Coltrane's Sound
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| Coltrane's Sound | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | Late June/early July 1964[1][2] | |||
| Recorded | October 24 & 26, 1960 | |||
| Studio | Atlantic (New York City) | |||
| Genre | Jazz | |||
| Length | 38:18 original LP 50:33 CD reissue | |||
| Label | Atlantic SD 1419 | |||
| Producer | Nesuhi Ertegun | |||
| John Coltrane chronology | ||||
| ||||
Coltrane's Sound is an album of music by the jazz musician and composer John Coltrane. It was released in 1964 through Atlantic Records. It was recorded at Atlantic Studios in 1960 during the sessions for My Favorite Things, and was assembled after Coltrane had stopped recording for the label and had a contract with Impulse! Records. Like Prestige and Blue Note Records before them, as Coltrane's fame grew during the 1960s Atlantic used unissued recordings and released them without either Coltrane's input or approval.
On February 16, 1999, Rhino Records reissued Coltrane's Sound as part of its Atlantic 50th Anniversary Jazz Gallery series. Included were two bonus tracks: "26-2" had been previously released on the 1970 album The Coltrane Legacy; and the alternate take of "Body and Soul" had been released on the 1975 album Alternate Takes.
Reception
[edit]| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| All About Jazz | (favorable)[3] |
| AllMusic | |
| The Encyclopedia of Popular Music | |
| The Penguin Guide to Jazz | |
| The Rolling Stone Jazz Record Guide | |
In a review for AllMusic, Lindsay Planer called the album "one of the most highly underrated entries in Coltrane's voluminous catalog," and wrote: "The title could not have been more accurate, as each of the six pieces bear the unmistakable and indelible stamp of Coltrane's early-'60s style... Regardless of the lack of attention, these recordings remain among Trane's finest."[4]
Douglas Payne of All About Jazz stated: "Spin Coltrane's Sound and even non-jazz fans sense something. It's a warm, human sound that takes listeners somewhere they like to go... [it] makes for essential, enjoyable jazz listening."[3]
Writing for Jazz Views, Nick Lea described the album as a useful document "in tracing the saxophonist's transition from his coming out as a leader, and out from the shadow of his former boss to the ever searching and deeply exploratory playing that would ultimately lead to the classic A Love Supreme and the large scale Ascension."[8]
Author Eric Nisenson singled out Coltrane's rendition of "Body and Soul" for praise, commenting: "Coltrane does what every great jazz musician can do with a tune no matter how familiar or shopworn: he makes it into a uniquely personal statement and lets us hear it anew, as if for the first time."[9]
Track listing
[edit]Side one
[edit]| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Recording date | Length |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "The Night Has a Thousand Eyes" | Buddy Bernier, Jerry Brainin | October 26, 1960 | 6:51 |
| 2. | "Central Park West" | John Coltrane | October 24, 1960 | 4:16 |
| 3. | "Liberia" | John Coltrane | October 26, 1960 | 6:53 |
Side two
[edit]| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Recording date | Length |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Body and Soul" | Edward Heyman, Robert Sour, Frank Eyton, Johnny Green | October 24, 1960 | 5:40 |
| 2. | "Equinox" | John Coltrane | October 26, 1960 | 8:39 |
| 3. | "Satellite" | John Coltrane | October 24, 1960 | 5:59 |
1999 reissue bonus tracks
[edit]| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Recording date | Length |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7. | "26-2" | John Coltrane | October 26, 1960 | 6:17 |
| 8. | "Body and Soul" (alternate take) | Heyman, Sour, Eyton, Green | October 24, 1960 | 5:58 |
Personnel
[edit]- John Coltrane — tenor saxophone on all except "Central Park West"; soprano saxophone on "Central Park West" and "26-2"
- McCoy Tyner — piano except "Satellite"
- Steve Davis — bass
- Elvin Jones — drums
Production personnel
[edit]- Nesuhi Ertegün — production
- Tom Dowd — engineering
- Marvin Israel — photography
- Ralph J. Gleason — liner notes
- Bob Carlton, Patrick Milligan — reissue supervision
- Dan Hersch — digital remastering
- Rachel Gutek — reissue design
- Hugh Brown — reissue art direction
- Kenny Berger — reissue liner notes
- Steven Chean — reissue editorial supervision
- Elizabeth Pavone — reissue editorial coordination
References
[edit]- ^ Liner notes to The Heavyweight Champion: The Complete Atlantic Recordings
- ^ Billboard July 11, 1964
- ^ a b All About Jazz review
- ^ a b AllMusic review
- ^ Larkin, Colin (2007). The Encyclopedia of Popular Music (4th ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195313734.
