Requisites

Coltrane’s Sound is an album credited to jazz musician John Coltrane, released in 1964 on Atlantic Records, catalog SD 1419. It was recorded at Atlantic Studios during the sessions for My Favorite Things, assembled after Coltrane had stopped recording for the label and was under contract to Impulse! Records. Like Prestige and Blue Note Records before them, as Coltrane’s fame grew during the 1960s Atlantic used unissued recordings, releasing them without either Coltrane’s input or approval.

Track Listing | 38:18 ~ Original Recording / 50:33 CD Reissue *All compositions are by John Coltrane except where mentioned

  1. The Night Has A Thousand Eyes ~ Buddy Bernier, Jerry Brainin ~ 6:51
  2. Central Park West ~ 4:16
  3. Liberia ~ 6:53
  4. Body and Soul ~ Edward Heyman, Robert Sour, Frank Eyton, Johnny Green ~ 5:40
  5. Equinox ~ 8:39
  6. Satellite ~ 5:59
The Players
  • John Coltrane ~ tenor saxophone except for soprano Central Park West
  • McCoy Tyner ~ piano
  • Steve Davis ~ bass
  • Elvin Jones ~ drums
Technical Crew
  • Nesuhi Ertegün ~ production
  • Tom Dowd ~ engineering
  • Marvin Israel ~ photography
  • Ralph J. Gleason ~ liner notes
Coltrane’s Sound ~ John Coltrane | By Eddie Carter

Fans of Modern Jazz know that John William Coltrane was in a league of his own as a bandleader, composer, soprano and tenor saxophonist, making some of his most substantial contributions to the music genre recording for Atlantic, Impulse and Prestige. The album up for discussion is Coltrane’s Sound (Atlantic 1419), originally recorded in 1960 at the same session that also gave the jazz world, My Favorite Things.  This album was released in 1964, three years into Coltrane’s contract with Impulse Records, capitalizing on his increasing popularity during the first half of the sixties. Though criminally underrated, it’s an outstanding program of two timeless evergreens and four original tunes that Coltrane demonstrates are just as enjoyable as the standards. This album in my opinion also helps solidify his place as one of the most important musicians of the twentieth century. Completing the quartet are McCoy Tyner on piano, Steve Davis on bass and Elvin Jones on drums. My copy used in this report is the 2010 Rhino Records US Stereo Audiophile Reissue (SD 1419–R1 1419).

Side One opens with a sparkling rendition of The Night Has a Thousand Eyes, written in 1948 by Jerry Brainin and Buddy Bernier.  This jazz and pop standard made its introduction in the film noir crime drama Night Has a Thousand Eyes, released that year. The movie was based on the 1945 novel by author Cornell Woolrich. The song is one of the most popular standards in The Great American Songbook and has been recorded numerous times as a vocal and instrumental. Sometimes played and sung sublimely, the quartet offers a lively theme treatment that’s inspiring. John starts the soloing charging out the gate with a vigorous performance.  McCoy heats up the closing reading with exuberant enthusiasm into the coda. Trane turns to the soprano sax for Central Park West, the first of four tunes by the leader. It opens with an alluring introduction and ends with an equally tender melody led by John who also expresses gentle feelings on the opening statement with a soft timbre. The song’s final solo by McCoy is an intimately polite presentation anchored by the affectionate infrastructure of Steve and Elvin.

The first side wraps up with Coltrane’s Liberia, returning the foursome to an uptempo beat with a sprightly theme treatment in unison.  John takes the opening statement, gradually building each verse efficiently into a passionate climax. Tyner displays his strong chops on a short closing solo that’s stunning into Trane’s reappearance for the finale. The ageless classic Body and Soul begins the second side with a midtempo rendition by the quartet. It was written in 1930 by Frank Eyton, Johnny Green, Edward Heyman, Robert Sour. The most famous instrumental version was made in 1939 by Coleman Hawkins for Bluebird and it’s one of the most recorded standards in the history of music. The trio led by McCoy’s cheerful piano introduces this chestnut and John provides a succulent treat of what’s in store on the opening melody and heightens the mood on the lead solo. McCoy flavors the next reading with a joyful swing to the infectious beat, then Coltrane makes a final statement that’s brief, but clever leading to the blissful conclusion.

Up next is Equinox, a slow tempo blues by John that was named by his first wife, Naima. The equinox occurs twice a year, the first one around March 21st and the second by September 23rd. It’s the point when the sun crosses the equator with day and night, everywhere on earth approximately at an equal length. The rhythm section opens the song sensuously into Trane’s elegantly tender opening chorus and passionate solo. Tyner concludes the readings with a delicately gentle performance over the soothing support of Davis’ bass and Jones’ elegant timekeeping. Coltrane’s Satellite, the album finale is a trio performance following in the footsteps of Sonny Rollins’ trio LP’s with just the bass and drums providing the power behind him.  This tune is a jubilant joyride with John blowing fire on the theme and excitingly fierce solo. Steve dazzles with feisty exuberance and Elvin brings the heat with aggressive brushwork behind John’s reprising the theme into the climax.

The man behind the dials of the original recording was one of the best engineers in the business, Tom Dowd and Nesuhi Ertegün supervised the album’s production. Bernie Grundman cut the lacquers from the original analog masters, utilizing premium 180-gram audiophile vinyl by RTI (Record Technology Incorporated). The sound quality of Mr. Dowd’s work has been beautifully remastered and is amazing throughout the treble, midrange and bass spectrum with a very revealing soundstage for the instruments placing the listener’s favorite chair in the center of the studio alongside the musicians. If you’re in the mood for an album of Hard-Bop and Modal Jazz, I invite you to audition Coltrane’s Sound by John Coltrane.  It’s a great LP that makes a profound statement to a legendary jazz giant and a title that should not only appease and delight the serious jazz aficionado but the first-time listener as well! See you next month and Happy Listening Gang!

~ Body and Soul (Bluebird B-10523-A); My Favorite Things (Atlantic 1361/SD 1361) – Source: Discogs.com

~ The Night Has a Thousand Eyes, Body and Soul – Source: JazzStandards.com

~ Equinox – Source: The Merriam-Webster Unabridged Dictionary, Wikipedia.org

More Posts: ,,,,,,,,