John Coltrane - "India" - Feat. Eric Dolphy
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- Опубліковано 3 жов 2024
- Recorded November 5, 1961 @ the Village Vanguard,
New York City.
Impressions is a 1963 album of both live and studio recordings by jazz musician John Coltrane. Tracks 1 and 3 were recorded live at the Village Vanguard in November 1961, while tracks 2 and 4 were recorded at Van Gelder Studio, respectively on September 18, 1962 and April 29, 1963. Track 5, "Dear Old Stockholm" did not appear on the original release, but appears on later reissues. The album was originally released in 1963 on the Impulse! label. The recording features the "classic quartet" of John Coltrane: McCoy Tyner, Jimmy Garrison, and Elvin Jones; they are joined by Eric Dolphy and Reggie Workman on the live tracks.
Dolphy plays a memorable solo on the long modal workout "India", but lays out on all but the coda of "Impressions". Workman (bass) is at hand only on "India", to join Garrison in approximating the sound of an African drum choir.
Video Remix by DJ Yebo
Best thing by anyone ever.
TY! , check out my new version "India" (B) ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
I think you're actually right.
I totally agree
he is of the Creator of Heaven and Earth
i heard dat
I am from India and trust me I hear these sound in my daily life. They have done complete justice portraying the essence of my culture much more than the pictures.
It's only because most of these are just pictures of John Coltrane. I usually think of the Taj Mahal, or the Ghanges, or big scary tigers B-lining it for small, defenseless fishing boats. But then of course, I've only been to India in my mind 😞
But I have been to The Blue Note!
St. John Coltrane, probably, must be a god from India. 🙏🏻😊
Right?.....Can You gear how Coltrane imitates the chaos in the city, and Eric Dolphy perfectly imitates the jungle and Animals!.......i mean, this Is by far the Best thing EVER played......EVER.....EVER.....
@@raphaeldorsa1835 You right ma Man!!!.....cheers
@@sandorhartig3957but is it chaos ? Everyone is on their schedule and purpose, divine or personal
Coltrane's music is an expression of a certain level of higher consciousness that comprehended the abstract lines of connections that exist between certain Indian musical perspectives/musical dimensions and assorted vibratory modes that correspond to African musical stylistic approaches and representations of evolving creative freedom. Many listeners obviously understand that while others are apparently looking for lower frequency evidence to fuel an argument about Coltrane's music "having nothing to do with India." We absorb and resonate actuality in fashions that correspond to our individual understanding and all music has an array of degrees of resonance and interconnectivity.
Can I get some of that Adderall?
What a load of pompous cr*p.
Makes me Hella proud to be an Indian!!! John Coltrane speaks to God with his music.. you don't find a lot of people from my country listening to jazz... It's rare.. I'm glad to treasure coltrane to myself
ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html "India B"
Castillo Piano Composition you Indians have bollywood, fair enough
Dear Castillo, There are lots of jazz devotees in India. Due to the current onslaught of Hip-hop and pseudo-rock in India, Jazz is a dying breed. But the immortals will never perish. Please pass it on to as many of you can, the World will be a better place that way.
@@TheSayanto Exactly mate... The number Jazz devotees is far far less than the fans of hip hop and pseudo-rock...there used to be a time when jazz bars existed in india...until government of India closed them, god knows why. From then, Jazz started dying in India...famous jazz musicians couldn't find audience anymore...If that didn't happen then.. Jazz might have expanded in India..and indian musical industry could have gone to a good direction..All I see is an ocean of "item songs", "bad raps" and "awful remixes of famous, classic songs". I hope people like us can still keep the Jazz alive in India as well as in the world. Thanks. And much respect to you.
@@vicentcarro nah man. Honestly I find Bollywood shit.. this here.. Is music
For the fact that I support the Indian cricket team and I grew up listening to jazz music I feel the happiness in me
Never get tired of this song, shout out to E.D.
Agreed check out "India B" and "Africa" available on my channel
Those drums are just mindblowing.
Well, Elvin. What can you say?
@@tonespinner ..they all pushed eachother to the sky..
I love what Elvin does on this piece.
ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html "India B"
..this combo was on fire..
I've read many times that the bass clarinet is the most difficult instrument to master. Shows what a genius Eric Dolphy clearly was.
ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html "India 🇮🇳 B "
..dolphy was one of his kind..and he was a virtouoso on the flute aswell..and on the sax..three completely different to play instruments 🖤🖤🖤
@@sutusmihaly Yes, very true. 👍
When you hear jazz that has been emancipated from the fast chord changes of the bebop era and artists thought beyond that paradigm and outside the rules you get such creative and beautiful pieces of art. To me bebop became more of a test of a players chops that it started to feel more like a sporting event than music. That's what I love about kind of blue is that so what is one chord the whole song basically, or I think it has one subtle change. And you hear what these guys do with the same seven notes when they dont have to worry about or think ahead of changes and they can comfortable in that space and take their time and take us the listeners on a leisurely journey. They can focus on the moment because the moment stretches on for infinity.
After a while someone noticed each chord could be approached as a "unified tonal gravity field." With nowhere to go and nothing to do, they are free to express themselves fully
Well put
This features one of Eric Dolphy's greatest solos--and that's saying something for someone who had genius coming out of his pores the way Dolphy did
Agreed, check out "India B" ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
Eric Is a sith lord in this one!!!.......thank you John and Eric, God bless You!!!
The most innovative musician who ever lived
Back in '70 when I ws in college I would set my turntable to "replay" and listen to this (and the A side "impressions") all night while I was sleeping. Every note ingrained in me. Has been a lifelong inspiration (I am 70 now). PS: Also did this
with "A Love Supreme"
ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html 🇮🇳B
I feel that. "Impressions" is a big one, as is "A Love Supreme".
Did You notice the Last ton the Eric played Is a sound of a river calming down and enters the city, then John Takes over the city!!!
have done that too.
alors ça!! c'est phénoménale!! je m'en souviens quand je faisais des voyages en voiture nuit et jour, avec un bon ami de l'école de photographie dans laquelle j'étais inscrit! (Jo Aitnanu, poète et philosophe et dessinateur d'art brut!)
Eric Dolphy gives me the chills on this track.
Mr coltraine he never goes wrong he is my best jazz artist forever and ever
John coltrane was giants of giants when it comes to jazz
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"India B"
So outwardly and beautiful
What you might describe as strange beauty....and out of THIS world
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"India B" - John Coltrane
"Africa" - John Coltrane ua-cam.com/video/2MDY2Y9IgvU/v-deo.html
Can't miss with Dolphy & Trane!
ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
Classic quartet with eric dolphy, cant get better than that.
ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html "🇮🇳B"
This composition is another answer to the question by the legendary Jazz Griot John Coltrane with Eric Dolphy and accompanying artists, "What Does Jazz Look Like"?
Coltrane's lines are out of this world
Eight Miles High actually came about as a tribute to John Coltrane. It was our attempt to play jazz. We were on a tour of America, and someone played us the Coltrane albums Africa/Brass and Impressions. 3:03 [The Guardian]
This song inspired Roger McGuinn on "Eight Miles High" by The Byrds. He used that lick that's repeated throughout this song and played it on the 12 string.
ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
It's more likely to be Africa/Brass rather than India that was the major influence on Eight Miles High.
@@maxmerry8470 No, it's India. McGuinn literally plays that melody on guitar.
@@timcardona9962 , Think we'll have to compromise here. India was indeed influential but I still think the overall feel and structure of Africa is what I now hear in Eight Miles High including the McGuinn solo. I know McGuinn himself has cited India : the famous anecdote about the tape they listened to of Coltrane/Shankar while on tour springs to mind. But I'm pretty sure Crosby, who provided the tape, has said it was Africa. Whatever the case, I honestly don't hear a direct borrow from India, but I do from Africa.
@@maxmerry8470 I can even hear the chord progressions in there. Gene Clark, McGuinn, and Crosby owe a great deal to Coltrane.
j'aime Coltrane, j'adore Dolphy, les deux ensemble , quel bonheur
The spirituality that is portrait by Coltrane and Dolphy is beyond imagination. This is an abstract relation that can only be defined by musical notes and nothing else. Once the notes are played and the song ends, the spirituality disappears and only the memory lingers behind.
In case you don't have the complete Village Vanguard sessions, there's another version of _India_ that is perhaps even more stunning than this.
