funds ran out.[25] After touring with King Kolax, he joined a band led by Jimmy Heath, who was introduced to Coltrane's playing by his former Navy buddy, trumpeter William Massey, who had played with Coltrane in the Melody Masters.[26] Although he started on alto saxophone, he began playing tenor saxophone in 1947 with Eddie Vinson.[27]

Coltrane called this a time when "a wider area of listening opened up for me. There were many things that people like Hawk [Coleman Hawkins], and Ben [Webster] and Tab Smith were doing in the '40s that I didn't understand, but that I felt emotionally."[28] A significant influence, according to tenor saxophonist Odean Pope, was the Philadelphia pianist, composer, and theorist Hasaan Ibn Ali. "Hasaan was the clue to...the system that Trane uses. Hasaan was the great influence on Trane's melodic concept."[29] Coltrane became fanatical about practicing and developing his craft, practicing "25 hours a day" according to Jimmy Heath. Heath recalls an incident in a hotel in San Francisco when after a complaint was issued, Coltrane took the horn out of his mouth and practiced fingering for a full hour.[30] Such was his dedication it was common for him to fall asleep with the horn still in his mouth or practice a single note for hours on end.[31]

Charlie Parker, who Coltrane had first heard perform before his time in the Navy, became an idol, and he and Coltrane would play together occasionally in the late 1940s. He was a member of groups led by Dizzy Gillespie, Earl Bostic, and Johnny Hodges in the early to mid-1950s.

1955–1957: Miles and Monk period

In 1955, Coltrane was freelancing in Philadelphia while studying with Sandole when he received a call from trumpeter Miles Davis. Davis had been successful in the 1940s, but his reputation and work had been damaged in part by heroin addiction; he was again active and about to form a quintet. Coltrane was with this edition of the Davis band (known as the "First Great Quintet"—along with Red Garland on piano, Paul Chambers on bass, and Philly Joe Jones on drums) from October 1955 to April 1957 (with a few absences). During this period Davis released several influential recordings that revealed the first signs of Coltrane's growing ability. This quintet, represented by two marathon recording sessions for Prestige in 1956, resulted in the albums Cookin', Relaxin', Workin', and Steamin'. The "First Great Quintet" disbanded due in part to Coltrane's heroin addiction.[32]

During the later part of 1957, Coltrane worked with Thelonious Monk at New York's Five Spot Café, and played in Monk's quartet (July–December 1957), but, owing to contractual conflicts, took part in only one official studio recording session with this group. Coltrane recorded many sessions for Prestige under his own name at this time, but Monk refused to record for his old label.[33] A private recording made by Juanita Naima Coltrane of a 1958 reunion of the group was issued by Blue Note Records as Live at the Five Spot—Discovery! in 1993. A high quality tape of a concert given by this quartet in November 1957 was found later, and was released by Blue Note in 2005. Recorded by Voice of America, the performances confirm the group's reputation, and the resulting album, Thelonious Monk Quartet with John Coltrane at Carnegie Hall, is very highly rated.

Blue Train, Coltrane's sole date as leader for Blue Note, featuring trumpeter Lee Morgan, bassist Paul Chambers, and trombonist Curtis Fuller, is often considered his best album from this period. Four of its five tracks are original Coltrane compositions, and the title track, "Moment's Notice", and "Lazy Bird", have become standards.

1958: Davis and Coltrane

Coltrane rejoined Davis in January 1958. In October of that year, jazz critic Ira Gitler coined the term "sheets of sound"[34] to describe the style Coltrane developed with Monk and was perfecting in Davis's group, now a sextet. His playing was compressed, with rapid runs cascading in very many notes per minute. Coltrane recalled: "I found that there were a certain number of chord progressions to play in a given time, and sometimes what I played didn't work out in eighth notes, sixteenth notes, or triplets. I had to put the notes in uneven groups like fives and sevens in order to get them all in."[35]

Coltrane stayed with Davis until April 1960, working with alto saxophonist Cannonball Adderley; pianists Red Garland, Bill Evans, and Wynton Kelly; bassist Paul Chambers; and drummers Philly Joe Jones and Jimmy Cobb. During this time he participated in the Davis sessions Milestones and Kind of Blue, and the concert recordings Miles & Monk at Newport (1963) and Jazz at the Plaza (1958).

1959–1961: Period with Atlantic Records

At the end of this period, Coltrane recorded Giant Steps (1960), his issued album as leader for Atlantic which contained only his compositions.[36] The album's title track is generally considered to have one of the most difficult chord progressions of any widely played jazz composition,[37] eventually referred to as Coltrane changes.[38] His development of these cycles led to further experimentation with improvised melody and harmony that he continued throughout his career.[39]

Coltrane formed his first quartet for live performances in 1960 for an appearance at the Jazz Gallery in New York City.[40] After moving through different personnel, including Steve Kuhn, Pete La Roca, and Billy Higgins, he kept pianist McCoy Tyner, bassist Steve Davis, and drummer Elvin Jones.[41][42] Tyner, a native of Philadelphia, had been a friend of Coltrane for some years, and the two men had an understanding that Tyner would join the band when he felt ready.[43][44] My Favorite Things (1961) was the first album recorded by this band.[45] It was Coltrane's first album on soprano saxophone,[46] which he began practicing while with Miles Davis.[47] It was considered an unconventional move because the instrument was more associated with earlier jazz.[48]

1961–1962: First years with Impulse! Records

 
Coltrane in Amsterdam, 1961

In May 1961, Coltrane's contract with Atlantic was bought by Impulse!.[49] The move to Impulse! meant that Coltrane resumed his recording relationship with engineer Rudy Van Gelder, who had recorded his and Davis's sessions for Prestige. He recorded most of his albums for Impulse! at Van Gelder's studio in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey.

By early 1961, bassist Davis had been replaced by Reggie Workman, while Eric Dolphy joined the group as a second horn. The quintet had a celebrated and extensively recorded residency at the Village Vanguard, which demonstrated Coltrane's new direction. It included the most experimental music he had played, influenced by Indian ragas, modal jazz, and free jazz. John Gilmore, a longtime saxophonist with musician Sun Ra, was particularly influential; after hearing a Gilmore performance, Coltrane is reported to have said, "He's got it! Gilmore's got the concept!"[50] The most celebrated of the Vanguard tunes, the 15-minute blues "Chasin' the 'Trane", was strongly inspired by Gilmore's music.[51]

In 1961, Coltrane began pairing Workman with a second bassist, usually Art Davis or Donald Garrett. Garrett recalled playing a tape for Coltrane where "I was playing with another bass player. We were doing some things rhythmically, and Coltrane became excited about the sound. We got the same kind of sound you get from the East Indian water drum. One bass remains in the lower register and is the stabilizing, pulsating thing, while the other bass is free to improvise, like the right hand would be on the drum. So Coltrane liked the idea."[52] Coltrane also recalled: "I thought another bass would add that certain rhythmic sound. We were playing a lot of stuff with a sort of suspended rhythm, with one bass playing a series of notes around one point, and it seemed that another bass could fill in the spaces."[53] According to Eric Dolphy, one night: "Wilbur Ware came in and up on the stand so they had three basses going. John and I got off the stand and listened."[53] Coltrane employed two basses on the 1961 albums Olé Coltrane and Africa/Brass, and later on The John Coltrane Quartet Plays and Ascension. Both Reggie Workman and Jimmy Garrison play bass on the 1961 Village Vanguard recordings of "India" and "Miles' Mode". [54]

During this period, critics were divided in their estimation of Coltrane, who had radically altered his style. Audiences, too, were perplexed; in France he was booed during his final tour with Davis. In 1961, DownBeat magazine called Coltrane and Dolphy players of "anti-jazz" in an article that bewildered and upset the musicians.[51] Coltrane admitted some of his early solos were based mostly on technical ideas. Furthermore, Dolphy's angular, voice-like playing earned him a reputation as a figurehead of the "New Thing", also known as free jazz, a movement led by Ornette Coleman which was denigrated by some jazz musicians (including Davis) and critics. But as Coltrane's style developed, he was determined to make every performance "a whole expression of one's being".[55]

1962–1965: Classic Quartet period

In 1962, Dolphy departed and Jimmy Garrison replaced Workman as bassist. From then on, the "Classic Quartet", as it came to be known, with Tyner, Garrison, and Jones, produced searching, spiritually driven work. Coltrane was moving toward a more harmonically static style that allowed him to expand his improvisations rhythmically, melodically, and motivically. Harmonically complex music was still present, but on stage Coltrane heavily favored continually reworking his "standards": "Impressions", "My Favorite Things", and "I Want to Talk About You".

The criticism of the quintet with Dolphy may have affected Coltrane. In contrast to the radicalism of his 1961 recordings at the Village Vanguard, his studio albums in the following two years (with the exception of Coltrane, 1962, which featured a blistering version of Harold Arlen's "Out of This World") were much more conservative. He recorded an album of ballads and participated in album collaborations with Duke Ellington and singer Johnny Hartman, a baritone who specialized in ballads. The album Ballads (recorded 1961–62) is emblematic of Coltrane's versatility, as the quartet shed new light on standards such as "It's Easy to Remember". Despite a more polished approach in the studio, in concert the quartet continued to balance "standards" and its own more exploratory and challenging music, as can be heard on the Impressions (recorded 1961–63), Live at Birdland and Newport '63 (both recorded 1963). Impressions consists of two extended jams including the title track along with "Dear Old Stockholm", "After the Rain" and a blues. Coltrane later said he enjoyed having a "balanced catalogue".[56]

On March 6, 1963, the group entered Van Gelder Studio in New Jersey and recorded a session that was lost for decades after its master tape was destroyed by Impulse Records to cut down on storage space. On June 29, 2018, Impulse! released Both Directions at Once: The Lost Album, made up of seven tracks made from a spare copy Coltrane had given to his wife.[57][58] On March 7, 1963, they were joined in the studio by Hartman for the recording of six tracks for the John Coltrane and Johnny Hartman album, released that July.

Impulse! followed the successful "lost album" release with 2019's Blue World, made up of a 1964 soundtrack to the film The Cat in the Bag, recorded in June 1964.

