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Showing posts with label John Coltrane. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Coltrane. Show all posts

Monday, September 28, 2015

Eid Blues Roundup

So it was a long break, and I've been slacking on the blog lately (i know, forgive me). I expect things to pick up by October.

I've gathered up some tidbits about some blues / jazz (and me, plugging shamelessly) for ya:

1) Radio Blues


Yep, I was on the radio (Kuwait FM 99.7) yesterday morning for some live blues and discussion on the Eid Special with Maha and DJ Aki. Props to them and 99.7 for the support and love!

Songs played:

1- Key to the Highway
2- You Don't Have to Go
3- Rollin' Stone

2- Jazz for Cows

It's not really a new video, but it just came across my feed again and thought it was cute. Bovines love jazz it seems!





3- Happy Birthday John Coltrane!




It was the legendary jazzman's birthday over the holiday, so mad props to the man who reinvented music with his nonstop search for enlightenment. Here's the full Blue Train album for your pleasure:




4- Dudley Taft's album confirmed for October

Blues-rocker Dudley Taft will release his new album 'Skull & Bones' on October 16! Here's a snippet of some hard rockin blues to come:




5- The Hurt Project releases EP

Marlon Hunt from the Hurt Project contacted me and informed me of their new EP release 'After the Storms' and features some old-school blues I'm sure you guys will enjoy. Their bandcamp site is [here] and you can hear the music below:





Sunday, February 15, 2015

50 Years On... 'A Love Supreme' Reigns Supreme

by Edward Shin
In February 1965, John Coltrane released his ultimate album, 'A Love Supreme' and the music world was never the same again. 

I have covered this album extensively on the blog, so instead of repeating myself and telling you how it's rated 47 in Rolling Stone's Top 500 Albums of All Time, how it's one of the top selling (probably second best after Miles Davis' Kind of Blue) jazz album of all time, and how it's not just jazz but a transcendence to a higher space etc etc.

Here's a roundup of the articles related to this great recording, plus the whole album to listen to:

1 - A Love Supreme - Spiritual Guidance
2 - Rare: Live Footage of John Coltrane's "A Love Supreme"
3 - John Coltrane's A Love Supreme : Deluxe Edition
4 - John Coltrane’s "A Love Supreme" among Titles Remastered for iTunes
5 - Read all about the Font on the Cover of Coltrane's 'A Love Supreme'
6 - John Coltrane's 'Love Supreme' in Graffiti Art
7 - New Photos Found from Coltrane's 'A Love Supreme' Session


Sunday, December 7, 2014

Assorted Jazz News


I haven't done much on the jazz side of things on the blog recently, so I rounded up a few recent news bits for you!

Read more after the jump:

Monday, September 22, 2014

Celebrate the Autumn Equinox, Jazz Style



Well Autumn is finally here today, if you're into that sorta thing.

Here are the standards 'Autumn Leaves' and 'Equinox' by Miles Davis and John Coltrane respectively to set the mood.




Monday, September 15, 2014

New John Coltrane Record Coming - 'Offering: Live at Temple University'



[SOURCE]


In association with the jazz legend's old label Impluse!, Resonance Records has announced that a newly discovered live recording from John Coltrane will be released on his birthday, called Offering: Live Temple University.

Here's the description from the record label:

'Offering: Live At Temple University documents a legendary concert by John Coltrane at Temple University in his hometown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on November 11, 1966, six weeks after his fortieth birthday and nine months before his untimely death.

Offering, available on September 23, 2014 in a deluxe format 2-CD digi-pak, incorporates a look that is contiguous with the graphic identity of Impulse! Records, Coltrane’s exclusive label from 1961 until the end of his life. This is the first officially sanctioned release of an undiscovered, complete Coltrane performance since 2005. It captures Coltrane in exemplary form, navigating the language he had developed during the last phase of his musical path with passion and pellucid logic.

Operating at equivalent levels of invention and energy are three members of his working quintet of one year’s standing his wife, Alice Coltrane, on piano; Pharoah Sanders on reeds and flute; and Rashied Ali on drums.

Offering is emblematic of the efflorescent energies and radical ideas that Coltrane himself had much to do with bringing forth during the seven years after 1960, when he left the employ of Miles Davis to pursue his vision as a leader. There are versions of Coltrane’s 1960 hits “Naima” and “My Favorite Things,” a transformational reworking of the 1964 ballad “Crescent,” a spirit-raising rendering of “Leo,” which he had recorded on several previous occasions during 1966, and the hymnal “Offering,” which he would record on a February 15, 1967 studio session that Impulse! would release during the ‘90s as Spiritual Offering.

On Offering, Resonance Records achieves the highest possible audio quality, using direct transfers of original master reels from a location recording by Temple’s WRTI-FM, remastered at 96kHz/24 bit, that were tracked down by Coltrane scholar Yasuhiro Fujioka.

The immense life-force that animates the proceedings on this November 1966 evening in Philadelphia belies the declining state of Coltrane’s health. It is still difficult to grasp and to accept that he was firmly in the grip of the liver cancer that would still his voice on July 17, 1967. As co-producer Ashley Kahn states in his liner notes, “Coltrane was pointing the way forward for generations of players to come, pushing the music to exhilarating, spiritual heights that caught most by surprise. In 1966, that wasn’t what jazz performances were about—not yet.”