Rather than entering with his solo at about a minute in with that single sustained note of great release, Coltrane comes in immediately and builds anticipation of the main theme with a bit less energy but in a more measured fashion, with more finesse. He seems to have been experimenting with different ways of setting up that extraordinarily convincing and authentic sense of great triumph at the end of a long struggle that this piece seems to convey.
(Oddly enough it reminds me of the final movement of Beethoven's fifth symphony in that sense.)
polymath7 Yes, I do, thinking about doing another India vid, thanks for the feedback.
ua-cam.com/video/nAvX7GZj2sQ/v-deo.html
Do you mean this version (?): www.discogs.com/John-Coltrane-The-Other-Village-Vanguard-Tapes/release/5384523
Yeah that's the definitive vers. Imo, more inspired, energy and dolphy's solo was awesome.
I've been aware of Coltrane for some time, though I'm only now truly discovering his music. Thanks for sharing - it feels like he's in the room.
Loving the video too!
When I was 19 years old in 1967, I was listening to this album and reading Goebbels' Diaries at the same time. Two older guys had turned me on to politics and jazz. Those lessons have never left me.
ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
What's the name of the Goebbels book?
@@mathman228 'Flyfishing' By JR Goebells
Carolyn Zaremba you're just a nazi shit.
Wait like Joseph goebbels? Jesus Christ man
These two musicians together, genuine enchantment ....
ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html "🇮🇳 B"
Grand homme un des plus grand genie de la musique
"India B" - ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
What can I say? Great! I also heard both of them live every time they visited Stockholm. Unforgettable moments. Thanks.
Tommy Goldman YW also check out India "B" and Africa, both on channel VJ YEBO. Peace
I love John Coltrane but John Coltrane and Eric Dolphy is always great.
Marc Duarte
"India" (B) - John Coltrane
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Thank you, I appreciate it, I love both versions.
Marc Duarte "Africa" - John Coltrane
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That eruptive way of playing jazz made me perceive Coltrane and his fellows like the most emotional jazz players...
Digging strange tones for this era, modern perception and awesome restitution! This track is my fav of all his works.
I wish this creative music with its musicians would never end. How lucky we are to have at least these beautiful recordings!!
Ikr UA-cam really save my life if it wasn't for youtube I probably would listen to shitty top 40 music on the daily basis.
one of the best music in the world
ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
Coltrane was huge, but Dolphy was fenomenal
stunning and clearly inspired by Bismillah Khan. The shehnai is not so far. A pure and shining creation of all musicians.
musically a time of discovery........like antonioni,fellini,bergman films...... we wondered what will they do next so many diverse visions, marion brown,sun ra, cecil taylor,ect this was so out there. it was teriffing at first these cats were out on manuvers an the cats were taking no prisoners
Coltrane influenced such rock mavericks as Frank Zappa and Jimi Hendrix. Miles Davis said having him in his band was like hiring three saxophone players in one. Dec 19, 2001
Source: The Guardian
Just heard this for the first time. No doubt it influenced the Byrds Eight Miles High as I had read
Very fine.
Well,yes....one is ..... flabbergasted!! I first heard this when I was 18. Now I'm 66.
"India B" - ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
😎 I'm 67! TY 🙏
Wow, to hell with taking the bullet out of Aaron Burr's gun. If I ever get my hands on a time machine, I'm going back to the Vanguard the night this was recorded.
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..same same..
Jhon coltrane.....NON PUÒ SOLO PIACERTI....MA DEVE FAR PARTE DI TE'.....PER ESSERE COMPRESO.....LA SUA MUSICA....SE LA SENTI TUA .....DEVI FIN DALL'INIZIO.....CAPIRE LA FINE.....ALTRIMENTI NON POTRA CHIAMARSI....FREE JAZZ ......
He made me proud to be black. Joe usher
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"India B"
Same here too
They made America proud. This is the music we export to the world.
Immer wieder: Klasse. 56 Jahre jung.
ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
Cutting edge !
John Coltrane très bien !
Seriously what the fuck. What's this signature. I didn't know this guy Coltrane, but Impulse has the best jazz... Just kidding, this is amazing. Coltrane makes me so happy it's unbelievable. Have a good day y'all.
