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John Coltrane wallpaper from JazzMagazine.com
Celebrating John Coltrane, PersonallyJazz Today[9 March 2007] Spurred on by a couple of anniversaries, a new podcast "Traneumentary", and plenty of memory, Layman reflects on the music and meaning of John Coltrane. by Will LaymanJohn Coltrane was born 80 years ago and died 40 years ago, but any time is the right time to remember and celebrate him. I suspect I’m like most jazz fans, and maybe like you: at a moment’s notice I can conjure the sound of his art in my ear, letting it come up in the surges and waves that were so natural to it. Coltrane—more than any other musician—seems to have existed forever inside me, so that when I first heard him it was like coming home again.
A Personal History
My friend Bobby and I were playing ping-pong in the most suburban of New Jersey basements one afternoon when his older brother, David, came down with a weird blue LP and a strange smile. “So, you guys are into jazz now, huh?” G-nip, g-nop—Bobby slipped a smash past me and the ball rolled into the corner. “Yeah,” Bobby said. “Miles Davis. Sonny Rollins. The Jazz Messengers.” This amounted to almost every jazz name we could come up with off the top of our heads. David held up the cardboard sleeve and walked toward the old turntable that was to the side of the ping-pong table. “Gentlemen,” he said, ”this is what you need.”
“Is that old stuff or new stuff,” Bobby asked, this being a distinction that we understood, with new stuff having guitars and electric pianos and old stuff more crackling with trumpets. “Is it good?”
![]() Atop the groove, Coltrane enters. If you’d been following his career, you wouldn’t expect the sound, however—an octave higher than the tenor, a nasal, Eastern sound, a snake charmer’s twisting rise and fall. The groove is a drone, and Coltrane is a raga master, even though the melody is familiar. He doesn’t abstract the melody or hide it, but he adds trills and rhythmic syncopation on this soprano saxophone, stringing together statements of the main melody with swooping interludes. If you are playing ping-pong in a basement, you stop. You’ve never heard anything like it. By the time he recorded the tunes for My Favorite Things, Trane had already been present for a least one genre-shirting jazz session, Miles Davis’s free-modal beauty, Kind of Blue. There, Trane’s gentle side blended beautifully with pianist Bill Evans and a set of medium tempo sketches that allowed every player to blow freely. Live, Coltrane had begun to play longer and longer solos, which he explained in interviews were simply attempts to “get out” all the ideas that he was working through at the time. And so the lead song on this album—an album that Atlantic hoped would be a “hit”—is almost 14 minutes long, with Coltrane soloing obsessively for the much of the time. Did anyone really think that a 14-minute soprano saxophone solo was going to be a hit? But as you listen to Trane’s solo (really two solos: a short one, then a chordal statement by Tyner, then a long, colossal statement that takes over the track) you can hear him thinking through his ideas. In fact, it is odd to be so captivated by something that seems so utterly introspective and private, maybe akin to reading someone’s diary. The rhythm section, rocking over just a very few chords, rises and falls like the ocean under the soprano sax, and you find yourself floating in the foam with Trane’s ideas—his curving rises and swooping falls, and then his complex intervallic patterns alternating a single high note with a series of different lower notes. All this is done so quickly, with such command of embouchure and air that it sounds absolutely as if Coltrane is playing two separate lines from a single horn. It seems, standing there in your best friend’s basement, that the man is Houdini with a saxophone, performing the impossible on vinyl. You know, at that moment, that you’ll be listening to him forever.
![]() Remembering Trane Through Other Musicians and Critics Reasons to be thinking of Coltrane have come fast and furious in the past two years. The discovery of the recording of Trane and Monk at Carnegie Hall had the jolt of a jazz missing link. And last fall, Prestige started reissuing early Trane in a series of box sets (the first is Fearless Leader, featuring often overlooked material from 1957-58) that impress you with the man’s energy and industry around the time that he got off drugs. But the real kicker for me has been a series of documentary podcasts that are now being released under the title “Traneumentary”. Produced and implemented by Joe Vella, the Traneumentary is presenting a series of podcasts—to be released one-per-week between early February and mid-July—each of which features an interview with a musician, historian, or critic with something interesting to say or remember about Coltrane. The fun of the project is twofold. First, the podcasts frequently give the “witnesses” the chance to comment on Trane’s music as you are listening to it. This is a riveting technique, breathing insight into the notes and soul into the commentary. When historian Lewis Porter reads a poem along with a portion of “A Love Supreme” to illustrate how Coltrane was—note for syllable—speaking through his horn, you come to a whole new appreciation for the art. Second, the diversity of the “witnesses”—ranging from McCoy Tyner and Sonny Rollins to Anton Fig (Letterman’s drummer) and Lenny Pickett (tenor player for SNL and Tower of Power)—makes clear that Coltrane’s influence and meaning goes well beyond jazz. The episodes available to date are a fair mix. The first, appropriately, is made of the words of the master himself, drawn from old interviews in which he discusses his long-form approach to soloing. More interesting, in some ways, is the perspective a modern musician who first heard Trane much like the rest of us, as a fan and a school-kid—trumpeter Terrence Blanchard. Blanchard was riveted by “the rhythmic propulsion that that band could manufacture.” Blanchard focuses on musical concerns but not technical matters. “People consider [his music] very spiritual, and I think the chant-like quality adds to that greatly. It was brilliant of Coltrane to bring that into the music as it was something we had never before experienced.” He also raises his appreciation to another level, discussing Coltrane as the perfect combination of technical mastery and spiritual awareness. “He used to say that you have to learn how to ‘play in tune’, but he didn’t mean pitch; he meant that you had to play in tune with what is happening in the universe.” The very next episode, however, brings you back in time as drummer Jimmy Cobb talks about recording with Trane in Rudy Van Gelder’s New Jersey living room for Prestige in the ‘50s. “My own approach was to be strong enough to stay with him, keeping it swinging. All drummers had to do it—Elvin had to do it. Elvin used to be so wet when he came off the stand that he could wring sweat out of his pants.” That is the kind of documentary memory that keeps you listening.
