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John Coltrane departed this mortal plane more than fifty years ago; today he remains among us,
more alive than ever. His sound continues to grab the ears of an ever-widening circle of fans. His
legend is stone solid: planted firmly in our culture as that of any 20th century musical giant. His
saxophone sound—brooding, searching, dark—is still one of the most recognizable in modern jazz.
His influence stretches over styles and genres, and transcends cultural boundaries. The modern ideal
of music serving a deeply spiritual, connective purpose? A defining facet of John Coltrane.

To Coltrane, a musician was a message-giver; making music was an endeavor tied to a larger, greater
good. “I humbly asked to be given the means and privilege to make others happy through music,”
Coltrane wrote in 1964 in a letter to his listeners, telling of a prayer to God. In 1966, less than a year
before his death, he stated:

“I know that there are bad forces,


forces that bring suffering to others
and misery to the world. I want to be
the opposite force. I want to be the
force which is truly for good.”
Coltrane achieved his goal as a hard-working jazz player
coming out of a proud, rooted musical tradition, paying
his dues as a sideman, learning the ropes as a leader,
working with primarily wordless music to convey his
message. He released twenty-five albums as a leader
during his lifetime, some attaining five-star, classic status:
Blue Train, Giant Steps, My Favorite Things, his
Grammy-nominated, “humble offering” to God, A Love
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Supreme. One after another, from 1957 to ’67, his music


defined a comet-like path of rapid growth and dizzying
rate of change. That Coltrane accomplished all he did in a
mere ten years accounts at least partly for the saint-like devotion he often receives.

Jazz journalist Nat Hentoff, who interviewed and championed Coltrane, praised him more soberly.
“By the time A Love Supreme hit, Trane struck such a spiritual chord in so many listeners that people
started to think of him as being beyond human. I think that’s unfair. He was just a human being like
you and me -- but he was willing to practice more, to do all the things that somebody has to do to
excel. The real value in what John Coltrane did was that what he accomplished, he did as a human.”

Certain aspects of Coltrane’s humble beginnings point to what he would become. Being born in
1926 in small-town North Carolina—specifically Hamlet, and later High Point—helps explain his
predilection for the blues. His affinity for a distinct, gospel feel—meditative, prayer-like songs and
the preacher-like tone in his saxophone—can be partially credited to being raised in a religious
family. His father preached, and his grandfather was a community leader and minister. In 1938 both
passed away suddenly, then Coltrane’s grandmother and an aunt—all within months of each other.
Coltrane himself was barely twelve. The family was devastated, emotionally and economically.
Having just taken up the clarinet, music became a lifeline of sorts for Coltrane.

Timing had much to do with building Coltrane’s musical foundation as well. Being born in ‘26
meant that by his teenage years he was hearing the popular songs and sophisticated arrangements at
the height of the big band era. As he approached adulthood in the mid ‘40s, the bebop of alto
saxophonist Charlie Parker and trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie grabbed the ears of his generation. Johnny
Hodges, the longtime alto saxophonist in Duke Ellington’s famed orchestra; and Dexter Gordon, the
tenor-sax playing, first-generation bebopper, were two of Coltrane’s earliest heroes.

Bebop was a new exciting language that snapped and


popped with a fresh, rhythmic freedom, and expanded the
harmonic bandwidth of the music—requiring an under-
the-hood familiarity with the mechanics of music.
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Coltrane, already an autodidact, was hooked, intellectually


and emotionally.

Coltrane moved to Philadelphia in 1943, following other


family members, and immediately threw himself into the
local music scene, meeting other young, bebop-focused
players, like saxophonists Jimmy Heath and Benny
Golson. A stint in the Navy in the closing days of World
War II gave him the chance to use the G.I. Bill to take
music classes after his discharge, and dedicate himself to
music as a profession.

Philadelphia featured one of the most developed and


vibrant African American communities in the post-WWII
years. The black parts of town were filled with bars, clubs,
and theaters, all requiring live music of all styles. Despite
his dedication to bebop, Coltrane became a journeyman musician on the circuit, blowing alto
saxophone and playing whatever the gig required.