The Classic Quartet produced their best-selling album, A Love Supreme, in December 1964. A culmination of much of Coltrane's work up to this point, this four-part suite is an ode to his faith in and love for God. These spiritual concerns characterized much of Coltrane's composing and playing from this point onwards—as can be seen from album titles such as Ascension, Om and Meditations. The fourth movement of A Love Supreme, "Psalm", is, in fact, a musical setting for an original poem to God written by Coltrane, and printed in the album's liner notes. Coltrane plays almost exactly one note for each syllable of the poem, and bases his phrasing on the words. The album was composed at Coltrane's home in Dix Hills on Long Island.

The quartet played A Love Supreme live only three times, recorded twice — in July 1965 at a concert in Antibes, France and in October 1965 in Seattle, Washington.[59] A recording of the Antibes concert was released by Impulse! in 2002 on the remastered Deluxe Edition of A Love Supreme,[60] and again in 2015 on the "Super Deluxe Edition" of The Complete Masters.[61] A recently discovered second amateur recording titled "A Love Supreme: Live in Seattle" was released in 2021.[62]

1965: Adding to the quartet and Avant-garde Jazz

 
As Coltrane's interest in jazz became experimental, he added Pharoah Sanders (center; circa 1978) to his ensemble.

In his late period, Coltrane showed an interest in the avant-garde jazz of Ornette Coleman,[63] Albert Ayler,[64] and Sun Ra. He was especially influenced by the dissonance of Ayler's trio with bassist Gary Peacock,[65] who had worked with Paul Bley, and drummer Sunny Murray, whose playing was honed with Cecil Taylor as leader. Coltrane championed many young free jazz musicians such as Archie Shepp,[66] and under his influence Impulse! became a leading free jazz label.

After A Love Supreme was recorded, Ayler's style became more prominent in Coltrane's music. A series of recordings with the Classic Quartet in the first half of 1965 show Coltrane's playing becoming abstract, with greater incorporation of devices like multiphonics, use of overtones, and playing in the altissimo register, as well as a mutated return of Coltrane's sheets of sound. In the studio, he all but abandoned soprano saxophone to concentrate on tenor. The quartet responded by playing with increasing freedom. The group's evolution can be traced through the albums The John Coltrane Quartet Plays, Living Space, Transition, New Thing at Newport, Sun Ship, and First Meditations.

In June 1965, he went into Van Gelder's studio with ten other musicians (including Shepp,[67] Pharoah Sanders,[67] Freddie Hubbard,[67] Marion Brown, and John Tchicai[67]) to record Ascension, a 38-minute piece that included solos by young avant-garde musicians.[66] The album was controversial primarily for the collective improvisation sections that separated the solos. After recording with the quartet over the next few months, Coltrane invited Sanders to join the band in September 1965. While Coltrane frequently used overblowing as an emotional exclamation-point, Sanders "was involved in the search for 'human' sounds on his instrument,"[68] employing "a tone which blasted like a blow torch"[69] and drastically expanding the vocabulary of his horn by employing multiphonics, growling, and "high register squeals [that] could imitate not only the human song but the human cry and shriek as well."[70] Regarding Coltrane's decision to add Sanders to the band, Gary Giddins wrote "Those who had followed Coltrane to the edge of the galaxy now had the added challenge of a player who appeared to have little contact with earth."[71]

1965–1967: The second quartet

 
Percussionist Rashied Ali (pictured in 2007) augmented Coltrane's sound.

By late 1965, Coltrane was regularly augmenting his group with Sanders and other free jazz musicians. Rashied Ali joined the group as a second drummer. This was the end of the quartet. Claiming he was unable to hear himself over the two drummers, Tyner left the band shortly after the recording of Meditations. Jones left in early 1966, dissatisfied by sharing drumming duties with Ali and stating that, concerning Coltrane's latest music, "only poets can understand it".[72] In interviews, Tyner and Jones both voiced their displeasure with the music's direction; however, they would incorporate some of the intensity of free jazz in their solo work. Later, both musicians expressed tremendous respect for Coltrane: regarding his late music, Jones stated: "Well, of course it's far out, because this is a tremendous mind that's involved, you know. You wouldn't expect Einstein to be playing jacks, would you?"[73] Tyner recalled: "He was constantly pushing forward. He never rested on his laurels, he was always looking for what's next... he was always searching, like a scientist in a lab, looking for something new, a different direction... He kept hearing these sounds in his head..."[74] Jones and Tyner both recorded tributes to Coltrane, Tyner with Echoes of a Friend (1972) and Blues for Coltrane: A Tribute to John Coltrane (1987), and Jones with Live in Japan 1978: Dear John C. (1978) and Tribute to John Coltrane "A Love Supreme" (1994).

There is speculation that in 1965 Coltrane began using LSD,[75][76] informing the "cosmic" transcendence of his late period. Nat Hentoff wrote: "it is as if he and Sanders were speaking with 'the gift of tongues' - as if their insights were of such compelling force that they have to transcend ordinary ways of musical speech and ordinary textures to be able to convey that part of the essence of being they have touched."[77] After the departure of Tyner and Jones, Coltrane led a quintet with Sanders on tenor saxophone, his second wife Alice Coltrane on piano, Garrison on bass, and Ali on drums. When touring, the group was known for playing long versions of their repertoire, many stretching beyond 30 minutes to an hour. In concert, solos by band members often extended beyond fifteen minutes.

The group can be heard on several concert recordings from 1966, including Live at the Village Vanguard Again! and Live in Japan. In 1967, Coltrane entered the studio several times. Although pieces with Sanders have surfaced (the unusual "To Be" has both men on flute), most of the recordings were either with the quartet minus Sanders (Expression and Stellar Regions) or as a duo with Ali. The latter duo produced six performances that appear on the album Interstellar Space. Coltrane also continued to tour with the second quartet up until two months before his death; his penultimate live performance and final recorded one, a radio broadcast for the Olatunji Center of African Culture in New York City, was eventually released as an album in 2001.

1967: Illness and death

Coltrane died of liver cancer at the age of 40 on July 17, 1967, at Huntington Hospital on Long Island. His funeral was held four days later at St. Peter's Lutheran Church in New York City. The service was started by the Albert Ayler Quartet and finished by the Ornette Coleman Quartet.[78] Coltrane is buried at Pinelawn Cemetery in Farmingdale, New York.

Biographer Lewis Porter speculated that the cause of Coltrane's illness was hepatitis, although he also attributed the disease to Coltrane's heroin use at a previous period in his life.[79] Frederick J. Spencer wrote that Coltrane's death could be attributed to his needle use "or the bottle, or both."[80] He stated that "[t]he needles he used to inject the drugs may have had everything to do with" Coltrane's liver disease: "If any needle was contaminated with the appropriate hepatitis virus, it may have caused a chronic infection leading to cirrhosis or cancer."[80] He noted that despite Coltrane's "spiritual awakening" in 1957, "[b]y then, he may have had chronic hepatitis and cirrhosis ... Unless he developed a primary focus elsewhere in later life and that spread to his liver, the seeds of John Coltrane’s cancer were sown in his days of addiction."[81]

Coltrane's death surprised many in the music community who were unaware of his condition. Miles Davis said, "Coltrane's death shocked everyone, took everyone by surprise. I knew he hadn't looked too good ... But I didn't know he was that sick—or even sick at all."[82]

Instruments

In 1947, when he joined King Kolax's band, Coltrane switched to tenor saxophone, the instrument he became known for playing.[83] In the early 1960s, during his contract with Atlantic, he played soprano saxophone.[83]

His preference for playing melody higher on the range of the tenor saxophone is attributed to his training on alto horn and clarinet. His "sound concept", manipulated in one's vocal tract, of the tenor was set higher than the normal range of the instrument.[84] Coltrane observed how his experience playing the soprano saxophone gradually affected his style on the tenor, stating "the soprano, by being this small instrument, I found that playing the lowest note on it was like playing ... one of the middle notes in the tenor ... I found that I would play all over this instrument ... And on tenor, I hadn't always played all over it, because I was playing certain ideas which would just run in certain ranges ... By playing on the soprano and becoming accustomed to playing from that low B-flat on up, it soon got so when I went to tenor, I found myself doing the same thing ... And this caused ... the willingness to change and just try to play... as much of the instrument as possible."[85]

Toward the end of his career, he experimented with flute in his live performances and studio recordings (Live at the Village Vanguard Again!, Expression). After Eric Dolphy died in June 1964, his mother gave Coltrane his flute and bass clarinet.[86]

According to drummer Rashied Ali, Coltrane had an interest in the drums.[87] He would often have a spare drum set on concert stages that he would play.[88] His interest in the drums and his penchant for having solos with the drums resonated on tracks such as "Pursuance" and "The Drum Thing" from A Love Supreme and Crescent, respectively. It resulted in the album Interstellar Space with Ali.[89] In an interview with Nat Hentoff in late 1965 or early 1966, Coltrane stated: "I feel the need for more time, more rhythm all around me. And with more than one drummer, the rhythm can be more multi-directional."[77] In an August 1966 interview with Frank Kofsky, Coltrane repeatedly emphasized his affinity for drums, saying "I feel so strongly about drums, I really do."[90] Later that year, Coltrane would record the music released posthumously on Offering: Live at Temple University, which features Ali on drums supplemented by three percussionists.

Coltrane's tenor (Selmer Mark VI, serial number 125571, dated 1965) and soprano (Selmer Mark VI, serial number 99626, dated 1962) saxophones were auctioned on February 20, 2005, to raise money for the John Coltrane Foundation.[91]

Although he rarely played alto, he owned a prototype Yamaha alto saxophone given to him by the company as an endorsement in 1966. He can be heard playing it on live albums recorded in Japan, such as Second Night in Tokyo, and is pictured using it on the cover of the compilation Live in Japan. He can also be heard playing the Yamaha alto on the album Stellar Regions.[92]

Personal life and religious beliefs

Upbringing and early influences

Coltrane was born and raised in a Christian home. He was influenced by religion and spirituality beginning in childhood. His maternal grandfather, the Reverend William Blair, was a minister at an African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church[93][94] in High Point, North Carolina, and his paternal grandfather, the Reverend William H. Coltrane, was an A.M.E. Zion minister in Hamlet, North Carolina.[93] Critic Norman Weinstein observed the parallel between Coltrane's music and his experience in the southern church,[95] which included practicing music there as a youth.

