After 50 years,what causes a/c vents to sweat John Coltrane’s
A Love Surpreme
remains a highlight of genius for the
jazz saxophonist and composer, whose remarkable output left an indelible mark on music
. At a taut 33 minutes, the suite has left
an indelible mark on music with everyone from
U2
‘s Bono to
Carlos Santana
having cited the album as an influence.
The then-38-year-old Coltrane spent two days alongside McCoy Tyner, Jimmy Garrison and
Elvin
Jones in 1964 recording at Rudy Van Gelder’s legendary studio in Englewood Cliffs, N.J., and now — for the first time — every note of that session is
available to listeners. A new box set called
A Love Supreme: The Complete Masters
includes all takes, including
two goes that featured saxophonist Archie
Shepp
and a second bassist, Art Davis.
More from Billboard
SZA Reveals Six Variations of 'Lana' Cover Art, Celebrates 1-Year Anniversary of 'SOS'
Olivia Rodrigo Makes Cameo in 'Tiny Ass Bag' Sketch on 'SNL'
Tony Romo Calls Taylor Swift Travis Kelce's 'Wife' as Singer Cheers On the Chiefs at Arrowhead Stadium
Wayne Shorter on Miles Davis, Kanye West, & the Music of the Future
“Whenever I had the chance to play with John, it was, for me, a very special moment,”
Shepp
told
Billboard
from Paris, where he now lives. “Every time I met him I asked him to give me a lesson! I was always inspired and perhaps a little intimidated. I knew that he was breaking new ground and I felt very fortunate to have been chosen to be where I was.”
The dueling saxophones add a whole new dimension to the suite’s iconic first section, “Acknowledgement,” with Shepp’s throaty tone cutting through the band’s hypnotic refrain as Coltrane soared above.
“It’s still mysterious in ways,” said
Ravi Coltrane
, one of John’s three sons and an accomplished saxophonist and composer himself. “Like, how did this guy come up with this stuff? How did the synergy of these four players get to this point? It’s one of the great, beautiful, mysterious creations in 20th century music.”
How Kendrick Lamar Transformed Into ‘The John Coltrane of Hip-Hop’ on ‘To Pimp a Butterfly’
As much as
A Love Supreme
’s success results from Coltrane’s singular virtuosity, the album is also fundamentally an exercise in spiritual music: “a primer to a vocabulary of ascension,” in the words of scholar Ashley Kahn, who wrote the reissue’s liner notes.
“I think some people don’t understand that Coltrane was really a very religious man,” Shepp added of the saxophonist, who studied everything from Islam to Hinduism to Christianity with almost equal intensity — an omnivorousness that comes through particularly well in his most iconic record.
Another striking aspect of
A Love Supreme
, even as it receives archival reissues and canonizing awards (it’s in the Smithsonian), is how contemporary it sounds, even 50 years later.
“If we were to put on a
Pat Boone
record
that was recorded the same year as
A Love Supreme
,” the younger Coltrane said, “to our ear and our sensibilities and our aesthetics and taste, it would sound like it was maybe 100 years old.”
A Love Supreme
, though “still has that same veering and peeking into the future type of sound, which is very uncommon [even today].”
“
A Love Supreme
is 50 years old,” he continued. “But if you have not heard it before — you didn’t know it existed before yesterday — than it’s essentially brand new.”
Best of Billboard
Janet Jackson's Biggest Billboard Hot 100 Hits
H.E.R. & Chris Brown 'Come Through' to No. 1 on Adult R&B Airplay Chart
Anne Wilson's 'I Still Believe in Christmas' Crowns Christian Airplay Chart
View comments