Coltrane Jazz Explained

Coltrane Jazz
Type:studio
Artist:John Coltrane
Cover:Coltrane jazz.jpg
Released:January or February 1961
Genre:Jazz
Length:38:51 original LP
63:00 CD reissue
Producer:Nesuhi Ertegün
Prev Title:Giant Steps
Prev Year:1960
Next Title:Lush Life
Next Year:1961

Coltrane Jazz is a studio album by the jazz musician John Coltrane. It was released in early 1961 on Atlantic Records.[1] [2] [3] [4] Most of the album features Coltrane playing with his former Miles Davis bandmates, pianist Wynton Kelly, bassist Paul Chambers and drummer Jimmy Cobb during two sessions in November and December, 1959. The exception is the track "Village Blues", which was recorded October 21, 1960. "Village Blues" comes from the first recording session featuring Coltrane playing with pianist McCoy Tyner and drummer Elvin Jones, who toured and recorded with Coltrane as part of his celebrated "classic quartet" from 1960 to 1965.

Background

In 1959, Miles Davis' business manager Harold Lovett negotiated a contract for Coltrane with Atlantic, the terms including a $7000 annual guarantee.[5] After having recorded most of Giant Steps in May of that year, Coltrane started having bridge problems, and did not return to a recording studio for six months.[6] When he returned to the studio in November and December for the Coltrane Jazz recording sessions, he employed the rhythm section from the Miles Davis Quintet. The sessions yielded the bulk of Coltrane Jazz, and the track "Naima," which was included on the Giant Steps album.[7] "Like Sonny," a tribute to colleague Sonny Rollins,[8] is based on a melodic figure that Sonny Rollins can be heard playing at 3:22 during his solo on "My Old Flame" on Kenny Dorham's 1957 album Jazz Contrasts. (Coltrane made one further studio recording of "Like Sonny" in September 1960 for Roulette Records, who issued the piece under the title "Simple Like" in 1962 on the album "The Best of Birdland: Volume 1".)

After leaving Davis's band in the spring of 1960, Coltrane formed his first touring quartet for a residency at the Jazz Gallery club in Manhattan. Coltrane initially hired pianist Steve Kuhn and drummer Pete "La Roca" Sims for his group, along with bassist Steve Davis, but by September, the quartet's rhythm section consisted of Tyner, Jones, and Davis.[9] This group entered the studio on October 21, recording "Village Blues" at the beginning of the week of sessions that produced Coltrane's My Favorite Things album.

On June 20, 2000, Rhino Records reissued Coltrane Jazz as part of its Atlantic 50th Anniversary Jazz Gallery series. Included were four bonus tracks, two of which had appeared in 1975 on the Atlantic compilation Alternate Takes, the remaining pair earlier issued on in 1995. Two bonus tracks, the alternate versions of "Like Sonny", had been recorded at the March 26, 1959 sessions that were not used for Giant Steps.[10]

Track listing

2000 reissue bonus tracks

Personnel

March 26, 1959 ("Like Sonny")

November 24, 1959 & December 2, 1959

October 21, 1960 ("Village Blues")

Production

Notes and References

  1. News: Editorial Staff . Cash Box . Atlantic's LP Kick-off for 1961 . 20 July 2019 . The Cash Box . The Cash Box Publishing Co. Inc., NY . 28 January 1961.
  2. News: Editorial Staff . Billboard . Coltrane Jazz . 20 July 2019 . The Billboard . The Billboard Publishing Co. . 30 January 1961.
  3. Book: Porter . Lewis . The John Coltrane Reference . 2013 . Lewis Porter . Chris . DeVito . Yasuhiro . Fujioka . Wolf . Schmaler . David . Wild . Routledge . New York/Abingdon . 978-1135112578 . 570.
  4. News: Editorial Staff . Cash Box . Coltrane Jazz . 20 July 2019 . The Cash Box . The Cash Box Publishing Co. Inc., NY . 11 February 1961.
  5. [Lewis Porter]
  6. Ben Ratliff. Coltrane: The Story of A Sound. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2007., p. 53.
  7. Porter, p. 361
  8. Porter, pp. 156-7.
  9. Porter, pp. 171-180.
  10. Coltrane Jazz. Rhino R2 75204 liner notes, p. 11.