First marriage

In 1955, Coltrane married Naima (née Juanita Grubbs). Naima Coltrane, a Muslim convert, heavily influenced his spirituality. When the couple married, she had a five-year-old daughter named Antonia, later named Syeeda. Coltrane adopted Syeeda. He met Naima at the home of bassist Steve Davis in Philadelphia. The love ballad he wrote to honor his wife, "Naima", was Coltrane's favorite composition. In 1956, the couple left Philadelphia with their six-year-old daughter in tow and moved to New York City. In August 1957, Coltrane, Naima and Syeeda moved into an apartment on 103rd Street and Amsterdam Avenue. in New York. A few years later, John and Naima Coltrane purchased a home at 116-60 Mexico Street in St. Albans, Queens.[96] This is the house where they would break up in 1963.[97]

About the breakup, Naima said in J. C. Thomas's Chasin' the Trane: "I could feel it was going to happen sooner or later, so I wasn't really surprised when John moved out of the house in the summer of 1963. He didn't offer any explanation. He just told me there were things he had to do, and he left only with his clothes and his horns. He stayed in a hotel sometimes, other times with his mother in Philadelphia. All he said was, 'Naima, I'm going to make a change.' Even though I could feel it coming, it hurt, and I didn't get over it for at least another year." But Coltrane kept a close relationship with Naima, even calling her in 1964 to tell her that 90% of his playing would be prayer. They remained in touch until his death in 1967. Naima Coltrane died of a heart attack in October 1996.

1957 "spiritual awakening"

In 1957, Coltrane had a religious experience that may have helped him overcome the heroin addiction[98][99] and alcoholism[99] he had struggled with since 1948.[100] In the liner notes of A Love Supreme, Coltrane states that in 1957 he experienced "by the grace of God, a spiritual awakening which was to lead me to a richer, fuller, more productive life. At that time, in gratitude, I humbly asked to be given the means and privilege to make others happy through music." The liner notes appear to mention God in a Universalist sense and do not advocate one religion over another.[101] Further evidence of this universal view can be found in the liner notes of Meditations (1965) in which Coltrane declares, "I believe in all religions."[102]

Second marriage

In 1963, he met pianist Alice McLeod.[103] He and Alice moved in together and had two sons before he became "officially divorced from Naima in 1966, at which time [he] and Alice were immediately married."[102] John Jr. was born in 1964, Ravi in 1965, and Oranyan ("Oran") in 1967.[102] According to the musician Peter Lavezzoli, "Alice brought happiness and stability to John's life, not only because they had children, but also because they shared many of the same spiritual beliefs, particularly a mutual interest in Indian philosophy. Alice also understood what it was like to be a professional musician."[102]

Spiritual influence in music, religious exploration

After A Love Supreme, many of the titles of his songs and albums had spiritual connotations: Ascension, Meditations, Om, Selflessness, "Amen", "Ascent", "Attaining", "Dear Lord", "Prayer and Meditation Suite", and "The Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost".[102] His library of books included The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna, the Bhagavad Gita, and Paramahansa Yogananda's Autobiography of a Yogi. The last of these describes, in Lavezzoli's words, a "search for universal truth, a journey that Coltrane had also undertaken. Yogananda believed that both Eastern and Western spiritual paths were efficacious, and wrote of the similarities between Krishna and Christ. This openness to different traditions resonated with Coltrane, who studied the Qur'an, the Bible, Kabbalah, and astrology with equal sincerity."[104] He also explored Hinduism, Jiddu Krishnamurti, African history, the philosophical teachings of Plato and Aristotle,[105] and Zen Buddhism.[106]

In October 1965, Coltrane recorded Om, referring to the sacred syllable in Hinduism, which symbolizes the infinite or the entire universe. Coltrane described Om as the "first syllable, the primal word, the word of power".[107] The 29-minute recording contains chants from the Hindu Bhagavad Gita[108] and the Buddhist Tibetan Book of the Dead,[109] and a recitation of a passage describing the primal verbalization "om" as a cosmic/spiritual common denominator in all things.

Study of world music

Coltrane's spiritual journey was interwoven with his investigation of world music. He believed in not only a universal musical structure that transcended ethnic distinctions, but also being able to harness the mystical language of music itself. His study of Indian music led him to believe that certain sounds and scales could "produce specific emotional meanings." According to Coltrane, the goal of a musician was to understand these forces, control them, and elicit a response from the audience. He said, "I would like to bring to people something like happiness. I would like to discover a method so that if I want it to rain, it will start right away to rain. If one of my friends is ill, I'd like to play a certain song and he will be cured; when he'd be broke, I'd bring out a different song and immediately he'd receive all the money he needed."[110]

Veneration

 
Coltrane icon at St. John Coltrane African Orthodox Church
Born(1926-09-23)September 23, 1926
Hamlet, North Carolina, US
DiedJuly 17, 1967(1967-07-17) (aged 40)
Huntington, New York, US
Venerated inAfrican Orthodox Church
Episcopal Church
Canonized1982, St. John Coltrane Church, 2097 Turk Blvd, San Francisco, CA 94115 by African Orthodox Church[111]
FeastDecember 8 (AOC)
PatronageAll Artists

After Coltrane's death, a congregation called the Yardbird Temple in San Francisco began worshiping him as God incarnate.[112] The group was named after Charlie "Yardbird" Parker, whom they equated to John the Baptist.[112] The congregation became affiliated with the African Orthodox Church; this involved changing Coltrane's status from a god to a saint.[112] The resultant St. John Coltrane African Orthodox Church, San Francisco, is the only African Orthodox church that incorporates Coltrane's music and his lyrics as prayers in its liturgy.[113]

 
Musicians at St John Coltrane African Orthodox Church, San Francisco 2009

Rev. F. W. King, describing the African Orthodox Church of Saint John Coltrane, said "We are Coltrane-conscious...God dwells in the musical majesty of his sounds."[114]

Samuel G. Freedman wrote in The New York Times that

... the Coltrane church is not a gimmick or a forced alloy of nightclub music and ethereal faith. Its message of deliverance through divine sound is actually quite consistent with Coltrane's own experience and message. ... In both implicit and explicit ways, Coltrane also functioned as a religious figure. Addicted to heroin in the 1950s, he quit cold turkey, and later explained that he had heard the voice of God during his anguishing withdrawal. ... In 1966, an interviewer in Japan asked Coltrane what he hoped to be in five years, and Coltrane replied, "a saint".[112]

Coltrane is depicted as one of the 90 saints in the Dancing Saints icon of St. Gregory of Nyssa Episcopal Church in San Francisco. The icon is a 3,000-square-foot (280 m2) painting in the Byzantine iconographic style that wraps around the entire church rotunda. It was executed by Mark Dukes, an ordained deacon at the Saint John Coltrane African Orthodox Church who painted other icons of Coltrane for the Coltrane Church.[115] Saint Barnabas Episcopal Church in Newark, New Jersey, included Coltrane on its list of historical black saints and made a "case for sainthood" for him in an article on its website.[116]

Documentaries about Coltrane and the church include Alan Klingenstein's The Church of Saint Coltrane (1996),[111][117] and a 2004 program presented by Alan Yentob for the BBC.[118]

Sculptor John Raimondi created an abstract sculpture dedicated to John Coltrane in 2000. The sculpture, fabricated with patinated bronze, stands 12 feet tall. Smaller scale iterations have also been fabricated in patinated bronze.

Selected discography

The discography below lists albums conceived and approved by Coltrane as a leader during his lifetime. It does not include his many releases as a sideman, sessions assembled into albums by various record labels after Coltrane's contract expired, sessions with Coltrane as a sideman later reissued with his name featured more prominently, or posthumous compilations, except for the one he approved before his death. See main discography link above for full list.

On June 25, 2019, The New York Times Magazine listed John Coltrane among hundreds of artists whose material was reportedly destroyed in the 2008 Universal fire.[119]

Prestige and Blue Note Records

Atlantic Records

Impulse! Records

Sessionography

Awards and honors

 
John Coltrane House, 1511 North Thirty-third Street, Philadelphia

In 1965, Coltrane was inducted into the Down Beat Jazz Hall of Fame. In 1972, A Love Supreme was certified gold by the RIAA for selling over half a million copies in Japan. This album was certified gold in the United States in 2001. In 1982 he was awarded a posthumous Grammy for Best Jazz Solo Performance on the album Bye Bye Blackbird, and in 1997 he was awarded the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award.[28] In 2002, scholar Molefi Kete Asante named him one of his 100 Greatest African Americans.[120] He was awarded a special Pulitzer Prize in 2007 citing his "masterful improvisation, supreme musicianship and iconic centrality to the history of jazz."[2] He was inducted into the North Carolina Music Hall of Fame in 2009.[121]

A former home, the John Coltrane House in Philadelphia, was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1999. His last home, the John Coltrane Home in the Dix Hills district of Huntington, New York, where he resided from 1964 until his death, was added to the National Register of Historic Places on June 29, 2007. Their son Ravi, named after Ravi Shankar, is also a saxophonist.

The parent company of Impulse!, from 1965 to 1979 known as ABC Records, purged much of its unreleased material in the 1970s.[122]

An early documentary on Jazz was made in 1990 by fellow musician Robert Palmer, called The World According to John Coltrane.

Chasing Trane: The John Coltrane Documentary, is a 2016 American film directed by John Scheinfeld. Narrated by Denzel Washington, the film chronicles the life of Coltrane in his own words and includes interviews with such admirers as Wynton Marsalis, Sonny Rollins, Bill Clinton, and Cornel West.[123]

Citations

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  6. ^ Berkman, Franya (2010). Monument Eternal: The Music of Alice Coltrane. Wesleyan University Press. p. 47.
  7. ^ DeVito et al., p. 1.
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General and cited references

Further reading

  • Baham, Nicholas III (2015) [2015]. The Coltrane Church: Apostles of Sound, Agents of Social Justice. McFarland. ISBN 978-0786494965.
  • Kahn, Ashley (2003) [2002]. A Love Supreme: The Story of John Coltrane's Signature Album. Elvin Jones. Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-200352-2.
  • Margry, Peter Jan and Wojcik, Daniel. (2017) "A Saxophone Divine. The Transformative Power of Saint John Coltrane's Jazz Music in San Francisco's Fillmore District', in: V. Hegner and P. J. Margry (editors), Spiritualizing the City: Agency and Resilience of the Urban and Urbanesque Habitat. Milton Park: Routledge, 169–194.
  • Simpkins, Cuthbert (1989) [1975]. Coltrane: A Biography. New York: Herndon House Publishers. ISBN 0-915542-82-X.
  • Thomas, J.C. (1975). Chasin' the Trane. New York: Da Capo. ISBN 0-306-80043-8.
  • Woideck, Carl (1998). The John Coltrane Companion. New York: Schirmer Books. ISBN 0-02-864790-4.