For sure, pls subscribe to my channel +
👉 "India B" - ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
Many brilliant musicians surpass rigidity in their outlook on music, and embrace an eclectic one; John Coltrane was such, always searching.
Conal Rose I always think of him and Jimi...imagine if they played together???
Conal Rose "India" (B) - John Coltrane
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So was Miles Davis.
My all time favourite record
Whew! I'm all funky and dripping with sweat just listening!
Roger Robinson TY! check out my videos "India (B)" and "Africa".
Roger Robinson ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
Roger Robinson ua-cam.com/video/nAvX7GZj2sQ/v-deo.html
Extremely sublime
ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
"India B"
such a beautiful piece
One of my favorites ever.
One Love !
Eight miles high and King Kong from Zappa spring very much to mind
Merci pour cette merveille et ce diaporama intelligent
come ho fatto a vivere senza Coltrane?l
ANOTHER LESSON IN BLESSINGS.
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Cuanto aborda, John Coltrane lo depura hasta sublimarlo. No cae en banalidades ni se abandona al tumulto. Destello y exhalación se aúnan en su música hacia el fulgor. Por un instante, arcoíris, reflejo astral, luz purísima.
+pedro a. cantero Don Pedro, en la exploración Jazzística que a mis veinte años empezé, como un descubrimiento grandioso e inspirador, me he embarcado a mirar muchos y muchos videos de Jazz en este medio llamado UA-cam.
Leer los comentarios le hacen saber a uno que los sentimientos y sensaciones que uno siente no son exclusivos, sino que son compartidos por mucha gente de toda clase.
Este es el tercer comentario suyo con el que me encuentro y creo que usted tiene una visión bonita y profunda del Jazz, además de que creo que ya ha escuchado mucho.
Recomiéndeme artistas y obras, si no le molesto, para continuar por este camino de descubrimientos no solo musicales sino sensoriales y emocionales.
Gracias por su atención.
+Daniel Rojas
Daniel
Es difícil recomendar a ciegas pues no sé lo que sabes o lo que ignoras, sin contar que el camino lo debes hacer poco a poco abriéndote a músicos y a músicas.Según los diversos periodos de mi vida he ido encontrado solaz y verdad en tantos y tantos músicos como astros logro divisar en el cielo. El primer disco de jazz que oí en mi vida fue “Ballads and Blues” de Miles Davis que me subyugó. Pero fue Sun Ra quien me reveló el poder volcánico de esta música. El jazz, que ha dado al mundo un soplo musical incomparable. En la historia de la música no conozco
pareja irrupción. Al modo del géiser que con sus aguas calientes rompe el hielo y caldea poblaciones, este caudal surgido de las raíces de la humanidad ha devuelto al mundo su sentido de origen, cuna africana de la que todos provenimos. Puede que esto haya sido una de las razones de su reconocimiento como música universal. En todo caso, Sun Ra me lo hizo estimar desde el primer día que escuché “Jazz in Silhouette”, aquel lejano otoño de los primeros sesenta. No puedo decirte quiénes son mejores pero sí sé aquellos que dejaron rastro. Sin lugar a dudas el gran Mingus, contrabajista y compositor de una talla excepcional. Pero el pianista que me haría viajar siguiendo su rastro durante años fue Cecil Taylor, con él logré ahondar las entrañas mismas del teclado, sin por ello renegar de otros pianistas cuya música me habían permitido llegar hasta él. Lennie Tristano, Dave Brubeck, Thelonius Monk, McCoy Tyner, Sun Ra…Los saxofonistas John Coltrane, Ornette Coleman, Anthony Braxton, Albert Ayler, Pharoah Sanders, Archie Shepp, Eric Dolphy o el minimalista Steve Lacy fueron en mi juventud una constelación como las que en el cielo ayudan a navegar al marino. No obstante, el jazz es mucho más que una sarta de nombres, muchos de ellos llegaron en el momento preciso como compañeros inestimables. Cuántas veces en las largas noches pasadas en una pequeña isla de Galápagos el contrabajo de Charlie Haden o las trompetas de Don Cherry o Chet Baker nos hicieron más llevadero el trabajo y la soledad.Pero no escucho solo jazz, las cuerdas de Bach o Beethoven, el piano de Mompou, la persecución de lo absoluto de Scelsi, la incansable búsqueda de Schöemberg o la salvajía de Tom Waits me han ayudado a superar momentos de tensa creatividad o de tedio…Como verás Daniel, de poco te servirá mi respuesta, pero no ceses de escuchar, de ilusionarte, de aborrecer mas nunca de abandonar la senda, pues en ella hallarás horizontes sin fin
+pedro a. cantero apología al jazz y la música en general, abrazo Sr. Cantero.