Coltrane’s apprenticeship took place from 1946 to 1955. He was a horn-for-hire, blowing the blues
out front of small groups, backing various jazz and R&B singers, adding to the punch and blend of
the sax section in a number of big bands. He worked his way up the ranks, from local groups (Jimmy
Heath’s big band for one; Bill Carney’s Hi-Tones, a small R&B outfit, for another) to national
ensembles in the early ‘50s—like big bands led by saxophonists Johnny Hodges, and Earl Bostic,
and Dizzy Gillespie, the latter demanding he switch from alto to tenor saxophone. Coltrane followed
orders, and his development continued.

It was during this endless succession of gigs and travel when Coltrane first tried narcotics; by 1951,
like too many of his peers, he acquired a heroin habit that would stay with him for six years.

Coltrane was playing in organist Jimmy Smith’s group at the end of summer 1955 when a call came

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from New York City to audition for trumpeter Miles Davis’s band. Despite Coltrane’s initial
uncertainty—“I am quite ashamed of those early records I made with Miles. Why he picked me, I
don’t know”, he later said—Miles liked what he heard. “After we started playing together for a
while, I knew that this guy was a bad motherfucker,” Davis wrote in his autobiography. “[He] was
just the voice I needed on tenor to set off my voice.”

The four years Coltrane spent in Davis’s group—from 1955 through ’59—catapulted the unknown
saxophonist from local obscurity to national renown. Under the spotlight that came with playing
alongside Davis, Coltrane evolved from what many heard as faltering insecurity to bold, chance-
taking confidence. True to Miles’s words, the intensity and density of Coltrane’s saxophone was an
effective foil to Davis’s subdued melancholy on trumpet. They had been born the same year and
grown to be so different in temperament. Yet they were, at the core, equal in their obsession with the
inner workings of music theory, and in their need for musical challenge and surprise.

Davis provided Coltrane an open-ended, instruction-less freedom to explore and find his own voice;
Coltrane referred to him as “Teacher”. Save for nine months in 1957 when the trumpeter
unceremoniously fired him due to his heroin use impeding his appearance and performance—after
which Coltrane kicked his habit cold turkey—their relationship remains one of the most fruitful and
significant in jazz history.

1957, in fact, was the year Coltrane truly became Coltrane. During that twelve-month period, his
compulsion to practice incessantly led to the first phase of his signature style: slaloming through
changes, playing and replaying scalar patterns, an outpouring of harmonic stacking the critic Ira
Gitler famously dubbed “sheets of sound.” Once clean and back on the scene as a freelancer,
Coltrane’s workaholic nature propelled him into the studio—as sideman on many tracks, recording
his debut as a leader (Coltrane on Prestige), and the first album to reveal his gifts as a composer
(Blue Train on Blue Note).

No event in ’57 proved more enduringly significant to


Coltrane than his summer-long collaboration with the

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pianist/composer Thelonious Monk, of which Coltrane


said:

“I learned from him in every way –


through the senses, theoretically,
technically.”
Monk's tutelage—more direct and patient than Miles—
helped him grasp music riddled with strange melodic
leaps and rhythmic breaks, and appealed with its own logic. When Coltrane returned to Miles’s
group at the end of that year, the trumpeter was on his own way to developing a new vocabulary.

The timing could not have been better. Miles’s shift from traditional, chord-based song forms to
more open-ended, modal structures provided a needed freshness that helped improvisers avoid the
same old bebop clichés. This “modal jazz” was the foundational idea to what is still Miles’s most
famous album, 1959’s Kind of Blue. For Coltrane, it was like pouring high-octane into a turbo-
charged engine. Liberated from the meticulous pathways in Monk’s music, he dove with gusto into
the harmonic freedoms that modal jazz offered, absorbing and later developing the same ideas
further in his own groundbreaking groups of the 1960s.

“Miles's music gave me plenty of


freedom," he said. "It's a beautiful
approach...I found it easy to apply
harmonic ideas that I had."
By the end of 1959, Coltrane was 33. While Miles tried to
keep him in his group, it was clear he was itching to go
his own way. He began gigging with his own bands, and
continued writing material. He had a booking agent and a
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lawyer, both recommended by Miles, the latter who


helped him start his own music publishing company
(Jowcol Music) and jump from his Prestige to a more
lucrative contract with the midsize Atlantic Records, a
label known as much for its R&B successes as for
releasing jazz records.