External links

  • Official website  
  • John Coltrane at Curlie
  • John Coltrane discography at Discogs  
  • infography
  • John Coltrane discography
  • Coltrane Church Website site
  • John Coltrane 1957 Carnegie Hall performance in transcription and analysis
  • John Coltrane Images of Trane by Lee Tanner in Jazz Times, June 1997
  • Interviews from 1958–1966

john, coltrane, coltrane, redirects, here, other, uses, coltrane, disambiguation, john, william, coltrane, september, 1926, july, 1967, american, jazz, saxophonist, bandleader, composer, among, most, influential, acclaimed, figures, history, jazz, 20th, centur. Coltrane redirects here For other uses see Coltrane disambiguation John William Coltrane September 23 1926 July 17 1967 was an American jazz saxophonist bandleader and composer He is among the most influential and acclaimed figures in the history of jazz and 20th century music John ColtraneColtrane in 1963Background informationBirth nameJohn William ColtraneBorn 1926 09 23 September 23 1926Hamlet North Carolina U S DiedJuly 17 1967 1967 07 17 aged 40 Huntington New York U S GenresHard bop modal jazz free jazz avant garde jazzOccupation s MusiciancomposerbandleaderInstrument s Tenor saxophonesoprano saxophonealto saxophoneflutebass clarinetYears active1945 1967LabelsPrestige Blue Note Atlantic Impulse WebsiteJohnColtrane comMilitary careerAllegiance United StatesService wbr branchUnited States NavyYears of service1945 1946RankSeaman first classUnitNaval Station Pearl HarborPacific Fleet Ceremonial BandBattles warsWorld War II Pacific TheaterAwardsAmerican Campaign Medal Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal World War II Victory MedalSaintJohn ColtraneVenerated inAfrican Orthodox Church Episcopal ChurchCanonized1982 San Francisco by African Orthodox ChurchMajor shrineSt John Coltrane Church 2097 Turk Blvd San Francisco CA 94115FeastDecember 8 AOC Born and raised in North Carolina Coltrane moved to Philadelphia after graduating high school where he studied music Working in the bebop and hard bop idioms early in his career Coltrane helped pioneer the use of modes and was one of the players at the forefront of free jazz He led at least fifty recording sessions and appeared on many albums by other musicians including trumpeter Miles Davis and pianist Thelonious Monk Over the course of his career Coltrane s music took on an increasingly spiritual dimension as exemplified on his most acclaimed album A Love Supreme 1965 and others 1 Decades after his death Coltrane remains influential and he has received numerous posthumous awards including a special Pulitzer Prize and was canonized by the African Orthodox Church 2 His second wife was pianist and harpist Alice Coltrane The couple had three children John Jr 3 1964 1982 a bassist Ravi born 1965 a saxophonist and Oran born 1967 a saxophonist guitarist drummer and singer 4 5 6 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 1926 1945 Early life 1 2 1945 1946 Military service 1 3 1946 1954 Immediate post war career 1 4 1955 1957 Miles and Monk period 1 5 1958 Davis and Coltrane 1 6 1959 1961 Period with Atlantic Records 1 7 1961 1962 First years with Impulse Records 1 8 1962 1965 Classic Quartet period 1 9 1965 Adding to the quartet and Avant garde Jazz 1 10 1965 1967 The second quartet 1 11 1967 Illness and death 2 Instruments 3 Personal life and religious beliefs 3 1 Upbringing and early influences 3 2 First marriage 3 3 1957 spiritual awakening 3 4 Second marriage 3 5 Spiritual influence in music religious exploration 3 6 Study of world music 4 Veneration 5 Selected discography 5 1 Prestige and Blue Note Records 5 2 Atlantic Records 5 3 Impulse Records 6 Sessionography 7 Awards and honors 8 Citations 9 General and cited references 10 Further reading 11 External linksBiography Edit1926 1945 Early life Edit Coltrane s first recordings were made when he was a sailor Coltrane was born in his parents apartment at 200 Hamlet Avenue in Hamlet North Carolina on September 23 1926 7 His father was John R Coltrane 8 and his mother was Alice Blair 9 He grew up in High Point North Carolina and attended William Penn High School While in high school Coltrane played clarinet and alto horn in a community band 10 before switching to the saxophone by the fall of 1940 after being influenced by the likes of Lester Young and Johnny Hodges 11 12 Beginning in December 1938 his father aunt and grandparents died within a few months of one another leaving him to be raised by his mother and a close cousin 13 In June 1943 shortly after graduating from high school Coltrane and his family moved to Philadelphia where he got a job at a sugar refinery In September that year his 17th birthday his mother bought him his first saxophone an alto 9 From 1944 to 1945 Coltrane took saxophone lessons at the Ornstein School of Music with Mike Guerra 14 From early to mid 1945 he had his first professional work a cocktail lounge trio with piano and guitar 15 An important moment in the progression of Coltrane s musical development occurred on June 5 1945 when he saw Charlie Parker perform for the first time In a DownBeat magazine article in 1960 he recalled the first time I heard Bird play it hit me right between the eyes 1945 1946 Military service Edit To avoid being drafted by the Army Coltrane enlisted in the Navy on August 6 1945 the day the first U S atomic bomb was dropped on Japan 16 He was trained as an apprentice seaman at Sampson Naval Training Station in upstate New York before he was shipped to Pearl Harbor 16 where he was stationed at Manana Barracks 17 the largest posting of African American servicemen in the world 18 By the time he got to Hawaii in late 1945 the Navy was downsizing Coltrane s musical talent was recognized and he became one of the few Navy men to serve as a musician without having been granted musician s rating when he joined the Melody Masters the base swing band 16 Because the Melody Masters was an all white band Coltrane was treated as a guest performer to avoid alerting superior officers of his participation in the band 19 He continued to perform other duties when not playing with the band including kitchen and security details By the end of his service he had assumed a leadership role in the band His first recordings an informal session in Hawaii with Navy musicians occurred on July 13 1946 20 He played alto saxophone on a selection of jazz standards and bebop tunes 21 He was officially discharged from the Navy on August 8 1946 He was awarded the American Campaign Medal Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal and the World War II Victory Medal 1946 1954 Immediate post war career Edit After being discharged from the Navy as a seaman first class in August 1946 Coltrane returned to Philadelphia where he plunged into the heady excitement of the new music and the blossoming bebop scene 22 Coltrane used the G I Bill to enroll at the Granoff School of Music where he studied music theory with jazz guitarist and composer Dennis Sandole 23 Coltrane would continue to be under Sandole s tutelage from 1946 into the early 1950s 24 Coltrane also took saxophone lessons with Matthew Rastelli a saxophone teacher at Granoff once a week for about two or three years but the lessons stopped when Coltrane s G I Bill funds ran out 25 After touring with King Kolax he joined a band led by Jimmy Heath who was introduced to Coltrane s playing by his former Navy buddy trumpeter William Massey who had played with Coltrane in the Melody Masters 26 Although he started on alto saxophone he began playing tenor saxophone in 1947 with Eddie Vinson 27 Coltrane called this a time when a wider area of listening opened up for me There were many things that people like Hawk Coleman Hawkins and Ben Webster and Tab Smith were doing in the 40s that I didn t understand but that I felt emotionally 28 A significant influence according to tenor saxophonist Odean Pope was the Philadelphia pianist composer and theorist Hasaan Ibn Ali Hasaan was the clue to the system that Trane uses Hasaan was the great influence on Trane s melodic concept 29 Coltrane became fanatical about practicing and developing his craft practicing 25 hours a day according to Jimmy Heath Heath recalls an incident in a hotel in San Francisco when after a complaint was issued Coltrane took the horn out of his mouth and practiced fingering for a full hour 30 Such was his dedication it was common for him to fall asleep with the horn still in his mouth or practice a single note for hours on end 31 Charlie Parker who Coltrane had first heard perform before his time in the Navy became an idol and he and Coltrane would play together occasionally in the late 1940s He was a member of groups led by Dizzy Gillespie Earl Bostic and Johnny Hodges in the early to mid 1950s 1955 1957 Miles and Monk period Edit In 1955 Coltrane was freelancing in Philadelphia while studying with Sandole when he received a call from trumpeter Miles Davis Davis had been successful in the 1940s but his reputation and work had been damaged in part by heroin addiction he was again active and about to form a quintet Coltrane was with this edition of the Davis band known as the First Great Quintet along with Red Garland on piano Paul Chambers on bass and Philly Joe Jones on drums from October 1955 to April 1957 with a few absences During this period Davis released several influential recordings that revealed the first signs of Coltrane s growing ability This quintet represented by two marathon recording sessions for Prestige in 1956 resulted in the albums Cookin Relaxin Workin and Steamin The First Great Quintet disbanded due in part to Coltrane s heroin addiction 32 During the later part of 1957 Coltrane worked with Thelonious Monk at New York s Five Spot Cafe and played in Monk s quartet July December 1957 but owing to contractual conflicts took part in only one official studio recording session with this group Coltrane recorded many sessions for Prestige under his own name at this time but Monk refused to record for his old label 33 A private recording made by Juanita Naima Coltrane of a 1958 reunion of the group was issued by Blue Note Records as Live at the Five Spot Discovery in 1993 A high quality tape of a concert given by this quartet in November 1957 was found later and was released by Blue Note in 2005 Recorded by Voice of America the performances confirm the group s reputation and the resulting album Thelonious Monk Quartet with John Coltrane at Carnegie Hall is very highly rated Blue Train Coltrane s sole date as leader for Blue Note featuring trumpeter Lee Morgan bassist Paul Chambers and trombonist Curtis Fuller is often considered his best album from this period Four of its five tracks are original Coltrane compositions and the title track Moment s Notice and Lazy Bird have become standards 1958 Davis and Coltrane Edit Coltrane rejoined Davis in January 1958 In October of that year jazz critic Ira Gitler coined the term sheets of sound 34 to describe the style Coltrane developed with Monk and was perfecting in Davis s group now a sextet His playing was compressed with rapid runs cascading