- Live in Japan (John Coltrane album)
Infobox Album
Name = Live in Japan
Type = Live
Artist =John Coltrane
Released = 1973 (original double LP)
1991 4-CD set
Recorded = 1966
Genre =Jazz
Length =
Label =Impulse!
Producer =
Reviews =Allmusic Rating|3|5 [http://allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:dzfexqtgldte]
Last album =
This album =
Next album =For|other albums of this name|Live in Japan (disambiguation)"Live in Japan" is a four-disc
box set byJohn Coltrane and his last group, featuring the quintet of Coltrane, his wife/pianist Alice, saxophonist/bass clarinetistPharoah Sanders , bassistJimmy Garrison and drummerRashied Ali .Recorded live on Coltrane's only Japanese tour in July
1966 at two Tokyo venues, Shinjuku Kosei Nenkin Hall and Sankei Hall, it is taken from radio broadcasts. It is notable for the presence of alto saxophone, played both by Coltrane and Sanders.By this point in his career, Coltrane was firmly enmeshed into the
avant-garde style of jazz. Sanders, who was an innovator offree jazz , influenced Coltrane's playing through his technical use ofoverblowing and fierce vibrations of the reed, and this record is remarkable for its use ofmultiphonics ,overtones , and other extended musical techniques from both players.Analyses
The songs on the 4-disc album are noted for their very lengthy running time (the "shortest" piece is 25 minutes long), all during which each player takes long, free solos, and sometimes the melody is not even played but only briefly alluded to.
At 38:49, the version of
Afro Blue on this album is by far the longest Coltrane ever recorded. The solo form to this song is of the performer's choice: Either anF minor blues in3/4 or an openvamp over F minor, the latter of which Coltrane always opted for. After playing the melody quite faithfully, he takes a 3-minutesoprano sax solo, then turns over the spotlight to Sanders, who, for the next 12 minutes or so, uses his trademark screeching, screaming, and shrieking during his entire solo. Alice Coltrane plays a very avant-garde piano ad lib, and then Coltrane comes back in on soprano with a gargantuan 18-minute solo before ending the song. "Peace on Earth" is more listenable and subdued, with both saxophonists playing alto and trading off each other toward the end. Around this time, Coltrane also periodically gave Garrison extended bass solos to open some of the songs (this version of "My Favorite Things" begins with a 14-minute bass solo.) After a 12-minute bass intro, Coltrane's song "Crescent" is kicked off, with both saxophones taking ferocious, harsh solos during the almost hour-long version. A second version of "Peace on Earth" on the third disc is quite like the first, with Sanders complimenting the ensemble on auxiliary percussion when not playing. Coltrane's composition "Leo", which first appeared on his1966 albumCosmic Music and later on his sax/drum duo album with Ali entitledInterstellar Space , is arguably the hardest listening on the album. It begins with Coltrane and Sanders playing shrillharmonics and high, tuneless overblowing notes before the rest of the ensemble comes in. Ali takes an extended drum solo about 15 minutes in.After aforementioned bass solo, the hour-long version of "My Favorite Things" includes a very harmonic solo by Alice, and Coltrane and Sanders taking extended sax solos (Coltrane's is approximately 20 minutes).Released in Japan in 1966, its complete American release was held back 25 years, though part of it was released in the mid-1970s.
Track listing
Disc One
# Afro Blue (
Mongo Santamaria , 38:49)
# Peace on Earth (Coltrane, 26:25)Disc Two
# Crescent (Coltrane, 54:33)
Disc Three
# Peace on Earth (Coltrane, 25:05)
# Leo (Coltrane, 44:49)Disc Four
# My Favorite Things (
Richard Rodgers /Oscar Hammerstein II, 57:19)Personnel
*John Coltrane (soprano, alto and
tenor saxophone s,bass clarinet , percussion)
*Alice Coltrane (piano )
*Pharaoh Sanders (alto andtenor saxophone s,bass clarinet , percussion)
*Jimmy Garrison (bass)
*Rashied Ali (Drum kit drum s] )
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