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John Coltrane - Impulse Story (CD)

Impulse Story
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Album Details: Impulse Story

Release Date:06/06/2006
Label:Impulse Records
UPC:602498551066

Pro Reviews: Impulse Story

  • All Music Guide

    Budgetline, onedisc compilations documenting a particular recording artist's contributions to a label are a dimeadozen. They are, in many cases, tossed off for quick sale. The Impulse Story series provides an exception to that alltoofrequent rule. In fact, the series is accompanying the publication of Ashley Kahn's book's The House That Trane Built: The Story of Impulse Records. The other titles include albums by Alice Coltrane, Pharoah Sanders, Archie Shepp, McCoy Tyner (all of whom played with Trane) Albert Ayler (whom Trane mentored), Sonny Rollins, Charles Mingus, Gato Barbieri, and Keith Jarrett. There is also a fourCD box set that goes into more depth and carries the same title as Kahn's book. The box and singledisc issues were compiled by him as well. Arguably, it is difficult to surmise, over a single disc, John Coltrane's contribution to Impulse. His growth as a bandleader, improviser, and composer grew by leaps and bounds while at the label so much so that it is nigh impossi...ble to gauge there was no scale or frame of reference for the direction Coltrane took; a direction similar to that of his former boss, Miles Davis, who went in both similar and opposite directions at the same time with his electric bands. Coltrane's Impulse Story contains nine tunes. None of this material is unreleased; indeed, that is not the point of the series at all. It charts Coltrane's development from his Africa Brass period in 1961 through to his final planned release, Expression, in 1967. "Greensleeves" is here with the enormous band which included Eric Dolphy and Julian Priester, Booker Little, and many others. The trio version of "Chasin' the Trane" is taken from Live at the Village Vanguard, The Master Takes. These cuts are obvious choices, as are the rest: "Tunji," from Coltrane in 1962; the title track from Impressions recorded a few days before in the same year; "After the Rain," from the same album; "Bessie's Blues," from Crescent in 1964; "Part One, Acknowledgement," from A Love Supreme; the seminal and still outrageous "The Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost," from the second Meditations album, with Pharoah Sanders, and the twin drummers Elvin Jones and Rashied Ali, along with Jimmy Garrison and McCoy Tyner. It closes with the brief and beautiful "Ogunde," with the new quartet of Alice Coltrane, Garrison, and Ali. As previously stated, one can argue choices all day long and not get anywhere, but if you are looking for an overview or introduction to Coltrane's seminal Impulse period, this disc will better than suffice, though it must be stated that A Love Supreme stands on its own and should be purchased as well. - Thom Jurek, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

John Coltrane

Despite a relatively brief career (he first came to notice as a sideman at age 29 in 1955, formally launched a solo career at 33 in 1960, and was dead at 40 in 1967), saxophonist John Coltrane was among the most important, and most controversial, figures in jazz. It seems amazing that his period of greatest activity was so short, not only because he recorded prolificall... Read more