in very many notes per minute Coltrane recalled I found that there were a certain number of chord progressions to play in a given time and sometimes what I played didn t work out in eighth notes sixteenth notes or triplets I had to put the notes in uneven groups like fives and sevens in order to get them all in 35 Coltrane stayed with Davis until April 1960 working with alto saxophonist Cannonball Adderley pianists Red Garland Bill Evans and Wynton Kelly bassist Paul Chambers and drummers Philly Joe Jones and Jimmy Cobb During this time he participated in the Davis sessions Milestones and Kind of Blue and the concert recordings Miles amp Monk at Newport 1963 and Jazz at the Plaza 1958 1959 1961 Period with Atlantic Records Edit At the end of this period Coltrane recorded Giant Steps 1960 his issued album as leader for Atlantic which contained only his compositions 36 The album s title track is generally considered to have one of the most difficult chord progressions of any widely played jazz composition 37 eventually referred to as Coltrane changes 38 His development of these cycles led to further experimentation with improvised melody and harmony that he continued throughout his career 39 Giant Steps source source One of Coltrane s most acclaimed recordings Giant Steps features harmonic structures more complex than were used by most jazz musicians of the time Problems playing this file See media help Coltrane formed his first quartet for live performances in 1960 for an appearance at the Jazz Gallery in New York City 40 After moving through different personnel including Steve Kuhn Pete La Roca and Billy Higgins he kept pianist McCoy Tyner bassist Steve Davis and drummer Elvin Jones 41 42 Tyner a native of Philadelphia had been a friend of Coltrane for some years and the two men had an understanding that Tyner would join the band when he felt ready 43 44 My Favorite Things 1961 was the first album recorded by this band 45 It was Coltrane s first album on soprano saxophone 46 which he began practicing while with Miles Davis 47 It was considered an unconventional move because the instrument was more associated with earlier jazz 48 1961 1962 First years with Impulse Records Edit Coltrane in Amsterdam 1961 In May 1961 Coltrane s contract with Atlantic was bought by Impulse 49 The move to Impulse meant that Coltrane resumed his recording relationship with engineer Rudy Van Gelder who had recorded his and Davis s sessions for Prestige He recorded most of his albums for Impulse at Van Gelder s studio in Englewood Cliffs New Jersey By early 1961 bassist Davis had been replaced by Reggie Workman while Eric Dolphy joined the group as a second horn The quintet had a celebrated and extensively recorded residency at the Village Vanguard which demonstrated Coltrane s new direction It included the most experimental music he had played influenced by Indian ragas modal jazz and free jazz John Gilmore a longtime saxophonist with musician Sun Ra was particularly influential after hearing a Gilmore performance Coltrane is reported to have said He s got it Gilmore s got the concept 50 The most celebrated of the Vanguard tunes the 15 minute blues Chasin the Trane was strongly inspired by Gilmore s music 51 In 1961 Coltrane began pairing Workman with a second bassist usually Art Davis or Donald Garrett Garrett recalled playing a tape for Coltrane where I was playing with another bass player We were doing some things rhythmically and Coltrane became excited about the sound We got the same kind of sound you get from the East Indian water drum One bass remains in the lower register and is the stabilizing pulsating thing while the other bass is free to improvise like the right hand would be on the drum So Coltrane liked the idea 52 Coltrane also recalled I thought another bass would add that certain rhythmic sound We were playing a lot of stuff with a sort of suspended rhythm with one bass playing a series of notes around one point and it seemed that another bass could fill in the spaces 53 According to Eric Dolphy one night Wilbur Ware came in and up on the stand so they had three basses going John and I got off the stand and listened 53 Coltrane employed two basses on the 1961 albums Ole Coltrane and Africa Brass and later on The John Coltrane Quartet Plays and Ascension Both Reggie Workman and Jimmy Garrison play bass on the 1961 Village Vanguard recordings of India and Miles Mode 54 During this period critics were divided in their estimation of Coltrane who had radically altered his style Audiences too were perplexed in France he was booed during his final tour with Davis In 1961 DownBeat magazine called Coltrane and Dolphy players of anti jazz in an article that bewildered and upset the musicians 51 Coltrane admitted some of his early solos were based mostly on technical ideas Furthermore Dolphy s angular voice like playing earned him a reputation as a figurehead of the New Thing also known as free jazz a movement led by Ornette Coleman which was denigrated by some jazz musicians including Davis and critics But as Coltrane s style developed he was determined to make every performance a whole expression of one s being 55 1962 1965 Classic Quartet period Edit In a Sentimental Mood source source The romantic ballad features Coltrane with pianist Duke Ellington Problems playing this file See media help In 1962 Dolphy departed and Jimmy Garrison replaced Workman as bassist From then on the Classic Quartet as it came to be known with Tyner Garrison and Jones produced searching spiritually driven work Coltrane was moving toward a more harmonically static style that allowed him to expand his improvisations rhythmically melodically and motivically Harmonically complex music was still present but on stage Coltrane heavily favored continually reworking his standards Impressions My Favorite Things and I Want to Talk About You The criticism of the quintet with Dolphy may have affected Coltrane In contrast to the radicalism of his 1961 recordings at the Village Vanguard his studio albums in the following two years with the exception of Coltrane 1962 which featured a blistering version of Harold Arlen s Out of This World were much more conservative He recorded an album of ballads and participated in album collaborations with Duke Ellington and singer Johnny Hartman a baritone who specialized in ballads The album Ballads recorded 1961 62 is emblematic of Coltrane s versatility as the quartet shed new light on standards such as It s Easy to Remember Despite a more polished approach in the studio in concert the quartet continued to balance standards and its own more exploratory and challenging music as can be heard on the Impressions recorded 1961 63 Live at Birdland and Newport 63 both recorded 1963 Impressions consists of two extended jams including the title track along with Dear Old Stockholm After the Rain and a blues Coltrane later said he enjoyed having a balanced catalogue 56 On March 6 1963 the group entered Van Gelder Studio in New Jersey and recorded a session that was lost for decades after its master tape was destroyed by Impulse Records to cut down on storage space On June 29 2018 Impulse released Both Directions at Once The Lost Album made up of seven tracks made from a spare copy Coltrane had given to his wife 57 58 On March 7 1963 they were joined in the studio by Hartman for the recording of six tracks for the John Coltrane and Johnny Hartman album released that July Impulse followed the successful lost album release with 2019 s Blue World made up of a 1964 soundtrack to the film The Cat in the Bag recorded in June 1964 The Classic Quartet produced their best selling album A Love Supreme in December 1964 A culmination of much of Coltrane s work up to this point this four part suite is an ode to his faith in and love for God These spiritual concerns characterized much of Coltrane s composing and playing from this point onwards as can be seen from album titles such as Ascension Om and Meditations The fourth movement of A Love Supreme Psalm is in fact a musical setting for an original poem to God written by Coltrane and printed in the album s liner notes Coltrane plays almost exactly one note for each syllable of the poem and bases his phrasing on the words The album was composed at Coltrane s home in Dix Hills on Long Island The quartet played A Love Supreme live only three times recorded twice in July 1965 at a concert in Antibes France and in October 1965 in Seattle Washington 59 A recording of the Antibes concert was released by Impulse in 2002 on the remastered Deluxe Edition of A Love Supreme 60 and again in 2015 on the Super Deluxe Edition of The Complete Masters 61 A recently discovered second amateur recording titled A Love Supreme Live in Seattle was released in 2021 62 1965 Adding to the quartet and Avant garde Jazz Edit As Coltrane s interest in jazz became experimental he added Pharoah Sanders center circa 1978 to his ensemble In his late period Coltrane showed an interest in the avant garde jazz of Ornette Coleman 63 Albert Ayler 64 and Sun Ra He was especially influenced by the dissonance of Ayler s trio with bassist Gary Peacock 65 who had worked with Paul Bley and drummer Sunny Murray whose playing was honed with Cecil Taylor as leader Coltrane championed many young free jazz musicians such as Archie Shepp 66 and under his influence Impulse became a leading free jazz label After A Love Supreme was recorded Ayler s style became more prominent in Coltrane s music A series of recordings with the Classic Quartet in the first half of 1965 show Coltrane s playing becoming abstract with greater incorporation of devices like multiphonics use of overtones and playing in the altissimo register as well as a mutated return of Coltrane s sheets of sound In the studio he all but abandoned soprano saxophone to concentrate on tenor The quartet responded by playing with increasing freedom The group s evolution can be traced through the albums The John Coltrane Quartet Plays Living Space Transition New Thing at Newport Sun Ship and First Meditations In June 1965 he went into Van Gelder s studio with ten other musicians including Shepp 67 Pharoah Sanders 67 Freddie Hubbard 67 Marion Brown and John Tchicai 67 to record Ascension a 38 minute piece that included solos by young avant garde musicians 66 The album was controversial primarily for the collective improvisation sections that separated the solos After recording with the quartet over the next few months Coltrane invited Sanders to join the band in September 1965 While Coltrane frequently used overblowing as an emotional exclamation point Sanders was involved in the search for human sounds on his instrument 68 employing a tone which blasted like a blow torch 69 and drastically expanding the vocabulary of his horn by employing multiphonics growling and high register squeals that could imitate not only the human song but the human cry and shriek as well 70 Regarding Coltrane s decision to add Sanders to the band Gary Giddins wrote Those who had followed Coltrane to the edge of the galaxy now had the added challenge of a player who appeared