Recorded November 11, 1966
Mitten Hall, Temple University
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Featured Artists:
John Coltrane – soprano & tenor saxophones, flute & vocals
Pharoah Sanders – tenor saxophone & piccolo
Alice Coltrane – piano
Sonny Johnson – bass
Rashied Ali – drums'


During this time of his career, Coltrane's sound became very harsh, dissonant, and almost unlistenable; according to a small review and worthy article called 'What if Jazz Giant John Coltrane Had Lived?', it's almost very difficult to pin down.

You might like Coltrane for his older works like Blue Train or My Favorite Things, or maybe his later work up to A Love Supreme, or even to his transcendent music of Ascension and beyond, but no matter what, he truly changed jazz and music several times over.



Sunday, March 30, 2014

New Photos Found from Coltrane's 'A Love Supreme' Session



I've talked about John Coltrane's 'A Love Supreme' many times, and I still don't mind talking about it. It's a really supreme (don't mind the pun) album.

And now, David Stewart, son of Chuck Steward who was taking photos on the day of the recording in December 1964, found 6 never seen before pictures of that session.

You can go to NPR's Jazz Blog 'A Blog Supreme' (a name very relevant to this news!) and check out the whole story [here].

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

John Coltrane's 'Afro Blue Impressions' Re-Mastered & Expanded



One of John Coltrane's best live albums, 'Afro Blue Impressions', has been re-released as a double-disc with a new remastering and three extra bonus tracks.

Released originally in 1963, this was in the Classic Quartet's tour of Europe. With Elvin Jones on drums, McCoy Turner on piano, and Jimmy Garrison on bass, you knew this was gonna be an amazing performance. This was when Coltrane's music shifted to more modal and avant-garde jazz, from his old hard bop sound.

Featuring some of Coltrane's best songs, like Naima, Impressions, and a stunning 21 minute performance of My Favorite Things, the new album features 3 unreleased tracks from a Stockholm performance: Naima, My Favorite Things, and I Want To Talk About You.

It's also been nominated for a Grammy award for Best Album Notes.

Hear the supreme (pun intended) version of 'My Favorite Things' below, which features Coltrane on the unusual soprano saxophone, with a hypnotic performance: 


Wednesday, October 30, 2013

John Coltrane's 'Love Supreme' in Graffiti Art



Made by German artist MTO in Paris a few years back. 

Author Tony Whyton had a few words to say about this artwork. You can read the full text [here]. Below is an excerpt:

 "MTO’s image is inspired by Coltrane but also acts as an alternative to everyday representations of the icon. This is not an official reading of Coltrane’s masterpiece and, arguably, it conveys a certain politics: the graffiti artwork itself can be read as an act of subversion. Similarly, some of my research interests involve challenging official or dominant narratives that have become associated with Coltrane, trying to seek out underlying agendas which might play a role in the changing representation and interpretations of his music, and offering an alternative means of understanding the Coltrane legacy."


Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Someone's Pissed Off John Coltrane

Found this on the internet. There's always something new to discover.



Monday, June 3, 2013

A Look into the Church of St. John Coltrane




John Coltrane's 1964 album, A Love Supreme, is considered to be one of the best jazz albums of all time, and among the best of music in general.

Kristina Loring of KALW Radio in San Francisco, California, has written a very detailed and interesting article about the African Orthodox of John Coltrane. As discussed here before (see the link above), there is a church dedicated to the musical message of John Coltrane and was named a Saint by the African Orthodox Church.

Here's a quick excerpt from the article:

I would say Coltrane Consciousness is the divine formula,” Marlee-I Hand says. She has many roles in the church that range from choir singer to outreach to drummer in the band. “Acknowledge, resolution pursuance to reach the love supreme, so acknowledge god, resolve to do all you can and continually pursue everyday. That’s Coltrane Consciousness. Follow those steps, that’s it. coltrane gave us the key.

Read the full article [here], and do so while listening to "Acknowledgement", from the Love Supreme album.


Wednesday, March 20, 2013

John Coltrane's Saxophone is Up for Auction





One of John Coltrane's saxophones, an alto Yamaha prototype, is now up for sale on eBay.

The price? Just $115,000! This sax was used in the 1966 "Live in Japan" concert.

So if you feel you have the cash, go ahead and buy this, and try to clone 'Trane from any DNA samples you can find.

Thursday, February 28, 2013

'Equinox' - John Coltrane



I was hearing this song over and over yesterday... fits the mellow mood I'm in.

This song was released in 1964 on the 'Coltrane's Sound' album, and features a bluesy feel in C#m and is filled with mystique.

Enjoy this standard and search for the stars.

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Read all about the Font on the Cover of Coltrane's 'A Love Supreme'



An interesting website I discovered recently is called Rock That Font, which goes pretty in depth about the typography of rock and other music albums.

It was inevitable that John Coltrane's magum opus A Love Supreme was going to be a topic of discussion.

Apparently, the font used on the cover is "Anzeigen Grotesk, which in German loosely translates to “Advertising Sans-Serif.”

Read more [here].