mills

My name is Mills Baker; I write about love, culture, art, religion, mental illness, philosophy, memory, politics and the rather random.

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Posts tagged john coltrane.
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Kenny Garrett (with Pat Metheny) - Latifah

From Garrett’s excellent tribute to John Coltrane, Pursuance, this track features Garrett and Metheny going fairly berserk. Metheny’s guitar is processed to sound rather like a saxophone, which I found at first slightly silly but which, I now think, works extremely well in this piece.

I’ve posted some of Kenny Garrett’s work before; almost everyone I’ve played this song for just adores it, and it’s one of my favorites.

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John Coltrane - Olé.

Hero John Brissenden mentioned jazz flutist Eric Dolphy recently, and I was reminded of one of the first albums my father ever shared with me: John Coltrane’s Olé. The title track remains my absolute favorite song of his, for all sorts of aesthetic and emotional reasons, and I’ve listened to it as much as anything in my life.

You might like it. The personnel on this song are astounding: Coltrane, Eric Dolphy, Freddie Hubbard on trumpet, McCoy Tyner on piano, Elvin Jones on drums, and two bassists: Art Davis and Reggie Workman.

Note among the various miracles of this song: the bassists solo simultaneously, one plucking and one bowing (in separate channels), before Coltrane returns into the mix and unleashes a kind of fury I adore.

“It don’t mean a thing if it ain’t got that swing.”

Duke Ellington, memorably stating his view on the problem of art’s relationship to entertainment. Clive James argues that it is not an idle lyric but an assertion of aesthetic philosophy made at the time when jazz began to mirror other arts of the 20th century in declaring that anything enjoyable was unserious. The contrast here, then, is between what swings –what can be danced to and whistled and enjoyed by most- and what requires cerebral engagement of a more seated sort: say, late Coltrane (a favorite of mine who comes in for much criticism in this essay). Ellington and James favor the former.

The latter, an obsession with formal considerations and technical problems in the visual, musical, and literary worlds, is the result of artists turning away from audiences and towards one another, or worse: towards critics and academia. That this inward-orientation, this preoccupation with art about art and concerned mainly with other art, has weakened the arts is obvious enough; what audience pays to be ignored? Who wants to watch artists discuss themselves, once the novelty of the formal invention wears off? I once used a simple test in evaluating any work: if an essay is packaged with it, pasted on the wall alongside or as a program before the performance, to explain why it’s not meaningless, the work ought to have been an essay and is in its present form meaningless. If an essay is needed to convey the point, convey the point in an essay! It’s cheaper and easier and better for the audience.

Hundreds of objections to this stance come immediately to mind, however: how low ought to be our denominator in judging intelligibility? How much erudition, education, sophistication, or even simple intelligence can we say is required before we say the piece is insufficiently apprehensible? In other words: whose capacity to dance sets the limit on what we can swing to?

The problem is highlighted by James’ bizarre attack on Coltrane:

“Shapelessness and incoherence are treated as ideals. Above all, and beyond all, there is no end to it. There is no reason except imminent death for the cacophonous parade to stop, a fact which steadily confirms the listener’s impression that there was no reason for it to start. In other words, there is no real momentum, only velocity…supreme mastery of technique has led him to this charmless demonstration… nothing is more quickly copied than virtuosity, and Coltrane had a hundred clones.”

I adore James, but I could scarcely imagine anyone being more confused about the aesthetic interests of an artist than he is about Coltrane’s. Indeed, this is a perfect demonstration of an unfortunate fact: when someone draws a line in art’s history and says that beyond that point art loses its way, it is in nine cases out of ten merely a declaration of the speaker’s failure to understand. It is comparable to the derided declamation of the aging that this or that technology or style of dress is undermining social mores: it represents the point in history at which the speaker jumped off the train.

Art makes wrong turns; much of modern art (and much more of so-called ‘postmodern art’) is wretched, but most of art has always been wretched; it is just that now most bad art is forgotten. The consensus editorial filtering that takes place over time reduces the chaff of previous eras and makes it seem as though our own is populated by self-involved hucksters selling gimmickry as profundity. Hence the amusingly constant concern on the part of the elderly of every generation that nothing is as good as it was in the old days.

Ellington’s assertion is debatable, but it’s important too. I wish more artists would keep it in mind, even if just to override it after some internal struggle. But when I was eleven years old listening to Coltane’s Ole, nothing seemed emptily virtuosic or cacophonous about it to me; it had as much swing as anything I’d ever heard, and still seems to. Art’s progress requires that we learn to dance to novel rhythms, and I hope not to mistake unfamiliar music for swingless noise. (But I’m sure I will).

(Update: Topherchris feels that I have the swing whether or not it means a thing).

John Coltrane - My Favorite Things (1961).

One of the first albums I can remember my father giving to me was “Ole,” by John Coltrane, which -perhaps because the tracks are all so long- hasn’t the popularity in his oeuvre that I feel it should.

Searching for clips of those songs on YouTube was fruitless (I’ve never even heard a live performance of them), so I settled for this excellent performance of “My Favorite Things,” which shares some harmonic elements with “Ole” and features some of the same personnel: Eric Dolphy, McCoy Tyner, Reggie Workman (but not Art Davis), and Elvin Jones.

(Apologies for so many posts in one night).

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Alice Coltrane - Journey in Satchidananda.

John Coltrane’s very talented widow Alice Coltrane was a serious disciple of spiritual guru Swami Satchidananda, to whom she dedicated this album. She plays harp, which is always lovely to hear, and is joined by solid personnel including Pharoah Sanders.

Excellent and odd.