to have little contact with earth 71 1965 1967 The second quartet Edit Percussionist Rashied Ali pictured in 2007 augmented Coltrane s sound By late 1965 Coltrane was regularly augmenting his group with Sanders and other free jazz musicians Rashied Ali joined the group as a second drummer This was the end of the quartet Claiming he was unable to hear himself over the two drummers Tyner left the band shortly after the recording of Meditations Jones left in early 1966 dissatisfied by sharing drumming duties with Ali and stating that concerning Coltrane s latest music only poets can understand it 72 In interviews Tyner and Jones both voiced their displeasure with the music s direction however they would incorporate some of the intensity of free jazz in their solo work Later both musicians expressed tremendous respect for Coltrane regarding his late music Jones stated Well of course it s far out because this is a tremendous mind that s involved you know You wouldn t expect Einstein to be playing jacks would you 73 Tyner recalled He was constantly pushing forward He never rested on his laurels he was always looking for what s next he was always searching like a scientist in a lab looking for something new a different direction He kept hearing these sounds in his head 74 Jones and Tyner both recorded tributes to Coltrane Tyner with Echoes of a Friend 1972 and Blues for Coltrane A Tribute to John Coltrane 1987 and Jones with Live in Japan 1978 Dear John C 1978 and Tribute to John Coltrane A Love Supreme 1994 There is speculation that in 1965 Coltrane began using LSD 75 76 informing the cosmic transcendence of his late period Nat Hentoff wrote it is as if he and Sanders were speaking with the gift of tongues as if their insights were of such compelling force that they have to transcend ordinary ways of musical speech and ordinary textures to be able to convey that part of the essence of being they have touched 77 After the departure of Tyner and Jones Coltrane led a quintet with Sanders on tenor saxophone his second wife Alice Coltrane on piano Garrison on bass and Ali on drums When touring the group was known for playing long versions of their repertoire many stretching beyond 30 minutes to an hour In concert solos by band members often extended beyond fifteen minutes The group can be heard on several concert recordings from 1966 including Live at the Village Vanguard Again and Live in Japan In 1967 Coltrane entered the studio several times Although pieces with Sanders have surfaced the unusual To Be has both men on flute most of the recordings were either with the quartet minus Sanders Expression and Stellar Regions or as a duo with Ali The latter duo produced six performances that appear on the album Interstellar Space Coltrane also continued to tour with the second quartet up until two months before his death his penultimate live performance and final recorded one a radio broadcast for the Olatunji Center of African Culture in New York City was eventually released as an album in 2001 1967 Illness and death Edit Coltrane died of liver cancer at the age of 40 on July 17 1967 at Huntington Hospital on Long Island His funeral was held four days later at St Peter s Lutheran Church in New York City The service was started by the Albert Ayler Quartet and finished by the Ornette Coleman Quartet 78 Coltrane is buried at Pinelawn Cemetery in Farmingdale New York Biographer Lewis Porter speculated that the cause of Coltrane s illness was hepatitis although he also attributed the disease to Coltrane s heroin use at a previous period in his life 79 Frederick J Spencer wrote that Coltrane s death could be attributed to his needle use or the bottle or both 80 He stated that t he needles he used to inject the drugs may have had everything to do with Coltrane s liver disease If any needle was contaminated with the appropriate hepatitis virus it may have caused a chronic infection leading to cirrhosis or cancer 80 He noted that despite Coltrane s spiritual awakening in 1957 b y then he may have had chronic hepatitis and cirrhosis Unless he developed a primary focus elsewhere in later life and that spread to his liver the seeds of John Coltrane s cancer were sown in his days of addiction 81 Coltrane s death surprised many in the music community who were unaware of his condition Miles Davis said Coltrane s death shocked everyone took everyone by surprise I knew he hadn t looked too good But I didn t know he was that sick or even sick at all 82 Instruments EditIn 1947 when he joined King Kolax s band Coltrane switched to tenor saxophone the instrument he became known for playing 83 In the early 1960s during his contract with Atlantic he played soprano saxophone 83 His preference for playing melody higher on the range of the tenor saxophone is attributed to his training on alto horn and clarinet His sound concept manipulated in one s vocal tract of the tenor was set higher than the normal range of the instrument 84 Coltrane observed how his experience playing the soprano saxophone gradually affected his style on the tenor stating the soprano by being this small instrument I found that playing the lowest note on it was like playing one of the middle notes in the tenor I found that I would play all over this instrument And on tenor I hadn t always played all over it because I was playing certain ideas which would just run in certain ranges By playing on the soprano and becoming accustomed to playing from that low B flat on up it soon got so when I went to tenor I found myself doing the same thing And this caused the willingness to change and just try to play as much of the instrument as possible 85 Toward the end of his career he experimented with flute in his live performances and studio recordings Live at the Village Vanguard Again Expression After Eric Dolphy died in June 1964 his mother gave Coltrane his flute and bass clarinet 86 According to drummer Rashied Ali Coltrane had an interest in the drums 87 He would often have a spare drum set on concert stages that he would play 88 His interest in the drums and his penchant for having solos with the drums resonated on tracks such as Pursuance and The Drum Thing from A Love Supreme and Crescent respectively It resulted in the album Interstellar Space with Ali 89 In an interview with Nat Hentoff in late 1965 or early 1966 Coltrane stated I feel the need for more time more rhythm all around me And with more than one drummer the rhythm can be more multi directional 77 In an August 1966 interview with Frank Kofsky Coltrane repeatedly emphasized his affinity for drums saying I feel so strongly about drums I really do 90 Later that year Coltrane would record the music released posthumously on Offering Live at Temple University which features Ali on drums supplemented by three percussionists Coltrane s tenor Selmer Mark VI serial number 125571 dated 1965 and soprano Selmer Mark VI serial number 99626 dated 1962 saxophones were auctioned on February 20 2005 to raise money for the John Coltrane Foundation 91 Although he rarely played alto he owned a prototype Yamaha alto saxophone given to him by the company as an endorsement in 1966 He can be heard playing it on live albums recorded in Japan such as Second Night in Tokyo and is pictured using it on the cover of the compilation Live in Japan He can also be heard playing the Yamaha alto on the album Stellar Regions 92 Personal life and religious beliefs EditUpbringing and early influences Edit Coltrane was born and raised in a Christian home He was influenced by religion and spirituality beginning in childhood His maternal grandfather the Reverend William Blair was a minister at an African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church 93 94 in High Point North Carolina and his paternal grandfather the Reverend William H Coltrane was an A M E Zion minister in Hamlet North Carolina 93 Critic Norman Weinstein observed the parallel between Coltrane s music and his experience in the southern church 95 which included practicing music there as a youth First marriage Edit In 1955 Coltrane married Naima nee Juanita Grubbs Naima Coltrane a Muslim convert heavily influenced his spirituality When the couple married she had a five year old daughter named Antonia later named Syeeda Coltrane adopted Syeeda He met Naima at the home of bassist Steve Davis in Philadelphia The love ballad he wrote to honor his wife Naima was Coltrane s favorite composition In 1956 the couple left Philadelphia with their six year old daughter in tow and moved to New York City In August 1957 Coltrane Naima and Syeeda moved into an apartment on 103rd Street and Amsterdam Avenue in New York A few years later John and Naima Coltrane purchased a home at 116 60 Mexico Street in St Albans Queens 96 This is the house where they would break up in 1963 97 About the breakup Naima said in J C Thomas s Chasin the Trane I could feel it was going to happen sooner or later so I wasn t really surprised when John moved out of the house in the summer of 1963 He didn t offer any explanation He just told me there were things he had to do and he left only with his clothes and his horns He stayed in a hotel sometimes other times with his mother in Philadelphia All he said was Naima I m going to make a change Even though I could feel it coming it hurt and I didn t get over it for at least another year But Coltrane kept a close relationship with Naima even calling her in 1964 to tell her that 90 of his playing would be prayer They remained in touch until his death in 1967 Naima Coltrane died of a heart attack in October 1996 1957 spiritual awakening Edit In 1957 Coltrane had a religious experience that may have helped him overcome the heroin addiction 98 99 and alcoholism 99 he had struggled with since 1948 100 In the liner notes of A Love Supreme Coltrane states that in 1957 he experienced by the grace of God a spiritual awakening which was to lead me to a richer fuller more productive life At that time in gratitude I humbly asked to be given the means and privilege to make others happy through music The liner notes appear to mention God in a Universalist sense and do not advocate one religion over another 101 Further evidence of this universal view can be found in the liner notes of Meditations 1965 in which Coltrane declares I believe in all religions 102 Second marriage Edit In 1963 he met pianist Alice McLeod 103 He and Alice moved in together and had two sons before he became officially divorced from Naima in 1966 at which time he and Alice were immediately married 102 John Jr was born in 1964 Ravi in 1965 and Oranyan Oran in 1967 102 According to the musician Peter Lavezzoli Alice brought happiness and stability to John s life not only because they had children but also because they shared many of the same spiritual beliefs particularly a mutual interest in Indian philosophy Alice also understood what it was like to be a professional musician 102 Spiritual influence in music religious exploration Edit After A Love Supreme many of the titles of his songs and albums had spiritual connotations Ascension Meditations Om Selflessness Amen Ascent Attaining