Recording of December 2021: A Love Supreme: Live in Seattle
John Coltrane: A Love Supreme: Live in Seattle
Impulse!/UMe (CD B0034290-02, LP B0034291-01, download). 2021. Ravi Coltrane, prod.; Kevin Reeves, eng.
Performance *****
Sonics ***½
John Coltrane’s career as a bandleader can be divided, with haphazard tidiness, into three periods. His so-called classic quartet with pianist McCoy Tyner, bassist Jimmy Garrison, and drummer Elvin Jones, which deserves every bit of its legendary status, dominates the 19621965 middle section and encompasses Coltrane’s greatest achievements. Before that was the ramp-up and after lay the free jazz experiments.
Real life, of course, wasn’t so simple. In 1997, the fantastic four-disc set The Complete 1961 Village Vanguard Recordings expanded the view of 1962’s Coltrane “Live” at the Village Vanguard, showing the whole of the four-night run with eight musicians in various combinations before the emergence of what became his working band. We don’t have such documentation for the post-quartet transition, but A Love Supreme: Live in Seattle, recorded in 1965 and released for the first time in October, helps elucidate the period leading up to his radical transformation.
The Seattle recording is notable in many ways, not least in what a joy it is to listen to. It’s one of only two live recordings, and one of very few live performances, of the suite that marks the pinnacle of his career. It shows him putting what he, too, considered a significant statement into the language of his later years, the quartet augmented by saxophonists Pharoah Sanders and Carlos Ward and bassist Donald Rafael Garrett. The Seattle performance is less structured than the studio album, nicely relaxed, with extra interludes for group improvisation. It reveals a malleable work, not frozen in time and on tape but, like everything Coltrane did, adaptable to new approaches and ideas.
The possibility of moving A Love Supreme from middle-to late-period Trane (or that it could exist in both periods) shows how misleading those divisions are. Coltrane’s music was always changing, and external factors hastened the evolution. Tyner left the group at the end of 1965, and Jones departed the following January, each citing Coltrane’s move into free improvisation with larger ensembles as the reason. Coltrane had been adding players to the lineup, experimenting. Losing half the band freed him to pursue music with different, and less, structure.
The audio quality on the new Love Supreme is good, quite clear for a 1965 club recording and certainly better than recent Coltrane finds The Olatunji Concert: The Last Live Recording (recorded in 1967 and released in 2001) and Offering: Live at Temple University (recorded in 1966, released in 2014). But it isn’t perfect. The recording was made with two onstage mikes, both picking up Jones’s kit: The drums are too high in the mix. It hardly ruins the recording, though, and casual listeners might not notice the imbalance.
A Love Supremethe original recordingwas made at Rudy Van Gelder’s New Jersey studio in December 1964 and released the following month. In February and May of 1965, the quartet returned to Van Gelder’s studio to record The John Coltrane Quartet Plays, a set of recognizable, audience-pleasing tunes. Freer studio sessions in June ended up on Transition, Living Space, and Kulu Sé Mama. Later that month, Coltrane and an expanded ensemble recorded Ascensionan album that stands with Ornette Coleman’s 1961 Free Jazz: A Collective Improvisation as one of the essential early statements of spontaneous music.
After a European tour and some studio sessions that would be released after Coltrane’s death, the group headed west and, on September 30, with Sanders and Garrett at the Penthouse in Seattle, recorded this performance. The next day, they were in a studio in nearby Lynnwood, recording Om. Two weeks later, in Los Angeles, Coltrane and an octet recorded the title track for Kulu Sé Mama. The following month, back at Van Gelder’s studio, he recorded his Meditations suite with the sextet that included Ali and Sanders, after which Tyner, then Jones, left the band. It was an explosive year of the sort few musicians have.
In his essential book A Love Supreme: The Story of John Coltrane’s Signature Album, Ashley Kahn writes, “The signs of his future direction were already present in the Love Supreme sessions. Coltrane’s measured key-hopping on ‘Acknowledgement’ presage a harmonic approach in his playing bordering onand soon embracinga passionate atonality. His penchant for chanting would resurface on recordings like Om; his love of poetry on the album cover of Kulu Sé Mama.”
Viewing 1965 as a line rather than a break makes greater sense of Coltrane’s later work. A Love Supreme: Live in Seattle helps unmuddy the waters. It’s a valuable addition to the Coltrane discographyfresh yet familiar and eminently enjoyable.Kurt Gottschalk
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