- ^ Cook, Richard; Morton, Brian (2008). The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings. Penguin Books. pp. 286–287.
- ^ Swenson, J., ed. (1985). The Rolling Stone Jazz Record Guide. USA: Random House/Rolling Stone. p. 46. ISBN 0-394-72643-X.
- ^ Lea, Nick. "Trane: The Atlantic Collection". Jazz Views. Retrieved April 18, 2023.
- ^ Nisenson, Eric (2009). Ascension: John Coltrane and His Quest. Hachette Books. p. 97.
Coltrane's Sound
View on GrokipediaBackground
Recording sessions
The recording sessions for Coltrane's Sound occurred at Atlantic Studios in New York City over two days in late October 1960, specifically October 24 (afternoon and evening) and October 26, under the engineering of Tom Dowd, who employed two-track stereo techniques typical of Atlantic's jazz productions at the time to capture the quartet's dynamic interplay.[5][6] These sessions followed closely after the October 21 recordings for My Favorite Things and built on the quartet's earlier work that month, providing additional material beyond the primary tracks for that album.[5] The first relevant session took place on October 24, 1960, in the afternoon, yielding the master take of "Central Park West" along with alternate takes of "Body and Soul" and other pieces not selected for the final album.[7] That evening, the group recorded "Satellite," which opened the eventual LP, amid experiments with several blues-oriented originals.[7] On October 26, 1960, the session produced masters for "Liberia," "Equinox," and "The Night Has a Thousand Eyes," completing the core material drawn from these dates.[8] Featuring John Coltrane on tenor and soprano saxophone, McCoy Tyner on piano, Steve Davis on bass, and Elvin Jones on drums, the lineup marked an early iteration of Coltrane's enduring quartet formation.[5] These were among the earliest studio sessions for the emerging quartet of Coltrane, Tyner, and Jones, following their debut on the October 21 My Favorite Things recordings; the sessions generated multiple takes across originals and standards, allowing for improvisation and refinement; Dowd's precise balancing of the instruments preserved the group's emerging modal explorations alongside ballad interpretations.[5][6] Following Coltrane's departure from Atlantic Records in 1961, label executives selected six tracks from these October sessions—specifically "Satellite," "Body and Soul," "Liberia," "The Night Has a Thousand Eyes," "Equinox," and "Central Park West"—to compile Coltrane's Sound for its 1964 release, drawing from approximately two hours of recorded material to highlight the quartet's versatility.[5][9]Context in Coltrane's career
In 1960, John Coltrane navigated a pivotal transition in his career, having completed his obligations with Prestige Records by late 1959 and, having signed with Atlantic Records in 1959—which facilitated the recording of his landmark album Giant Steps in May 1959 (released in early 1960)—now in his second year with the label. This period followed the technical innovations of Giant Steps, including the complex "Coltrane changes" that expanded harmonic possibilities in jazz improvisation, and saw Coltrane assembling the core of what would become his classic quartet by incorporating pianist McCoy Tyner, a longtime acquaintance who joined the band that year, and drummer Elvin Jones, who came aboard earlier in 1960 after stints with other leaders like Sonny Rollins.[10][11][2] The October 1960 sessions for Coltrane's Sound highlighted this evolving ensemble, with bassist Steve Davis serving as a temporary rhythm section anchor, bridging from Reggie Workman—who had appeared on Coltrane's immediately preceding recordings—to the lineup changes that would occur in the winter of 1960–1961 when Workman took over the bass chair. These sessions represented early studio work for the quartet in its formative stage, capturing the nascent synergy that defined Coltrane's quartet sound.[12][13] Produced by Nesuhi Ertegun during Coltrane's Atlantic tenure, the album's material remained in the vaults until its release in June 1964, well after Coltrane's contract had been acquired by Impulse! Records in May 1961, an arrangement that allowed ABC-Paramount (Impulse!'s parent company) to take over his future output. This delayed issuance reflected Ertegun's strategy at Atlantic of curating and releasing archival sessions from artists who had departed, ensuring that unissued tracks from Coltrane's 1960 output reached audiences amid his rising prominence on Impulse!, where the quartet's chemistry would mature in works like A Love Supreme.[13][14]Music and composition
Overall style and innovations
