سماع [Sama'a] (Audition) [Ahmed] Pat Thomas Seymour Wright Joel Grip Antonin Gerbal Otoroku 2LP
https://ahmedquartet.bandcamp.com/album/samaa-audition
Bien curieuse production d’un quartet, [Ahmed] dont les membres se situent à la confluence des scènes française, suédoise et britannique et de mouvances collectives liées à des esthétiques différentes, voire aux antipodes l’une de l’autre. Pianiste britannique d’origine jamaïcaine et de culture musulmane, Pat Thomas est devenu un pianiste incontournable de la scène britannique aux côtés de Lol Coxhill, Roger Turner, Tony Oxley, Steve Noble, Phil Wachsmann, Dom Lash et en solo. C’est lui qui a proposé au groupe [Ahmed] de créer leur musique en relation profonde avec celle du contrebassiste de Jazz Ahmed Abdul Malik, un légendaire compagnon de Randy Weston et de Thelonious Monk (les deux LP’s Live au Five Spot en 1957 avec Johny Griffin et Roy Haynes). Ahmed Abdul Malik a développé ensuite un Jazz inspiré par les musiques du Moyen Orient et joué de l’Oud, l’instrument de culture arabe par excellence avec plusieurs albums uniques en leur genre. Vu l’intérêt de Pat Thomas pour les musiques nord africaines de culture arabe, rien d’étonnant, même si la facture musicale de la musique d’ [Ahmed] est tout à fait étonnante. Le tandem Joel Grip et Antonin Gerbal, contrebasse et batterie, m’a été révélé par un excellent CD du quartet Peeping Tom (Boperation) en compagnie du saxophoniste français Pierre-Antoine Badaroux et du trompettiste Axel Dörner, connu à la fois pour son « avant-gardisme radical réductionniste », mais aussi sa participation à Die Enttauschung, un quartet jazz « freebop » fascinant où brille le clarinettiste Rudi Mahall. Ce CD de peeping Tom a été produit par le label du collectif franco-allemand umlaut et la musique réinterprète de curieux compositeurs « bop » atypiques de manière originale et vivante. C’est bien comme cela que je qualifierais la démarche d’ [Ahmed]. J’ajoute encore que le saxophoniste Seymour Wright a fait partie depuis le début des années 2000 de la mouvance collective d’Eddie Prévost, Sebastian Lexer avec qui il a souvent enregistré pour le label Matchless des musiques radicales au niveau des formes et de la pratique instrumentale. Plus récemment, il s’est commis dans un enregistrement en duo avec Evan Parker vachement réussi (Tie the Stone to the Wheel/ Fataka).
En fait, notre quartet rejoue/ réinterprète les compositions d’Ahmed Abdul Malik en leur insufflant à la fois la radicalité du free jazz le plus débridé et la fidèle relecture avec cette rythmique qui se démarque clairement du 4/4 du jazz moderne. Cet aspect est exemplifié dans le première face du double LP consacré à la seule composition « Ya Annas » comme pour chacune des autres faces de ce superbe album. J’ai choisi de rendre compte de « Audition » car c’était pour moi l’opportunité d’acquisition la moins chère via un distributeur Berlinois, car les envois du label Otoroku situé à Londres sont chargés et taxés excessivement par la Douane de mon pays. En effet , leur dernier Opus – coffret de 5CD, Giant Beauty, est hors de prix, si je tiens compte des frais d’envoi.
L’évolution formelle et ludique, fascinante et très inspirée, leur étirement des morceaux dans une transe hypnotique et la cohérence du groupe dans l’instant fait de [Ahmed], un groupe de premier ordre. D’abord, il faut saluer le travail rhytmique d’Antonin Gerbal, comparable à l’innovation et la précision extrême d’un Tyshawn Sorey et sa capacité à s’abandonner à la sauvagerie brute. À cet égard, il suffit de se laisser emporter par l’enregistrement d’une récente performance à Nickelsdorf en juin 2025 : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WeE1TJVppuc : apocalyptique et … « punk » !
