| 1. Part 1: Aknowledgement/Part 2: Resolution |
| 2. Part 3: Pursuance/Part 4: Psalm |
| 3. Part 3-Pursuance |
| 4. Part 4-Psalm |
A Love Supreme Live in Concert,John Coltrane,Passport Audio/Just Jazz,Hard Bop,Jazz
Average customer rating: |
A Love Supreme Live in Concert
John Coltrane Manufacturer: Passport ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000AA4JCK Release Date: 2005-09-06 |
Tracks:
- Part 1: Aknowledgemen/tPart 2: Resolution
- Part 3: Pursuance/Part 4: Psalm
- Part 3: Pursuance
- Part 4: Psalm
Average customer rating: |
A Love Supreme Live in Concert
John Coltrane Manufacturer: France Radio Classic Concerts ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000001PWC Release Date: 1995-11-01 |
Tracks:
- Part 1: Aknowledgemen/tPart 2: Resolution
- Part 3: Pursuance/Part 4: Psalm
- Part 3: Pursuance
- Part 4: Psalm
Average customer rating:
|
A Love Supreme Live in Concert
John Coltrane Manufacturer: Black Label ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000000ZWM Release Date: 1995-02-24 |
Tracks:
- Part 1: Aknowledgemen/tPart 2: Resolution
- Part 3: Pursuance/Part 4: Psalm
- Part 3: Pursuance
- Part 4: Psalm
Amazon.com essential recording
A Love Supreme is a suite about redemption, a work of pure spirit and song, that encapsulates all the struggles and aspirations of the 1960s. Following hard on the heels of the lyrical, swinging Crescent, A Love Supreme heralded Coltrane's search for spiritual and musical freedom, as expressed through polyrhythms, modalities, and purely vertical forms that seemed strange to some jazz purists, but which captivated more adventurous listeners (and rock fellow travelers such as the Jimi Hendrix Experience, Cream, and the Byrds), while initiating a series of volatile, unruly prayer offerings, including Kulu Su Mama, Ascension, Om, Meditations, Expression, Interstellar Space. From the urgent speech-like timbre of his tenor, to the serpentine textures and earthy groove of Elvin Jones's drumming, Coltrane's suite proceeds with escalating intensity, conveying a hard-fought wisdom and a beckoning serenity in the prayer-like drones of "Psalm," where Jones rolls and rumbles like thunder as Garrison and Tyner toll away suggestively--all the while Coltrane searches for that one climactic note worthy of the love he wants to share. --Chip SternCustomer Reviews:
masterpiece.......2005-03-19
First on my list of favourites.......2005-02-17
This one is truly unique. Never listened to something even similar and don't want to. Because "A love supreme" is just perfect. I have other Coltrane works like "Giant Steps" or "Blue Train" but these ones don't mean much to me. And I even don't like much John's way of playing: too many notes in such a little time space. Many times they don't tell me anything. And it is the same reaction that I get sometimes from Bird. "Ok, you're a virtuoso. Congratulations!. So what?".
But this record was really his cornerstone for me. He was in a different approach. He meant something to me in every note he blew from his sax. He really got into something. And he's here with the great McCoy Tyner. With his piano helps Elvin Jones to create a mystic atmosphere where you can feel they are in some kind of spiritual voyage. And everything is a wonder.
So if you are one like me who's not very fond of Coltrane, it doesn't matter at all. This is a must have. Who told you that "Kind of Blue" was the all-time best?. It is "a love supreme". It is about pure inspiration from four geniuses of Music. It'll change you. For good!.
Still supreme after all these years........2004-12-01
The music on the album itself is powerful not just for Coltrane's playing itself but also for the fanatical interplay of the quartet. 'Acknowledgement' opens with Garrison's passionate bass line, leading into Coltrane's dynamic and ingenious playing, the quartet's spirited performance like a fervant, untamed emotion that has gripped them all. 'Resolution' blazes from the record with Tyler burnishing the track with some brilliant playing of his own. Jones's frantic drumming comes to the fore on the opening of 'Pursuance', a track where the meaning of 'Chasin' The Trane' becomes self-evident as Garrison, Tyler and Jones follow in hot pursuit of their leader's furious joy. Tyler's playing is again compelling as the quartet trade notes with such alarming velocity before Garrison's bass tip-toes and leads us like the pied-piper to the concluding 'Psalm'.
It's refreshing in this day and age to hear an artist whose sincerity and integrity shines through his work.
talk about navel-gazing..........2004-06-09
This album encapsulates the fatal flaw of jazz music, the element that is relegating it to the dustbin of history: form over substance. Nobody will care about the technical achievements of these guys in 100 years (not many do now except those who confuse self-obsession with depth). There are moments, especially the middle section, where Coltrane and co. hint at some melodic structure, some level of aesthetic appeal, but inevitably a stylized flourish ruins everything. I suppose it's good that someone pushed the 'repetitive droning and squawking' envelope, but do you really want to listen to him do it?
Art reaches out, speaks to the universal, appeals to the heart. Jazz excludes, speaks in code, demands analysis. I prefer art.
A Love Supreme.......2004-05-01
Part 1, "Acknowledgment," is to me an inner conflict given form in music. Coltrane is desparing, looking for a reason for life. His sax screams and whimpers in pain and turmoil. On and on it goes, him fighting against the pains of life, looking for an answer, but I also feel that part of him does *not* want to acknowledge it. Finally, however, after much soul-searching, he arrives at it. The answer is God: A Love Supreme. His sax repeats that phrase over and over and over again, as if he is overwhelmed by God's love. It goes on and on, until he puts down his instrument and begins chanting, "A love supreme. A love supreme. A love supreme." He has finally found the answer to life's difficulties, in acknowledging God's love and opening himself to it. This part is, I feel, the most powerful one. (Although that could change with further listenings.)
Part 2 is "Resolution". He has found God, now what? He resolves to live in God's love and according to His truths. He commits himself to God and resolves to walk in the light.
Part 3 is Pursuance. He has resolved to follow God, now he pursues that goal. There are difficulties, to be sure, and I think that that is expressed in the music. However, his entire soul is set on it, and he keeps true. In Part 4, "Psalm," he praises God, who has shown him true love.
*whew* Sorry if I waxed philosophical there. ;) This is more than just music, it is a window into a man's spirit. It is incredibly heart felt. Normally, using unusual effects on a horn annoys me, but Coltrane's screams, wails, whimpers, and cries are so heatfelt that I think they *add* to the music. They reflect the difficult life Coltrane had.
The sidemen were also excellent. I especially enjoyed the work of Elvin Jones (who gives a slight Middle Eastern feel to the music) on drums, and McCoy Tyner on piano. (I especially liked Tyner's extended solo in "Pursuance.")
I think that this is music that can touch anybody's heart.
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