Coltrane's Sound exemplifies a pivotal moment in John Coltrane's oeuvre, fusing post-bop structures with nascent modal jazz elements to create a dynamic interplay of hard bop vigor and contemplative balladry.[15] Recorded in October 1960, the sessions capture Coltrane's tenor saxophone evolving from the rapid-fire "sheets of sound" density—characterized by dense layers of arpeggios and melodic figures—to a more lyrical and expressive phrasing that emphasizes sustain and emotional resonance.[16] This stylistic maturation reflects Coltrane's technical refinements, including precise articulation through coordinated tonguing and fingering, honed during his recovery and practice regimen in the late 1950s.[17] The album's innovations lie in the quartet's cohesive interplay, where pianist McCoy Tyner's modal comping provides a harmonic foundation of sustained chords and percussive accents, complementing Coltrane's improvisations.[15] Drummer Elvin Jones contributes dynamic propulsion with intricate polyrhythms and explosive fills, while bassist Steve Davis offers supportive, walking lines that anchor the ensemble without overpowering its introspective moments.[15] This configuration prioritizes collective emotional depth over virtuosic speed, fostering a sense of communal exploration that distinguishes the group's sound.[16] Harmonically, the album integrates originals such as "Satellite" and "Liberia," which draw on modal scales like the Dorian mode for expansive improvisation, alongside reharmonized standards that accommodate extended solos through simplified chord progressions and cyclic vamps.[16] These elements build on Coltrane's "matrix" technique of chord substitutions while leaning toward modality, allowing greater melodic freedom.[16] In comparison to contemporaries, Coltrane's Sound shares modal exploration with Miles Davis's Kind of Blue (1959), which inspired Coltrane's shift from chord-based bebop to scale-driven improvisation, yet it stands apart through its emerging spiritual undertones, infusing the music with a transcendent, gospel-inflected intensity.[15]Individual tracks
The original release of Coltrane's Sound comprises six tracks recorded in October 1960, highlighting the John Coltrane Quartet's versatility across originals and standards. These selections demonstrate Coltrane's evolving tenor saxophone technique, supported by McCoy Tyner's piano, Steve Davis's bass, and Elvin Jones's drums.[4][1] "The Night Has a Thousand Eyes" (Buddy Bernier and Jerry Brainin, 6:42) opens with a bold major key theme and Coltrane's "sheets of sound" solo emphasizing melodic development. The rhythm section provides a happy, propulsive feel, with Tyner's percussive chords and Jones's off-beat bursts.[2][1] "Central Park West" (John Coltrane, 4:12) is a laconic ballad featuring Coltrane on soprano saxophone with an unhurried melody and meditative chords. Tyner's solo introduction stands out, showcasing delicate interplay in this original composition.[4][2][1] "Liberia" (John Coltrane, 6:45) begins with a thunderous drum roll by Jones and unfolds as an up-tempo original dedicated to the West African nation, incorporating rhythmic influences in a modal framework similar to "Night in Tunisia." Coltrane's tenor soars with high-energy lines, supported by Davis's propulsive bass and the quartet's collective drive.[4][1][2] "Body and Soul" (Edward Heyman, Robert Sour, Frank Eyton, and Johnny Green, 5:35) offers a reharmonized standard with Tyner's modal chords framing Coltrane's yearning tenor ballad. The performance highlights emotional depth, with Tyner's solo shifting from block chords to melodic triplets and Jones adding subtle counter-rhythms.[4][2][1] "Equinox" (John Coltrane, 8:33) features rhythmic interplay between Tyner's chords and Jones's counterpoint, with Coltrane's blues-inflected solo evolving into "sheets of sound." Tyner's tender solo explores countermelodies in this modal original.[4][2][1] "Satellite" (John Coltrane, 5:48) is an original composition serving as a contrafact of the standard "How High the Moon," employing Coltrane's signature cycle-of-thirds harmonic substitutions to create a medium-tempo swinger with a memorable head melody. The track features an extended tenor saxophone solo by Coltrane that probes harmonic possibilities, building intensity through rapid scalar runs and chromatic approaches. The rhythm section provides steady swing support in this pianoless trio section.[4][1][18][2]Release history
Original release
Coltrane's Sound was originally released in late June 1964 by Atlantic Records under catalog number SD 1419.[1] The album was issued as a stereo LP featuring a gatefold sleeve, with cover art consisting of an abstract design created by Marvin Israel, Atlantic's art director.[19] These sessions, recorded in October 1960 at Atlantic Studios in New York City, captured the John Coltrane Quartet during a transitional period in the saxophonist's career.[13] The album's production was overseen by Nesuhi Ertegun, who assembled it from previously unreleased tapes following Coltrane's departure from Atlantic Records in 1961.[20] Ertegun, as co-founder of Atlantic, selected and sequenced the tracks to highlight the quartet's evolving interplay, including performances by Coltrane on tenor and soprano saxophones, McCoy Tyner on piano, Steve Davis on bass, and Elvin Jones on drums.[1] This post-contract release allowed Atlantic to utilize archival material from Coltrane's time with the label.[21] In the context of Coltrane's rising prominence through his recordings on Impulse! Records, Atlantic positioned Coltrane's Sound as a showcase of his maturing quartet sound and innovative phrasing.[21] The album's timing capitalized on the saxophonist's growing fame, presenting earlier work that demonstrated the foundations of his signature intensity and harmonic exploration.[22]Reissues and remasters