Hola ! Es muy bueno leerlo a usted !
Mi querido amigo Pedro (espero no le moleste que me dirija a usted de esa forma), siempre es grato toparse con sus comentarios en UA-cam. Que la magia de la música lo acompañe.
Beautifull
hypnotico.
ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html "India 🇮🇳 B"
So beautiful!
Sharmila Roy "India" (B) - John Coltrane
ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
Well crafted edit.......brilliant Coltrane/Dolphy collaboration
Thanks so much, its nice when listeners appreciate the time effort I put into these videos.
Check out my NEW alternate take version of "India" (B). Peace, Yebo
ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
coltrane and dolphy, pure magic. and, graphics are stunning.
The edge man the sound ....
So pleasent in the end.
Flowing in the wind...!!!
"India" (B) - ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
Excellent thanks I love jazz too xxx
Beautiful.
ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
"India (B)"
TY! ☮️
Je ne sais plus vraiment, je perds la tête depuis quelque temps ! En tout cas, cette musique est merveilleuse, elle m'aide à m'endormir paisiblement. Et c'est heureux parce que mes névroses envahissantes, grignotent ma raison
"India" (B) - John Coltrane
ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
Next level musical composition.
ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
wowowowoow
thank you
Coltrane's fascination with the music of India is heard here.
Which part shows that sir? I don't find anything remotely related to any form of Indian music.
@@arghachatSomewhat of a sticking to one scale/mode to set the tone for the whole song (mixolydian, not sure what the Indian Classical equivalent is), though while in Indian classical music musicians use various bending techniques extract much more expression, modal jazz often uses fast shapes which act almost as if they are diverging from the scale moving through different tonal centers, before coming back to the main scale/mode, almost serving a similar artistic purpose to bending a note. Also, the drone on one root note throughout the song, which in the culture of western music is actually pretty uncommon.
Indian drone don’t stick to one note. At least two note (first and fifth) and some use more. Using one scale/tonal center is a basis of a lot of music. Indian ragas are very different from modes or scales. Ragas have a clear (and strict) melody structures that is maintained throughout the recital which not done here. Not just a scale. The treatment of notes ("swaras") and juxtaposition of notes, the ascent and descent, are all written down. The "bending" you referred are, most times, rules you follow not just improvistions you do. What Coltrane saw in Indian music maybe very different from our interpretation.
Also chromatic notes are barred from Indian classical. Anytime I here chromatics, I know this is not Indian classical. Modern Indian music is very different and significantly mixed with Western, but that's a different story.
@@arghachat I am aware Indian classical uses at least (what we in the west call) the 1 and 5, and sometimes more notes, in their drones, actually the bass player, the musician providing the drone in this performance, is playing the 1 and 5 himself. I was more trying to comment on the fact their is no "root movement" as per the west, as in the harmony/root note does not change throughout the song, which is undeniably rare in most forms of western music. I also do not contest this and Indian classical are very different forms of music, and I am aware ragas are much more than just a scale and some bends, I just believe the statement that this and Indian Classical are not remotely similar is somewhat of an exaggeration, especially in comparing most western music forms to Indian classical. Though I will add that on a second reading of your original comment this is probably not exactly what you meant (you said 'not remotely related', which is different from 'not remotely similar') but I nonetheless believe they are more "similar", relatively speaking, than you claim, though that speaks more to the vast differences between Western music and Indian Classical than the similarities of this and Indian Classical.