Face 2, Antonin Gerbal démontre sa capacité à croiser les rythmes et pulsations en solo (Isma’a Listen). Seymour Wright développe une approche sonore à la fois âpre et radicale tout en cultivant l’art des spirales idoines dans le cadre de leur projet musical, celui d’[Ahmed], une forme de lyrisme lunaire, un travail sur le son qui se révèle délicat ou … brutal selon les phases de jeu possibles de ce quartet d’exception dont le présent album n’est encore à mon avis qu’une carte de visite, un écartement de rideau qui ne donne pas encore toutes les dimensions sonores et vibrationnelles du quartet. Mais éclaire brillamment leur savoir faire et l’originalité profonde d’une voie majeure du free-jazz le plus inspiré. On imagine ce qu'il pourrait advenir hors des limitations des sillons d'une face de disque 33 tours. Et il faut rendre grâce au pianiste Pat Thomas, un artiste intègre et focalisé essentiellement sur sa démarche à la fois personnelle et collective, sans qu’il doive se sentir obligé de se profiler auprès de tous les « ténors » médiatisés de la free-music. Voici un artiste hyper-original de première grandeur qui n’a rien à envier « aux plus grands ». Son jeu au piano est un défi à l’histoire du jazz même free et est foncièrement original. Aussi trop complexe pour en identifier les sources et « influences » . Il provient d’une scène britannique qui a vu grandir les Stan Tracey, Keith Tippett, Howard Riley et Veryan Weston au fil des décennies, des artistes uniques.
Dans le contexte d[Ahmed], il faut applaudir le travail quasi-souterrain du bassiste Joel Grip, un pilier des scènes Berlinoises et Suédoises, qui s’échine ici à renforcer et consolider les inventions de ces trois zèbres de collègues avec un solide aplomb et un très bon sens des perspectives. Il faut savoir se concentrer sur l’écoute de ces lignes de basse et son jeu à l’archet, éminemment créatives. Aussi, ce quartet est un excellent exemple comment de simples artisans de la cause de la free-music et du jazz d’avant-garde arrivent à se surpasser au sein d’un vrai collectif pour créer un univers musical top-notch au niveau créatif des artistes les plus vénérés dont la plupart nous ont quitté ces dernières années. Au lieu de tirer les ficelles des réseaux pour livrer une trop fade lingua-franca qui vous laissera perplexe au fil des ans et des décennies. Suivez le guide, voici un groupe vraiment exemplaire à plein d’égards.
Gianni Mimmo the Lonesome Thing Rosebud Relevant RRR1
https://www.rosebudrelevant.com/record/the-lonesome-thing
https://soundcloud.com/amiranirecords/exceller-esteem
Nouveau label Rosebud Relevant Records pour Gianni Mimmo l’exclusif saxophoniste soprano italien et responsable d’Amirani, un label exemplaire depuis 2007 pour lequel il a laissé de superbes traces de son évolution. Influencé et inspiré par Steve Lacy, Gianni Mimmo s’est lancé dans l’improvisation libre « sans compositions » tout en maintenant un lyrisme singulier subtilement « polymodal » et maîtrisant une solide technique sur un instrument ardu, le saxophone « droit » soprano dont la justesse des notes demande une précision hardie et malaisée pour le commun des mortels du souffle. Ce deuxième opus solitaire depuis l’initial One Way Ticket de 2005 (Amirani), marque clairement tous les progrès réalisés au niveau de l’expressivité, de la qualité du souffle, de l’assurance dans l’établissement de formes. C’est aussi un aboutissement de tout un travail de rencontres et d’échanges associatifs avec des artistes pointus comme les pianistes Gianni Lenoci, Yoko Miura et Nicola Guazzaloca (graphiste attitré d’Amirani), des souffleurs Ove Volquartz et Harri Sjöström, des guitaristes John Russell et Garrison Fewell, des violoncelllistes Daniel Levin et Hannah Marshall, de Lawrence Casserley et son live signal-processing, etc… Ces fructueuses aventures et son travail de producteur ont muri son savoir-faire et cet album solitaire en est un fabuleux thermomètre à la gloire des rhizomes polymodaux chers à Steve Lacy. On n’a plus qu’à se laisser emporter dans cet univers fait de songes, de sonorités terriennes et élégiaques, ce sens inné des proportions t de la matière du souffle effilé, distendu en équilibre instable entre silence et les intervalles les plus remarquables de la toile d’araignée harmonique infinie magnifiée par un chant d’oiseau des îles. Steve Lacy a disparu et si vous voulez aujourd’hui vous replonger dans son univers en « vivant » - face à face vous n’avez rien d’autre à faire que d’écouter ce « re » créateur d’exception. Lacy était bien sûr inimitable (tout comme son ami Lol Coxhill, autre maître du soprano) tout en légèreté et subtilité. En bonus, A Flower is a Lonesome Thing de Strayhorn et trois compositions de Steve Lacy déclinées avec le plus grand des bonheurs : Esteem (issue du cycle the Way), Sideline (créée avec Michael Smith en 1976 dans l’album Sidelines / IAI) et Utah. Tous les autres morceaux joués ici participent du même moule fondateur .. en extension continue.