1959 to ’61 mark Coltrane’s Atlantic period, during which


he recorded one of his most important albums—Giant
Steps—featuring timeless tunes like “Naima”, “Cousin
Mary”, and the title track; collectively they served as a
masterful farewell to the labyrinthine chord changes of the
bebop world. He began to focus more on the highly
emotional, melody-driven influence of the avant-garde
jazz of the time, inspired greatly by the music of Ornette
Coleman—the Texas-born saxophonist who had turned
the jazz world on its ear upon arriving in New York City
in 1959.

Coltrane often visited and in fact received instruction


from Coleman; “He was interested in non-chordal playing
and I had cut my teeth on that stuff," Coleman reported
years after. "He later sent me a letter which included thirty
dollars for each lesson . . ."

In his last year with Atlantic, Coltrane added the soprano saxophone to his repertoire and the pianist
McCoy Tyner to his band. The confluence of the two led him to record the waltz-time Broadway
show tune “My Favorite Things” (from the musical The Sound Of Music) as a raga-flavored, modal
piece; the unlikely reimagining became a radio hit and his biggest commercial success.

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By the end of 1961, Coltrane was able to push higher, signing with Impulse Records—the jazz
imprint within the major label ABC-Paramount Records. It was with Impulse—from ’61 through his
death in July ‘67—that Coltrane would reach his highest career crest, and reveal the full range of his
projects: first with his quintet that featured saxophonist/flutist Eric Dolphy, then his so-called
“Classic Quartet” (with Tyner, drummer Elvin Jones and bassist Jimmy Garrison), various big band
efforts (Africa/Brass, Ascension), and finally the quintet that included Garrison, his wife, pianist
Alice Coltrane, saxophonist Pharoah Sanders, and drummer Rashied Ali.

Coltrane’s Impulse recordings, from 1961 through most of ’64, show him with one foot in the more
traditional jazz world, playing standards (Ballads) and collaborating with the likes of the legendary
Duke Ellington and vocalist Johnny Hartman, while the other foot rested in more avant-garde
territory. His release schedule balanced fiery, live recordings (Live! at the Village Vanguard, Live at
Birdland, some tracks on Impressions) with studio recordings sharing a softer, more meditative side
to his composing (other tracks on Impressions, Coltrane, Crescent). By the early ‘60s, Coltrane was
a nightclub and festival headliner, a force in terms of record sales and box office receipts, and a
major influence on many of his peers—his albums by then were required listening for jazz, R&B,
and rock players alike.

Coltrane recorded A Love Supreme at the end of ’64, calling it his “attempt to say ‘THANK YOU
GOD’ through our work”—a musical offering in gratitude for his spiritual re-awakening in ’57, the
year he rid himself of his drug habit. It was a four-part suite, the first of a series of larger works that
held to a higher intent and focus. It was carefully composed and planned in September ’64, just after
the birth of his first son John Jr. with his new wife, the Detroit-born, bebop-enthused Alice Coltrane
—née McLeod.

Their relationship would prove to be one of the most


prodigious and prolific husband-wife pairings of the jazz
world. John’s musical and spiritual influence on Alice
would redirect her life and career. After his death, she
carried his music and universalist message forward in her
own way, fusing modern jazz, Indian ragas, and Vedic
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devotional songs on eighteen very special albums, and


eventually put her career aside to establish and lead an
ashram of spiritual followers in southern California.

A Love Supreme was atypical for a jazz recording in many


ways. It included Coltrane’s voice, chanting the album’s title. The album cover featured a letter to
the listener and a poem, both penned by Coltrane and both espousing a universalist spirituality, and
addressing his role as a musician. When released in early ’65, it quickly became Coltrane’s best-
known album, a kind of musical self-portrait that earned him two Grammy nominations, induction
into Downbeat magazine’s Hall of Fame, and a newer generation of fans—many of who were
likewise looking to alternative spiritual paths. A few weeks before Coltrane composed A Love
Supreme, jazz writer Leonard Feather noted that his “most devoted followers are young listeners”
and asked how they could fully appreciate music that “demands technical knowledge and intense
attention.”

“As long as there is some feeling of communication, it isn't


necessary that it be understood,” Coltrane replied. “After all, I
used to love music myself long before I could even identify a G
minor seventh chord…eventually the listeners move right along
with the musicians.”
Coltrane’s put this truism to the test through 1965 as his musical explorations— inviting other
players into his band, writing music that grew increasingly discordant, dense, and multi-rhythmic—
tested the patience of both his audience and members of his Classic Quartet. Before the year was
out, both Tyner and Jones departed: Alice took over the piano seat, the young Rashied Ali was added
on drums, and Pharoah Sanders on second saxophone.

