Jazz is one of the only original musical art forms. It is
defined as “originating around the start of the 20th century in New Orleans,
rooted in African American musical styles blended with Western music technique
and theory.” One of the most famous jazz musicians was John Coltrane. In his
study of Coltrane’s newest posthumous release entitled “John Coltrane: Fearless
Leader”, Norman Weinstein analyses on of jazz’s greatest stars and the CD that
summarizes his sessions from 1957 to 1958.
Coltrane did not start his first jazz group until 1960,( a
quartet including Steve Kuhn, Pete LaRoca and Billy Higgins), so the period of
time described in this CD is prior to any real self controlled, organized play
on his part. First Weinstein discusses the difference between Coltrane’s
pre-Atlantic, pre-Impulse recordings versus the later sound. Coltrane has
recordings that go all the way back to 1946 but he did not start recording
professionally and with a means to preserve and distribute until 1955. After
this point however, he created and produced an impressive number of albums.
Since his death, some of these have been released. Still others have been
releases solely on the merit of his having been playing on the side or in a
lesser portion of a recording. Weinstein mentioned that a previous Coltrane
release, a 16 disc set was overwhelming and that the new 6 disc set of his
review is a much more manageable collection of Coltrane’s music, though not as
exhaustive as the aforementioned collection.
He recommends tuning out the other musicians and
concentrating solely on Coltrane and bassist Paul Chambers and calls Coltrane’s
playing “intensely inspired.”
Weinstein goes through each disc, listing the songs and
recommends listening to the CD’s in backwards order as they are chronologically
listed. He suggests that the listener go back in time and listen to Coltrane’s
earliest represented recordings last instead of first as a kind of musical
audio deconstruction.
Biographical information on Coltrane suggests that he began
to play while a young man in a racially segregated community after the death of
his aunt, grandfather and father. His musical passion seemed to be built from
the grief over these deaths and his sadness was transformed into “practicing
obsessively.” Though the new CD set does not go that far back into Coltrane’s
early years. It depicts and records a specific time of his growth. Weinstein
contends that you are able to hear that growth and that it is well worth the
purchase.
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