Music Review: John Coltrane - Interplay
Published October 28, 2007
Can anyone tell me why we celebrate people's deaths? How often do we see special re-issues and recordings of material in honour of some musician's death day, or because it's been X number of years since they've croaked? Wouldn't it make more sense to celebrate their birthday?
When we remember someone, or honour them, it's usually to commemorate what they accomplished while they were alive. The majority of us don't get much accomplished once we're shoved underground. I know there are those occasions when we want to honour how the person died; a fire fighter who refused to give up on people trapped inside a burning building and ends up sharing their fate for example.
But even that is about how that person lived their life, examples of their strength of character, their heroism, or their compassion. It's one thing to itemize his or her good points to help us remember them at a person's funeral, but after that, maybe we should celebrate what their being born meant to the world and the impact they had on their field of endeavour.
Maybe it doesn't sound like much of a difference, but, to me honouring someone's life through their death just seems a little backward.

The reason I bring the subject up is the last few months have seen quite a few re-releases, special packages, and DVDs of the late, great, jazz saxophonist John Coltrane. It doesn't take much to realize since he died in 1967, 2007 is the 40th anniversary of his death. It appears anybody who ever had a piece of him is lining up to cash in. Ironically, since he was forty years old when he died, this year also marks the 80th anniversary of his birth – something far more worthy to celebrate and commemorate in my opinion. After all if he hadn't have been born, we wouldn't have very much to celebrate at all, now would we?
The art of John Coltrane was his ability to find the core of a piece of music and extrapolate improvisations that were beautiful flights of fancy, yet managed to stay rooted in the original song. "I keep looking into certain sounds, certain scales, not that I'm sure of what I'm looking for, except it will be something that hasn't been played before. I don't know what it is. I know I'll have that feeling when I get it." So what sounded like finished work to us was always him continuing to explore and find new depths to delve into or heights to scale.
The ability to work with the sort of passion and skill required to sustain that type of free form only comes about after years of disciplined playing with other musicians of like mind. The jazz scene of the 1950s was ideal for a player of Coltrane's skill and desire as many of the best players moved away from the big bands of the forties into smaller combos so they could work out what that insane man Charlie Parker had come up with when he started be-bop.
It's from recordings that Coltrane made during this period on the Prestige Label in sessions from 1956 –58 that material has been gleaned for a new five disc box set, Interplay by Concord Music. Looking at the other musicians represented on the discs it represents a "Who's Who" of American jazz at the time. Zoot Zims, Kenny Burrell, Paul Chambers, and Mal Waldron, are only a few of the greats who Coltrane recorded with for the Prestige label in the famous studios in Hackensack, New Jersey of Rudy Van Gelder. (Although all this material was recorded during '56-'58, some of it wasn't released on album for the first time until Coltrane's 1965 record Dakar )
- Music Review: John Coltrane - Interplay
- Published: October 28, 2007
- Type: Review
- Section: Music
- Filed Under: Culture: Arts, Music: Acoustic, Music: Instrumental, Music: Jazz, Review
- Writer: Richard Marcus
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Richard Marcus is a long-haired Canadian iconoclast who writes reviews and opines on the world as he sees it at 