Dear Lord Prayer and Meditation Suite and The Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost 102 His library of books included The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna the Bhagavad Gita and Paramahansa Yogananda s Autobiography of a Yogi The last of these describes in Lavezzoli s words a search for universal truth a journey that Coltrane had also undertaken Yogananda believed that both Eastern and Western spiritual paths were efficacious and wrote of the similarities between Krishna and Christ This openness to different traditions resonated with Coltrane who studied the Qur an the Bible Kabbalah and astrology with equal sincerity 104 He also explored Hinduism Jiddu Krishnamurti African history the philosophical teachings of Plato and Aristotle 105 and Zen Buddhism 106 In October 1965 Coltrane recorded Om referring to the sacred syllable in Hinduism which symbolizes the infinite or the entire universe Coltrane described Om as the first syllable the primal word the word of power 107 The 29 minute recording contains chants from the Hindu Bhagavad Gita 108 and the Buddhist Tibetan Book of the Dead 109 and a recitation of a passage describing the primal verbalization om as a cosmic spiritual common denominator in all things Study of world music Edit Coltrane s spiritual journey was interwoven with his investigation of world music He believed in not only a universal musical structure that transcended ethnic distinctions but also being able to harness the mystical language of music itself His study of Indian music led him to believe that certain sounds and scales could produce specific emotional meanings According to Coltrane the goal of a musician was to understand these forces control them and elicit a response from the audience He said I would like to bring to people something like happiness I would like to discover a method so that if I want it to rain it will start right away to rain If one of my friends is ill I d like to play a certain song and he will be cured when he d be broke I d bring out a different song and immediately he d receive all the money he needed 110 Veneration EditSaint John Coltrane Coltrane icon at St John Coltrane African Orthodox ChurchBorn 1926 09 23 September 23 1926Hamlet North Carolina USDiedJuly 17 1967 1967 07 17 aged 40 Huntington New York USVenerated inAfrican Orthodox ChurchEpiscopal ChurchCanonized1982 St John Coltrane Church 2097 Turk Blvd San Francisco CA 94115 by African Orthodox Church 111 FeastDecember 8 AOC PatronageAll ArtistsAfter Coltrane s death a congregation called the Yardbird Temple in San Francisco began worshiping him as God incarnate 112 The group was named after Charlie Yardbird Parker whom they equated to John the Baptist 112 The congregation became affiliated with the African Orthodox Church this involved changing Coltrane s status from a god to a saint 112 The resultant St John Coltrane African Orthodox Church San Francisco is the only African Orthodox church that incorporates Coltrane s music and his lyrics as prayers in its liturgy 113 Musicians at St John Coltrane African Orthodox Church San Francisco 2009 Rev F W King describing the African Orthodox Church of Saint John Coltrane said We are Coltrane conscious God dwells in the musical majesty of his sounds 114 Samuel G Freedman wrote in The New York Times that the Coltrane church is not a gimmick or a forced alloy of nightclub music and ethereal faith Its message of deliverance through divine sound is actually quite consistent with Coltrane s own experience and message In both implicit and explicit ways Coltrane also functioned as a religious figure Addicted to heroin in the 1950s he quit cold turkey and later explained that he had heard the voice of God during his anguishing withdrawal In 1966 an interviewer in Japan asked Coltrane what he hoped to be in five years and Coltrane replied a saint 112 Coltrane is depicted as one of the 90 saints in the Dancing Saints icon of St Gregory of Nyssa Episcopal Church in San Francisco The icon is a 3 000 square foot 280 m2 painting in the Byzantine iconographic style that wraps around the entire church rotunda It was executed by Mark Dukes an ordained deacon at the Saint John Coltrane African Orthodox Church who painted other icons of Coltrane for the Coltrane Church 115 Saint Barnabas Episcopal Church in Newark New Jersey included Coltrane on its list of historical black saints and made a case for sainthood for him in an article on its website 116 Documentaries about Coltrane and the church include Alan Klingenstein s The Church of Saint Coltrane 1996 111 117 and a 2004 program presented by Alan Yentob for the BBC 118 Sculptor John Raimondi created an abstract sculpture dedicated to John Coltrane in 2000 The sculpture fabricated with patinated bronze stands 12 feet tall Smaller scale iterations have also been fabricated in patinated bronze Selected discography EditMain article John Coltrane discography The discography below lists albums conceived and approved by Coltrane as a leader during his lifetime It does not include his many releases as a sideman sessions assembled into albums by various record labels after Coltrane s contract expired sessions with Coltrane as a sideman later reissued with his name featured more prominently or posthumous compilations except for the one he approved before his death See main discography link above for full list On June 25 2019 The New York Times Magazine listed John Coltrane among hundreds of artists whose material was reportedly destroyed in the 2008 Universal fire 119 Prestige and Blue Note Records Edit Coltrane debut solo LP 1957 Blue Train 1958 John Coltrane with the Red Garland Trio 1958 Soultrane 1958 Atlantic Records Edit Giant Steps 1960 Coltrane Jazz 1961 My Favorite Things 1961 Ole Coltrane 1961 Impulse Records Edit Africa Brass 1961 Live at the Village Vanguard 1962 Coltrane 1962 Duke Ellington amp John Coltrane 1963 Ballads 1963 John Coltrane and Johnny Hartman 1963 Impressions 1963 Live at Birdland 1964 Crescent 1964 A Love Supreme 1965 The John Coltrane Quartet Plays 1965 Ascension 1966 New Thing at Newport 1966 Meditations 1966 Live at the Village Vanguard Again 1966 Kulu Se Mama 1967 Expression 1967 Sessionography EditMain article List of John Coltrane recording sessionsAwards and honors Edit John Coltrane House 1511 North Thirty third Street Philadelphia In 1965 Coltrane was inducted into the Down Beat Jazz Hall of Fame In 1972 A Love Supreme was certified gold by the RIAA for selling over half a million copies in Japan This album was certified gold in the United States in 2001 In 1982 he was awarded a posthumous Grammy for Best Jazz Solo Performance on the album Bye Bye Blackbird and in 1997 he was awarded the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award 28 In 2002 scholar Molefi Kete Asante named him one of his 100 Greatest African Americans 120 He was awarded a special Pulitzer Prize in 2007 citing his masterful improvisation supreme musicianship and iconic centrality to the history of jazz 2 He was inducted into the North Carolina Music Hall of Fame in 2009 121 A former home the John Coltrane House in Philadelphia was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1999 His last home the John Coltrane Home in the Dix Hills district of Huntington New York where he resided from 1964 until his death was added to the National Register of Historic Places on June 29 2007 Their son Ravi named after Ravi Shankar is also a saxophonist The parent company of Impulse from 1965 to 1979 known as ABC Records purged much of its unreleased material in the 1970s 122 An early documentary on Jazz was made in 1990 by fellow musician Robert Palmer called The World According to John Coltrane Chasing Trane The John Coltrane Documentary is a 2016 American film directed by John Scheinfeld Narrated by Denzel Washington the film chronicles the life of Coltrane in his own words and includes interviews with such admirers as Wynton Marsalis Sonny Rollins Bill Clinton and Cornel West 123 Citations Edit John Coltrane A Love Supreme Rolling Stone a b The 2007 Pulitzer Prize Winners Special Awards and Citations The Pulitzer Prizes Retrieved June 29 2009 With reprint of short biography Son of jazz great Coltrane dies in car crash UPI Retrieved December 17 2022 Porter Lewis 1999 John Coltrane His Life and Music The University of Michigan Press p 272 Porter Lewis 1999 John Coltrane His Life and Music The University of Michigan Press p 294 Berkman Franya 2010 Monument Eternal The Music of Alice Coltrane Wesleyan University Press p 47 DeVito et al p 1 DeVito et al p 2 a b DeVito et al p 3 Thomas J C 1976 Chasin the Trane Da Capo pp 14 17 Thomas J C 1976 Chasin the Trane Da Capo p 20 Porter pp 30 Porter pp 15 17 Porter pp 33 DeVito et al p 5 a b c Orlando Style Magazine July August 2016 Issue issuu Retrieved January 11 2017 Porter Lewis January 1998 John Coltrane His Life and Music University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 10161 0 Retrieved November 25 2018 John Coltrane Legendary and Revolutionary Saxophonist in the History of Jazz Music Blackthen com May 27 2018 Retrieved June 8 2018 Ratliff Ben October 28 2008 Coltrane The Story of a Sound Farrar Straus and Giroux pp 12 ISBN 978 1 4299 9862 8 Retrieved November 25 2018 DeVito et al p 367 DeVito et al pp 367 368 Porter Lewis January 1998 John Coltrane His Life and Music University of Michigan Press ISBN 0 472 10161 7 Porter pp 50 51 Ratliff Ben October 8 2000 Dennis Sandole Jazz Guitarist And an Influential Teacher 87 The New York Times Retrieved June 7 2022 Porter pp 52 Wilson Joe October 30 1945 Musically Speaking The Mananan Alexander Leslie M Rucker Walter C Jr February 9 2010 Encyclopedia of African American History 3 volumes amp 93 ABC CLIO pp 178 ISBN 978 1 85109 774 6 Retrieved November 25 2018 a b John Coltrane Biography The John Coltrane Foundation May 11 2007 Archived from the original on December 6 2015 Retrieved June 29 2009 Armstrong Rob February 8 2013 There Was No End to the Music Hidden City Philadelphia Retrieved July 12 2015 John Coltrane s Work Ethic YouTube Archived from the original on December 11 2021 Retrieved December 7 2019 Woideck Carl 1998 The John Coltrane Companion Five Decades of Commentary Schirmer Books p 29 ISBN 9780028647906 Ratliff Ben December 7 2001 CRITIC S NOTEBOOK The Miracle of Coltrane Dead at 40 Still Vital at 75 The New York Times Retrieved March 29 2019 John Coltrane Legendary and Revolutionary Saxophonist in the History of Jazz Music Blackthen com May 27 2018 Retrieved March 29 2019 Jazz news John Coltrane Sheets of Sound News allaboutjazz com June 19 2009 Retrieved October 15 2019 Coltrane John DeMicheal Don September 29 1960 Coltrane on Coltrane DownBeat 27 Porter Lewis 1999 John Coltrane His Life and Music The University of Michigan Press p 145 Nisenson Eric 2009 Ascension John Coltrane And His Quest Da Capo p 171 Berkman David 2013 The Jazz Harmony Book Sher Music p 145 Ratliff Ben 2007 Coltrane The Story of a Sound Farrar Straus and Giroux pp 52 53 Porter Lewis 1999 John Coltrane His Life and Music The University of Michigan Press pp 