From 1966 until his death in ’67, Coltrane was seen as the
point of the spear by a new generation of jazz avant-

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gardists—a generation more politically charged and


socially conscious than those before, and whose music
reflected the growing political outrage of the time.
Coltrane himself remained a humanist, more in tune with
the non-violent philosophy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.,
than the confrontational attitude of Malcolm X or the
Black Panthers. Yet his music was an indelible part of the
soundtrack of that turbulent era, and the recordings he
made between ’65 and ’67 remain the most controversial
of his entire career.

Through the last months of his life, Coltrane continued to push ahead with sessions that swung
between tracks that could be grating and intense, and sonic tapestries deeply introspective and calm.
The musical seeds that sprouted during the A Love Supreme sessions predicted where Coltrane
would go with his music. His measured key-hopping on “Acknowledgement” presaged a passionate
atonality. His chanting was heard again on the album Om. His love of poetry resurfaced on Kulu Se
Mama. His hymn-like titles became an unbroken theme—“Dear Lord”, “Welcome”, “The Father, the
Son and the Holy Ghost”—their meditative sonority reflecting that of A Love Supreme.

In the last year of his life, as Coltrane’s reputation and notoriety reached its highest level, those close
to him were aware something was wrong. He was often in pain, suffering from liver cancer, as it was
later learned. Yet Coltrane did not let up. He continued to perform and record, only weeks before his
passing on July 17, 1967. The impact on the music scene was seismic; he left behind a stunned
community of musicians, as well as his wife Alice, a daughter Michelle and three sons—John Jr.,
Ravi, and Oran—and a catalogue of recordings from which music continues to be issued and
reissued.

Coltrane died in mid-search, musically driven till the end. As he told Nat Hentoff in late ’66:

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“There is never any end…there are


always new sounds to imagine, new
feelings to get at. And always there is
the need to keep purifying these
feelings and sounds so that we can
really see what we've discovered in
its pure state. So that we can see more and more clearly what we
are . . . we have to keep on cleaning the mirror.”
Many have sought the same purification and, through their creative process, achieved it. Yet few
have searched as deeply, provoked as consistently, succeeded as profoundly as Coltrane. Even fewer
have ended as they began: still challenging themselves and their audience.

Still Coltrane rises, in stature and significance. His compositions and recordings are now permanent
parts of the canon of great American music, recognized by the Library of Congress, with many
inducted into The Grammy Hall of Fame; all are now required study for young musicians hoping to
unlock the secrets of the jazz tradition. In today’s mainstream media, Coltrane is often name-
checked on television shows and referenced in major Hollywood films like "Malcolm X", "Mo
Better Blues", "Jerry McGuire", "Mr. Holland’s Opus", and many others. There’s even a street
named in his honor at Universal Studios Hollywood, close to the Universal Music archives where
many of his original reel-to-reel masters are shelved.

Posthumous honors persist: in 1995, the United States


Postal Service placed Coltrane on a commemorative
postage stamp. In ’97, he was bestowed the Grammy
Lifetime Achievement Award. In ’01, the National
Endowment for the Arts chose “My Favorite Things” for

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its list of 360 Songs Of The Century. In ’07, Coltrane was


awarded a Pulitzer Prize, as a Special Citation for a
lifetime of innovative and influential work.

All distinctions aside, it’s clear that Coltrane’s importance


today rests in his enduring role as a paragon of artistic
sacrifice and spiritual vision, an original voice who sits
atop the pantheon of African American cultural heroes.
The inspiration his legacy continues to instill remains as
strong as it is necessary—evidence of the unifying power
of music: an argument to cherish our collective heritage; a
dictate to listen to and learn from each other.

In 2009, a new President was elected and in the private residence of the White House he hung a
candid portrait of Coltrane snapped by the photographer Jim Marshall, showing the saxophonist in a
particularly pensive moment backstage in 1966. A few weeks later, the Coltrane family received a
photo of the President contemplating the image, with the inscription:

“…from a huge fan of your father’s, Barack Obama.”

— By Ashley Kahn

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