Music Review: John Coltrane - Afro Blue Impressions

Part of: Dispatches From the Glass Museum

John Coltrane was a monument to life, and continues to be as his presence thunders and moans through speakers all over the earth. This is something that I am thinking simultaneously with everything else whipping around in my brain at all times. So, without going into more qualifying details, I’ll just tell you that I bought, without pause, the greatest statistical tome constructed with respect to this man. The John Coltrane Reference is a gigantic, hardcover, 800 plus page textbook, and the editors have compiled every engagement, recording session, radio session, and television appearance, as well as a comprehensive Coltrane discography that rivals all others ever constructed. Pouring over the pages, I selected an LP from my collection to provide an appropriate soundtrack.

Afro Blue Impressions is a portal. It’s a gaping passway that leads into the stirring calm of your frontal lobe, taking in the closest thing it will ever have to the perfect sound. It falls like snow around your house in the soft throes of a winter squall. It falls unobtrusively and unassuming. It hangs like dew to grass. This album is a collection of live recordings by the classic Coltrane quartet from various European tours, though Norman Granz is unsure of the exact dates in the liner notes. Needless to say, this mother tears. Not sure if I command the necessary vocabulary to shuck this son of a gun effectively, so I will try relaying a memory instead.

“Spiritual” is twelve minutes twenty-nine seconds, and would be entirely too short if I wasn’t positive that those tones stretched through space on an infinite plane. It is a funereal dirge that also heralds the innate joy that Coltrane knew was inside of every living thing, and while John described these feelings using a predominantly Christian (and later Indian) paradigm, their universality is unmistakable. I believe that if not every, then most, of his solos can be described with the same caterwauling intensity that he plays with. However, hearing them and processing them is made less difficult depending on experience.

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Article Author: Eric Gagne

Eric runs the the glass museum , which is basically his kitchen and a stereo. He is poor and happy.

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Article comments

  • 1 - El Bicho

    Mar 02, 2008 at 8:25 pm

    Very nice write-up. I would like to know what else is on the album, although since it's Trane, I have no doubt it would be compelling. I'll pass on the spikes, though.

  • 2 - Pico

    Mar 02, 2008 at 9:31 pm

    Good debut, Eric; welcome aboard!

  • 3 - JC Mosquito

    Mar 02, 2008 at 11:48 pm

    Personally, ABI was THE album that sold me on Trane. Dirty enough to be live, but decent sound quality. Loooooong cuts, but not overly long. Great soloing without meandering. Trust me, if you're any kind of Coltrane fan, get this one.

    Disc 1
    1. Lonnie's Lament
    2. Naima
    3. Chasin The Trane
    4. My Favorite Things

    Disc: 2
    1. Afro Blue
    2. Cousin Mary
    3. I Want To Talk About You
    4. Spiritual
    5. Impressions

  • 4 - heidi

    Jun 06, 2008 at 1:33 pm

    Eric -

    So good to read your insightful, connected observations and responses to what you seem to know best....really great music. Plan to read more.

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