With this latest edition of the Originals box sets collecting saxophonist John Coltrane's albums for the Impulse! label, the series reaches the critically-polarised period immediately following the ...
In the late summer of 1961, a John Coltrane-led quintet featuring fellow saxophonist Eric Dolphy — as well as drummer Elvin Jones, pianist McCoy Tyner, and bassist Reggie Workman — held a month-long ...
Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click. Both Directions at Once: The Lost Album will be released on June 29 on Impulse!
Four albums with a glossy, orange and black cover hit the record stores in January 1961, and began a buzz that has lasted for 50 years. “The first four albums all shipped to radio and all buyers at ...
Saxophonist and composer John Coltrane's “humble offering to Him" has become one of the most revered albums in jazz and indeed all of American music. A deeply spiritual man who claimed to have ...
Hear a new, unreleased John Coltrane album this week on ABC Jazz - featuring his legendary classic quartet, recorded back in 1963 and only just released in 2018! Why was this album - titled Both ...
While we’ll always put Hip-Hop first when it comes to the content we cover, The Source is a brand that appreciates all aspects of our culture — jazz, without a doubt, is included on that list. That’s ...
Well, this is a wild one. Long thought lost, the tapes of these 1961 performances at the Village Gate (now Le Poisson Rouge) in New York were recently discovered in the New York Public Library ...
Despite being John Coltrane‘s most celebrated album, and one of the most beloved jazz albums of all time, A Love Supreme wasn’t a record that the saxophonist touched on much in the live setting. Up ...
If the rest of Rhino’s Atlantic Jazz Gallery Series lives up to the first release, we’re in for some very interesting discoveries. The Last Giant includes some of the best of John Coltrane’s work from ...
A new album revives the lost tracks of a studio session Coltrane recorded with his quartet in 1963. Critic Kevin Whitehead says Both Directions At Once: The Lost Album is solid — but not revelatory.
While recognized as a great artist in his time, much of John Coltrane’s later work was so far ahead that it took the world years, if not decades, to catch up with it. Today, in a beautiful postscript ...
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