In short, the idea of both staying on one root note and playing primarily to one scale through a song was and is a bold statement in Western music, which generally relies on the constant movement of harmony and oftentimes the frequent changing of scale. Thus, being that Western music is usually hugely and utterly unlike Indian Classical, a performance which uses one root note and primarily one scale, with methods of deviation from that scale, throughout a song, appears very "Indian Classical esque" in comparison, though they are patently very different. Obviously the musicians here come from a tradition (Jazz) which born of two older musical traditions (those of Europe and Africa) which is all a world away from Indian Classical, which is part of why they are usually even more different than this from Indian Classical. It is likely Coltrane may have been partially inspired by some Indian Classical performances he heard and took away from his listening some basic elements in crafing this song. It is interesting, though, how some figures like John Coltrane, who is regarded by many as among the must profound musicians in the Jazz tradition, ended up gravitating towards some of the rudimentary ideas on which Indian Classical is based in some of his music, as simple as they may be. Though I my be biased to noticing times they do the same thing.
You fucking with Coltrane you fucking with the best!!!
One of the most amazing live clips I've seen, the essence of Sonny really comes across. And KD, NHOP, and Tootie on drums. Awesome.
Fsaxwas9 "India" (B) - John Coltrane
ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
Fsaxwas9 like it but don't understand it...??
Superlativo!
The very best tht ever did it.
THANK YOU
You're welcome, TY!
NEW alternate take version of "India" (B) ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
Love to hear this one at Peyton's Place in Macon, Ga. He had the best jazz playing at his club.
So much better when they make an effort to provide a decent recording.
One of my favorites by him thank you for sharing this
Brilliant
MAJOR Props to VJ YEBO for the impressive collage. It is quite apparent that you share that special love & appreciation for both John & Eric. Amazing things happened musically & spiritually when these two enlightened souls collaborated. I wasn’t aware of the statue of ‘Trane in his hometown, High Point, NC by a sculptor who was previously unaware of either the man or his music. Some locals think it looks more like Michael Jordan than John Coltrane!
Stanley Denton ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dl/v-deo.html
"India B"
Coltrane gone at 40 and Dolphy at 36, what'd we miss?
Harold McNair gone at 39. Rahsaan Roland Kirk at 42.
mrlawilliamsuk Warmachine not to mention, Booker Little at 23, Paul Chambers at 33, Bobby Timmons at 38 and the most redoubtable Tony Williams at 51. Thank God he started at 17 with Miles.
So true. Sad.
Let's not forget Lee Morgan and Albert Ayler both at 34, Clifford Brown at 25, Bird at 35, Fats Navarro at 26, Oscar Pettiford at 37, Fats Waller at age 39, and Nat King Cole at age 45.
Instead to mourn what was not, why not celebrate what is? They left tons of beautiful music...
magnifique, no comment.
Christian Remy Gressier THX, I'll take that as a 👍
"India" (B) - John Coltrane
ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
VJ YEBO of course.
come ho fatto a vivere senza Coltrane?
Non so quanti anni hai, ma io l'ho scoperto quasi 50 anni fa e piano piano mi ha cambiato la vita. C'è nella sua musica qualcosa di spirituale che ti cattura e ti cambia.
still love his music!!
This is a truly beautiful piece of music that still resonates regardless of the fact that the musicians are long dead ..... it reminds me why I love music and those who make great music ..... thanks for the post DJ Zeflo - nice video
McCoy and Reggie Workman are still with us!
gracias VJ YEBO buena colección de fotos y perfecta sincronización con la música.
Màgica y espiritual fusión entre ambos músicos legendarios y eternos.
superb, thank you for uploading
Thank You, check out my NEW alternate take version of "India" (B)
ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
heavenly!
New version "India" (B) ua-cam.com/video/htO_VAnB2dI/v-deo.html
TY!
Sheets of sound was a term coined in 1958 by Down Beat magazine jazz critic Ira Gitler to describe the new, unique improvisational style of John Coltrane.
English Wikipedia
musica eterna di due immortali!
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Let me say I am deeply influenced by Trane. That said; It must be understood that jazz from Bird to 1970 was moving forward too fast for even the musicians to keep up! Hell by 1960 the last "New Thing" had barely been assimilated! In my teens in the 70s I had the opportunity to learn from some old school cats who could really swing hard over changes and that aesthetic is really quite elegant and timeless because basically it's very architectural and, demanding like Bach and all things timeless in spite of all the macho talk about who's got balls etc. But for any one who's tried it's damn hard to legitimately get past 1963.
Greatness.
still love it
Beautiful and great video.
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He was bigger than.The Jazz industry
J. Coltrane-Bey baddest ever done it
such solid drumming!