The 1999 CD reissue of Coltrane's Sound by Rhino/Atlantic, released on February 16, 1999, as part of the Atlantic 50th Anniversary Jazz Gallery series, expanded the original album's track listing by adding two previously unreleased bonus tracks from the October 1960 Atlantic Studios sessions: "26-2" (6:17) and "Body and Soul" (alternate take) (5:58).[23][4] This edition featured 24-bit digital remastering for enhanced audio clarity, including greater dynamic range and reduced noise compared to earlier pressings, while retaining the original four-track LP structure as its core.[23] The reissue also included updated liner notes referencing Nat Hentoff's original 1964 annotations, providing historical context on the recording sessions and Coltrane's quartet dynamics.[4] In 2003, Warner Music Japan released a remastered CD edition utilizing 24-bit/96kHz technology, aimed at improving sonic depth and fidelity from the original analog tapes, particularly emphasizing the spatial imaging of Tom Dowd's engineering.[1] This version maintained the expanded track list from the 1999 reissue and was praised for its balanced reproduction of the quartet's interplay, with cleaner highs and more defined bass response.[1] Subsequent Japanese editions, such as the 2016 SHM-CD limited reissue on June 29, 2016, further refined the audio using Super High Material CD pressing for reduced distortion and superior transparency, while including Hentoff's liner notes and session photography in an expanded booklet.[24] The 2010 Analogue Productions/ORG Music 180-gram 45 RPM double LP reissue, mastered by Bernie Grundman from the original analog tapes, prioritized audiophile-grade vinyl playback with enhanced warmth and detail in Tom Dowd's mixes, extending the runtime through the bonus tracks for a total of approximately 49 minutes.[25][26] Pressed at Pallas Group in Germany, it was noted for its quiet surfaces and precise stereo separation, making it a reference for analog enthusiasts.[25] Reissues consistently featured Hentoff's insightful notes, which highlight Coltrane's transitional style between hard bop and modal exploration during the 1960 sessions.[4] In November 2025, Rhino announced a limited-edition 6LP mono box set titled John Coltrane: The Atlantic Years in Mono, celebrating Coltrane's centennial, which includes Coltrane's Sound along with five other albums from 1960–1964 (Giant Steps, Coltrane Jazz, My Favorite Things, Olé Coltrane, and Coltrane Plays the Blues). Scheduled for release on November 28, 2025, the set features 180-gram vinyl pressings in glossy gatefold jackets with alternate French cover art on the outside and original U.S. artwork inside, mastered from the original analog tapes, and includes rare photos and session notes.[27] Since the early 2010s, Coltrane's Sound has been available in digital formats on streaming platforms like Spotify, often using the 1999 or later remasters for high-resolution audio delivery, broadening accessibility while preserving the expanded content and improved sound quality from these editions.[28]Reception and legacy
Contemporary reviews
Upon its release in June 1964, Coltrane's Sound received positive attention in jazz trade publications for its blend of standards and originals, showcasing John Coltrane's evolving tenor and soprano saxophone style within the classic quartet format.[29] In the July 18, 1964, issue of Billboard, the album was highlighted in the Jazz Spotlight section as a notable Atlantic release, describing Coltrane as a "tenor saxophonist, innovator, searcher, and skilled technician" whose work was both "worshipped and criticized" yet widely influential. The review emphasized the album's balance of ballads like "The Night Has a Thousand Eyes" and "Body and Soul" with Coltrane originals such as "Central Park West," "Equinox," "Satellite," and "Liberia," praising the fresh interpretations that demonstrated the quartet's cohesive energy.[29] DownBeat offered a detailed assessment in its October 8, 1964, edition, awarding the album three and a half stars out of five from critic B.M. The review positioned it as representative of Coltrane's strongest work from the early 1960s recording sessions, commending the "forceful and imaginative" solo on "The Night Has a Thousand Eyes" for its strong quartet arrangement, the "searching and interesting" quality of "Satellite," and Coltrane's harmonic reworking of "Body and Soul" to suit his personal voice.[30] Commercially, the album enjoyed modest success as one of Coltrane's final Atlantic releases, with sales bolstered by his growing prominence on Impulse! Records, particularly the breakthrough of A Love Supreme in early 1965, which received broad acclaim.[31]Critical reevaluation and influence