Remember Trane, Down on Earth
My friend Joe Chappelle remembers how forbidding Coltrane could seem to a kid who was trying to figure out his world. “In high school, I bought a copy of Interstellar Space, the 1966 album of drum and saxophone duets between Coltrane and Rashid Ali. I was overwhelmed by it, and it was another ten years before I even dared to give it a second listen.” Actually, I remember listening to that record with Joe. Even though we both hear it as beautiful and logical now, our young ears heard the music as a brilliant kind of noise—aggressive, severe, and abstract. “The first time I heard him play with Miles Davis on ‘Round Midnight’,” explains my friend and poet Mike Tucker. “I had dived head-first into jazz at fifteen, and Coltrane helped me to realize what it means to move people as an artist, and that was a huge, life-changing moment for me. The feeling was so real, so raw, poignant and rich, and I remembered my late grandfather telling me and my brother and sister in 1963 in Arizona, ‘Love is real.’ Listening to Coltrane, I could hear my grandfather say, ‘Love is real.’”
![]() A terrific musician that I work with, Tim Lyons, first heard Coltrane in college, where he was presented as a literally towering figure. “I walked into the Music Library one day and saw the maintenance guys putting up a HUGE black & white charcoal/pencil drawing of Trane playing a soprano. The piece was seven feet tall and four feet wide—BIGGER than life size. The only parts of the canvas that weren’t colored in were the reflective parts of his horn, his forehead, eyes, fingernails, the buttons on his suit jacket—a haunting and memorable thing, to say the least. I immediately checked out A Love Supreme. I don’t remember if I liked it or not, but I remember thinking that it was weird, complicated, different, quiet and loud, annoying, interesting, big, and weird (again). Years later I was killing time in San Francisco and found a copy of A Love Supreme on sale for $6 at Amoeba Music. I picked it up, took the bus back downtown, put it on the stereo in my hotel room, and drank all the whiskey out of the mini-bar. Then, out of my tree, I went down to PacBell Stadium, bought what ended up being a 6th-row-behind-home-plate ticket from a scalper for $60 cash, ate three hot dogs and watched Bonds hit one into the bay.”
The Coltrane Legacy, Decades On
Maybe that’s why Coltrane’s sad, early death (in 1967 of liver cancer when he was only 40) was so shocking to the jazz community. It left a void at the vanguard of the music and the vacuum persists to this day. There is no jazz musician who has truly taken the mantle from Trane—musical, personal, and spiritual. (In fact, he’s the only jazz musician who has inspired his own church, the Saint John Coltrane African Orthodox Church in San Francisco, which has recognized Trane as a saint since 1971.) Coltrane—who kicked heroin, who practiced his craft with a focus and purpose few ever touch, and who opened himself to every branch of religious, scientific, and philosophical influence—wanted only to inspire people “to realize more and more of their capacities for living meaningful lives. Because there certainly is meaning to life.” (Quoted from the 1965 accompanying his Meditations album). This he did and this he proved. Traneumentary producer Vella sees Coltrane’s legacy as a challenge to us all. “What Coltrane demanded of himself, and his musicians, he demanded of us all as listeners. He challenged everyone to absorb his music and to push our own limits and boundaries in the abstract. He made us react and feel the music in all styles and in his unique way. “When you interview over 30 diverse people about an artist who has been gone for nearly 40 years, you realize that this isn’t just some artist who plays the saxophone well. This is an artist who on a mission that was deeper and greater than we could have ever imagined. He was not just playing jazz, he was not just improvising—he was pushing the limits of himself, his instrument, his music, and his spirit. John Coltrane’s music touches people of all walks of life and represents the true human soul. He was a person who worked on his craft everyday and was able to bridge his creative and spiritual energies into music that will last forever. But most profoundly, he continues to inspire people to be better and to be open and to trust in the internal spirit of themselves and the universe as a whole.” No matter how much I love that first recording of “My Favorite Things”, my favorite Coltrane work is his mournful and uplifting composition “Naima”. Written for his first wife Juanita Naima Grubb, the woman who introduced him to the spirituality that allowed him to free himself from drugs and to commence his greatest journey, “Naima” is a stately melody that floats over a pedal-point harmony stated in a compelling ballad pulse. When it first appeared on Giant Steps, it was gentle and delicate. As transformed on Live at the Village Vaguard Again!, it is still beautiful but also rapturously free—a blueprint for a fully explored human experience. It’s the kind of music that exists beyond style, genre, and era. It’s forever music. My poet friend Mike Tucker deserves the last word. “As a Spanish poet said in the 16th century, ‘Love is the reason for our survival.’ And listening to John Coltrane gives us reasons to survive and live and love and grow. Perhaps because that is what he is about. The spirit of love and the journey of the spirit and a quest for peace that pulses in his work cannot help but touch those with ears to hear and hearts open to his heart.” And at that point in his conversation with me, Mike becomes aware of his grammar and of the way we both feel about this music. And he says, “Coltrane is always present tense."
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