173 178 Porter Lewis 1999 John Coltrane His Life and Music The University of Michigan Press pp 178 180 Ratliff Ben 2007 Coltrane The Story of a Sound Farrar Straus and Giroux pp 57 59 Porter Lewis 1999 John Coltrane His Life and Music The University of Michigan Press p 177 Ratliff Ben 2007 Coltrane The Story of a Sound Farrar Straus and Giroux p 58 Porter Lewis 1999 John Coltrane His Life and Music The University of Michigan Press p 180 Nisenson Eric 2009 Ascension John Coltrane And His Quest Da Capo pp 212 213 Porter Lewis 1999 John Coltrane His Life and Music The University of Michigan Press pp 180 182 Porter Lewis 1999 John Coltrane His Life and Music The University of Michigan Press p 181 Ratliff Ben 2007 Coltrane The story of a Sound 1st ed New York Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 978 0 374 12606 3 Corbett John John Gilmore The Hard Bop Homepage DownBeat a b Kofsky Frank 1970 Black Nationalism and the Revolution in Music John Coltrane An Interview Pathfinder Press p 235 Porter Lewis 1999 John Coltrane His Life and Music The University of Michigan Press pp 198 199 a b Wilmer Val 2010 Conversation with Coltrane In DeVito Chris ed Coltrane on Coltrane The John Coltrane Interviews Chicago Review Press p 115 John Coltrane The Complete 1961 Village Vanguard Recordings discogs com Retrieved July 30 2022 Nisenson p 179 The History of Jazz and the Jazz Musicians Lulu Press Inc March 13 2013 ISBN 9781257544486 Retrieved March 29 2019 via Google Books Beaumont Thomas Ben June 8 2018 A new room in the Great Pyramid lost 1963 John Coltrane album discovered The Guardian Retrieved June 8 2018 Vincent Alice June 8 2018 Long lost John Coltrane album set for release The Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Archived from the original on January 11 2022 Retrieved June 8 2018 Porter Lewis DeVito Chris Fujioka Yasuhiro Wild David Schmaler Wolf 2008 The John Coltrane Reference Routledge pp 733 735 John Coltrane A Love Supreme Deluxe Edition discogs com Retrieved July 19 2020 John Coltrane A Love Supreme The Complete Masters Super Deluxe Edition discogs com Retrieved July 19 2020 You ve Never Heard John Coltrane Like This Before theatlantic com October 9 2021 Retrieved October 9 2021 Richardson Mark April 28 2016 New York Is Killing Me Albert Ayler s Life and Death in the Jazz Capital Pitchfork Retrieved January 16 2020 Beta Andy September 25 2015 Astral Traveling The Ecstasy of Spiritual Jazz Pitchfork Retrieved January 16 2020 Whitehead Kevin May 8 2001 Albert Ayler Testifying The Breaking Point NPR Retrieved January 16 2020 a b Bray Ryan March 2 2016 Jazz Legend Archie Shepp Reflects On John Coltrane s Quest For Musical Freedom Consequence of Sound Retrieved January 16 2020 a b c d Aceves Rusty January 27 2017 A Look Back At John Coltrane s Ascension SFJAZZ Center Retrieved January 16 2020 Wilmer Val 2018 As Serious as your Life Serpent s Tail p 43 Reid Graham April 26 2009 Pharoah Sanders Interviewed 2004 Creative man without a masterplan Elsewhere co nz Retrieved August 8 2020 Anderson Iain 2007 This Is Our Music Free Jazz the Sixties and American Culture University of Pennsylvania Press p 111 Giddins Gary 1998 Visions of Jazz The First Century Oxford University Press p 488 Thomas J C 1976 Chasin the Trane Da Capo p 207 Porter Lewis 1999 John Coltrane His Life and Music The University of Michigan Press p 267 Maita Joe November 8 2001 The A Love Supreme Interviews pianist McCoy Tyner Jerry Jazz Musician Retrieved March 3 2021 Porter pp 265 266 Mandel Howard January 30 2008 John Coltrane Divine Wind The Wire 221 Archived from the original on September 29 2009 Retrieved June 29 2009 a b John Coltrane 1966 Meditations liner notes Impulse A 9110 Porter p 293 Porter p 292 a b Spencer Frederick J M D 2002 Jazz and Death Medical Profiles of Jazz Greats University Press of Mississippi p 6 Spencer M D Frederick J 2002 Jazz and Death Medical Profiles of Jazz Greats University Press of Mississippi p 7 Porter p 290 a b Ruhlmann William John Coltrane AllMusic Retrieved November 25 2018 Secret of John Coltrane s high notes revealed Roger Highfield The Telegraph Sunday June 12 2011 Kofsky Frank 2010 Interview with John Coltrane In DeVito Chris ed Coltrane on Coltrane The John Coltrane Interviews A Cappella p 306 Cole Bill 2001 John Coltrane 2nd ed New York Da Capo Press p 158 ISBN 030681062X Mandel Howard August 13 2009 Rashied Ali 1935 2009 multi directional drummer speaks artsjournal com Retrieved September 4 2020 Coltrane was in a drummer thing He just wanted to free himself from playing these strict changes The bass player and the piano player would lay these chords down you know and he played just about everything he could play on these chords He played em upside down He d turn em around He played em sideways He did just about everything he could to em And playing with the drums he didn t have to deal with chord changes and keys and stuff like that So he was free to play however he wanted to play There were times I played with Trane he had a battery of drummers like about three conga players guys playing batas shakers and barrels and everything On one of his records he did that At the Village Vanguard live we had a whole bunch of drummers plus the traps And then sometimes he would have double traps Like in Chicago I played double traps with a young drummer coming up there named Jack DeJohnette Mandel Howard August 13 2009 Rashied Ali 1935 2009 multi directional drummer speaks artsjournal com Retrieved September 4 2020 Coltrane loved drums so much if we would have a second set of drums on the stage sometimes he would come up there and play them I mean he would sit behind the drums and play with the band you know He really had something about drums that he loved Jazz All About March 31 2003 Rashied Ali All About Jazz Retrieved March 16 2018 Kofsky Frank 2010 Interview with John Coltrane In DeVito Chris ed Coltrane on Coltrane The John Coltrane Interviews A Cappella p 294 John Coltrane s Saxophones drrick com Retrieved April 7 2011 John Coltrane Owned amp Stage Played Alto Saxophone With Full Documentation Recordmecca March 22 2013 a b Porter pp 5 6 Lavezzoli p 270 Weinstein Norman C 1933 A Night in Tunisia Imaginings of Africa in Jazz Hal Leonard p 61 ISBN 0 87910 167 9 Porter Lewis DeVito Chris Wild David April 26 2013 The John Coltrane Reference Routledge pp 323 ISBN 978 1 135 11257 8 Retrieved November 25 2018 John Coltrane Naima JazzWax com June 15 2009 Archived from the original on January 21 2017 Retrieved January 16 2017 Porter p 61 a b Lavezzoli p 271 Lavezzoli pp 272 273 John Coltrane s liner notes to A Love Supreme December 1964 Archived June 8 2011 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e Lavezzoli p 286 Lavezzoli p 281 Lavezzoli pp 280 281 Emmett G Price III John Coltrane A Love Supreme and GOD allaboutjazz com Archived from the original on January 3 2009 Retrieved October 9 2008 Lavezzoli pp 286 287 Porter p 265 Lavezzoli p 285 Coltrane and one or two other musicians begin and end the piece by chanting in unison a verse from chapter nine The Yoga of Mysticism of the Bhagavad Gita Rites that the Vedas ordain and the rituals taught by the scriptures all these I am and the offering made to the ghosts of the fathers herbs of healing and food the mantram the clarified butter I the oblation and I the flame into which it is offered I am the sire of the world and this world s mother and grandsire I am he who awards to each the fruit of his action I make all things clean I am Om Nisenson p 183 Porter p 211 a b The Church of Saint Coltrane Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times 2012 Archived from the original on December 30 2012 Retrieved April 16 2012 a b c d Freedman Samuel G December 1 2007 Sunday religion inspired by Saturday nights The New York Times Retrieved November 25 2018 Polatnick Gordon The Jazz Church Elvispelvis com Archived from the original on August 12 2006 Hyena Hank June 16 1998 The Church of St John Coltrane Jazz and German Tourists San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved May 15 2020 The Dancing Saints Saint Gregory s of Nyssa Episcopal Church Archived from the original on December 18 2010 John Coltrane The case for sainthood St Barnabas Episcopal Church Archived from the original on May 10 2009 Retrieved April 3 2011 Alan Klingenstein Huffington Post February 5 2008 Archived from the original on December 22 2015 Retrieved April 16 2012 Saint John Coltrane African Orthodox Church Diverse tv BBC documentary 2004 See also wikipedia article Saint John Coltrane African Orthodox Church Rosen Jody June 25 2019 Here Are Hundreds More Artists Whose Tapes Were Destroyed in the UMG Fire The New York Times Retrieved June 28 2019 Asante Molefi Kete 2002 100 Greatest African Americans A Biographical Encyclopedia Amherst New York Prometheus Books ISBN 1 57392 963 8 2009 Inductees North Carolina Music Hall of Fame Retrieved September 10 2012 ABC Paramount Records Story by David Edwards Patrice Eyries and Mike Callahan Both Sides Now website Retrieved January 29 2007 McNary Dave March 16 2017 John Coltrane Documentary Chasing Trane Gets Release Date Variety ISSN 0042 2738 General and cited references EditDeVito Chris Fujioka Yasuhiro Schmaler Wolf Wild David 2008 The John Coltrane Reference Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 97755 5 Lavezzoli Peter 2006 The Dawn of Indian Music in the West Continuum International Publishing Group ISBN 0 8264 1815 5 Nisenson Eric 1995 Ascension John Coltrane and His Quest Da Capo Press ISBN 0 306 80644 4 Porter Lewis 1999 John Coltrane His Life and Music University of Michigan Press ISBN 0 472 08643 X Further reading EditBaham Nicholas III 2015 2015 The Coltrane Church Apostles of Sound Agents of Social Justice McFarland ISBN 978 0786494965 Kahn Ashley 2003 2002 A Love Supreme The Story of John Coltrane s Signature Album Elvin Jones Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 200352 2 Margry Peter Jan and Wojcik Daniel 2017 A Saxophone Divine The Transformative Power of Saint John Coltrane s Jazz Music in San Francisco s Fillmore District in V Hegner and P J Margry editors Spiritualizing the City Agency and Resilience of the Urban and Urbanesque Habitat Milton Park Routledge 169 194 Simpkins Cuthbert 1989 1975 Coltrane A Biography New York Herndon House Publishers ISBN 0 915542 82 X Thomas J C 1975 Chasin the Trane New York Da Capo ISBN 0 306 80043 8 Woideck Carl 1998 The John Coltrane Companion New York Schirmer Books ISBN 0 02 864790 4 External links EditJohn Coltrane at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Data from Wikidata Official website John Coltrane at Curlie John Coltrane discography at Discogs John Coltrane infography John Coltrane discography Coltrane Church Website site John Coltrane 1957 Carnegie Hall performance in transcription and analysis John Coltrane Images of Trane by Lee Tanner in Jazz Times June 1997 Interviews from 1958 1966 Portals Jazz Biography Music Saints Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Coltrane amp oldid 1128041571, wikipedia, 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