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John Coltrane: Impressions

at a glance...

Hometown: Hamlet, NC
First Recordings: 1950

Sidemen:
John Coltrane -soprano/tenor saxophone
Eric Dolphy -alto saxophone,bass clarinet
Jimmy Garrison, Reginald Workman -bass
Elvin Jones, Roy Haynes -drums
McCoy Tyner -piano

Notes:
After Charlie Parker, John Coltrane is the most influential saxophonist in jazz. He rose from the ranks of journeyman musicians to be a key sideman for Miles Davis and Thelonious Monk. While he worked for them he straightened out a series of obstructive personal problems (addictions to heroin and alcohol) and dedicated himself to ongoing musical evolution. With Miles, Monk, and on his early recordings for Prestige and Blue Note Coltrane explored modes and chordally based improvisation. His dense improvisations during that period were characterized as "sheets of sound." In 1959 he signed to Atlantic records. His first album for the label, Giant Steps, is a landmark recording because of its indelible compositions and intense, harmonically adventurous playing. Coltrane subsequently established his own quartet which included pianist McCoy Tyner, drummer Elvin Jones, and a series of bassists. That band appeared on another Atlantic classic, My Favorite Things. The saxophonist's extended soprano saxophone solo on the theme from "The Sound of Music" introduced to his work new heights of spiritual intensity and a quasi-Indian sound. In 1961 he signed to Impulse! records, a more financially supportive label, and the music's rate of change accelerated. He explored large group recordings, African and Indian influences, album length suites, open-ended structures, and the outer limits of his horns' volume and timbre. Coltrane became a patron of the avant garde by recording with up-and-comers like John Tchicai, Archie Shepp, and Pharoah Sanders. His classic quartet dissolved in 1965; his wife, pianist Alice Coltrane, bassist Jimmy Garrison, and drummer Rashied Ali were the core of his new group. Coltrane died of liver cancer in 1967.


John Coltrane
Impressions
Impulse!, Released 1963; Reissued 2000

Amongst John Coltrane's first recordings for Impulse! records was a one week stand at the Village Vanguard in November, 1961. Those performances stood as a challenge for jazz to match new standards of intensity, stamina, and harmonic invention. They were also a well into which the label dipped repeatedly over the years. This album looks like a patchwork; two long pieces from the Vanguard, a short blues from 1962, and a ballad with guest drummer Roy Haynes from 1963. But they fit together splendidly.

The droning opener, "India," was one of Trane's most overt nods towards Eastern influences. A second bassist and fellow traveller Eric Dolphy thicken the pulses and textures, giving the tune an hypnotic aura. "Up 'Gainst The Wall" is a simple, succinct blues whose piercing split tones acknowledge the saxophonist's distant bar-walking past. The fiery title tune is another Vanguard artifact; Coltrane's burly tenor tone belies the speed and intricacy of his long, unfurling solo. The album proper closes with "After The Rain," whose prayerful lyricism gives an especially serene glimpse of the yearned for transcendence at the heart of Coltrane's art. As a bonus this reissue includes a second tune recorded at the same session. "Dear Old Stockholm" is a Swedish folk melody that became a bebop standard after both Stan Getz and Miles Davis played it during the 1950s. Spurred by Haynes' crisp decorations, Colrane and pianist McCoy Tyner find tortuous hairpin turns and sweeping broad avenues in the same melody.

Sometimes what looks like a grab bag turns out to be pure gold -- Impressions shines.

If you like John Coltrane, check out:
John Coltrane Coltrane Plays The Blues
John Coltrane Coltrane Jazz
John Coltrane Interstellar Space
John Coltrane Blue Train
John Coltrane A Love Supreme
David S. Ware Surrendered
Miles Davis Relaxin' With The Miles Davis Quintet
Miles Davis Kind Of Blue
Hank Mobley Workout

-- Bill Meyer

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