In the decades following its release, Coltrane's Sound has undergone significant critical reevaluation, often praised as an essential document of John Coltrane's transitional phase from the harmonic complexity of hard bop to the modal and spiritual explorations that defined his later work. Critics have highlighted its role in bridging albums like Giant Steps (1959), with its rapid chord changes, and the more introspective, mode-based spirituality of A Love Supreme (1965), showcasing Coltrane's evolving quartet sound through tracks that blend structured composition with freer improvisation.[10] This perspective positions the album as a pivotal artifact in Coltrane's Atlantic Records era, where the classic quartet—featuring McCoy Tyner on piano, Steve Davis on bass, and Elvin Jones on drums—began refining the interactive dynamics that would influence subsequent jazz ensembles.[32] Modern assessments underscore the album's enduring quality, with AllMusic awarding it 4.5 out of 5 stars and describing it as "one of the most highly underrated entries in Coltrane's voluminous catalog," emphasizing its warm, human tonal palette and innovative rhythmic drive.[13] In academic contexts, scholars have analyzed its contributions to quartet evolution, noting how Coltrane's tenor saxophone lines interact with Tyner's quartal harmonies and Jones's polyrhythmic propulsion to create layered textures that prefigure free jazz developments; for instance, the track "26-2" exemplifies these ensemble configurations in studies of Coltrane's mid-career improvisation.[33] Such discussions appear in theses and papers examining Coltrane's shift toward modal frameworks, where Coltrane's Sound serves as a case study for the quartet's growing cohesion and spiritual undertones.[32] The album's legacy extends to comprehensive reissues, including its inclusion in the 1995 box set The Heavyweight Champion: The Complete Atlantic Recordings, which compiles all of Coltrane's Atlantic output and highlights Coltrane's Sound alongside sessions from 1959–1961 to illustrate his rapid artistic growth.[34] Its influence on later artists is evident in the modal improvisation pioneered by saxophonists like Pharoah Sanders, who collaborated with Coltrane in the mid-1960s and adopted similar overblown, multiphonic techniques rooted in the quartet's exploratory sound on tracks like "Liberia," blending African-inspired rhythms with free-form expression. Sanders's work, such as on Karma (1969), echoes this modal-spiritual approach, crediting Coltrane's mid-period innovations for shaping post-bop tenor styles.[35] Culturally, Coltrane's Sound maintains relevance in jazz education, where it is studied for advanced improvisation techniques, including Coltrane's use of shifting triads and chromatic approaches over modal structures, as demonstrated in analyses of its compositions for teaching ensemble interaction and tonal development.[36] While direct sampling in hip-hop is less documented than for Coltrane's more famous works, the album's rhythmic elements, particularly the percussive drive in "Liberia," have indirectly informed genre fusions through broader Coltrane tributes in rap production, underscoring its lasting impact on musical experimentation across styles.[37]Track listing
Original LP sides
The original 1964 vinyl release of Coltrane's Sound was issued by Atlantic Records in both mono (catalog number 1419) and stereo (SD 1419) formats, featuring six tracks divided across two sides recorded during sessions on October 24 and 26, 1960, at the label's New York studio.[19][1] Side one- "The Night Has a Thousand Eyes" (Buddy Bernier, Jerry Brainin) – 6:42[38][39]
- "Central Park West" (John Coltrane) – 4:12[1][39]
- "Liberia" (John Coltrane) – 6:45[1][39]
- "Body and Soul" (Johnny Green, Edward Heyman, Robert Sour, Frank Eyton) – 5:35[40][39]
- "Equinox" (John Coltrane) – 8:33[1][39]
- "Satellite" (John Coltrane) – 5:48[1][39]
Bonus tracks on reissues
The CD reissues of Coltrane's Sound beginning in 1988 introduced bonus tracks drawn from the album's original October 1960 recording sessions at Atlantic Studios in New York City, enhancing the release with previously issued outtakes for their archival and musical value. These additions provide insight into Coltrane's creative process during this transitional period in his quartet's development.[23][41] The 1999 Rhino Records reissue, part of the Atlantic 50th Anniversary Jazz Gallery series, included the following bonus tracks after the original six:- "26-2" (John Coltrane) – 6:09, recorded October 26, 1960, and previously released on the 1970 compilation The Coltrane Legacy.[23][41]
- "Body and Soul" (alternate take) (Edward Heyman, Robert Sour, Frank Eyton, Johnny Green) – 5:57, recorded October 24, 1960, and previously released on the 1975 album Alternate Takes.[23][41]