PS , j’ai entendu le qualificatif de « copieur » au sujet de Mimmo . Je réponds à quiconque : Qui d’autre est aussi expert dans la musique essentielle de Steve Lacy ? . Ou alors jetez aussi aux orties les « élèves » de Coltrane parmi lesquels Phaorah Sanders, Evan Parker, Paul Dunmall etc.. . Mais quiconque a travaillé dur sa musique 7/7 quotidiennement prendra spontanément la mesure d’un artiste comme Gianni Mimmo : exceptionnelle !
Udo Schindler Uwe Oberg Schädel-Magie FMRCD738 – 0126
Vidéo du concert 6 Décembre 2024 à Krailing/ Munich.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uQSlmOeGqSw
Merci à Udo Schindler de m’envoyer quelques CD’s du label FMR que j’arrive péniblement à recevoir à cause des mesures Brexit et des frais de la Douane belge et de l’inertie de leur website. Dans cet album notre multi-instrumentiste germanique, Udo Schindler joue des clarinettes mi-bémol, basse et contrebasse et de la flûte alto, ce qui apporte une vraie cohérence aux quatre improvisations successives. Face à lui, le pianiste Uwe Oberg, entendu avec Evan Parker, Rudi Mahall, Xu Feng Xia, Georg Wolf, Jörg Fischer, Frank -Paul Schubert etc… J’apprécie beaucoup ce pianiste : il sait étendre les particularités de son jeu en créant de multiples atmosphères très variées issues autant du piano moderne « contemporain », que du free-jazz avec une réelle qualité de toucher, une belle angularité monko-dodécaphonique et un jeu « dans les cordes » bien calibré. Quant à Udo Schindler, il a été entendu et a enregistré avec bon nombre d’artistes de premier plan comme Wilbert De Joode, Damon Smith, Ernesto Rodrigues, Jaap Blonk, Ove Volquartz et des guitaristes curieux comme Andreas Willers et Gunnar Geisse. Sa discographie est exponentielle. Alors ce duo qui totalise 40:47 consiste en une belle trame existentielle, une ossature de qualité (Schäde-Magie = Skull-Magic) qui se décline avec de la suite dans les idées. Parmi ces idées, on trouve des mots curieux et difficilement traduisibles du poète Les deux duettistes nous emmènent dans un dialogue de qualité, la réflexion musicale et formelle dans les mains du pianiste et l’efflorescence sensuelle ou expressive parfois folichonne du souffle appliqué du clarinettiste. Celui-ci aime à mordre et déformer/ contorsionner les aigus et harmoniques quand le claviériste fait chanter un carillon de résonnances de cordes adroitement bloquées dans ce remarquable Stimziegelde 15 :56, un beau plat de résistance que j’apprécie beaucoup. Son travail dans Nachtmaschine (5 :34) au milieu des cordages du piano est tout à fait original , peu commun comme une série de boîtes à musiques délirantes auquel Udo répond avec une belle créativité.
Un très bon album en duo dont les aléas se renouvellent adroitement. Super !!
TATZLWURM Antonio Bertoni Massimo De Mattia Stefano Leonardi AUT Records 14-4
https://autrecords.bandcamp.com/album/tatzlwurm
Un autre album du tandem Antonio Bertoni – Stefano Leonardi (qui nous a livré le fabuleux Fuoco Sacro sur le même label AUT Records), mais cette fois-ci avec le remarquable flûtiste Massimo De Mattia, lui-même auteur d’excellents enregistrements pour le label Setola di Maiale. Leonardi et De Mattia se partagent les flûtes jouées ici : les instruments « ethniques » et la flûte pour le premier ; la flûte et la flûte alto classiques pour le deuxième. Comme instruments « ethniques », on peut citer le xun basse chinois, le dilli kaval turc, le kaval moldave à sept trous, le sulittu sarde, cher au Campidanu de Cagliari. Quant à Antonio Bertoni, il manie le Guembri, le violoncelle, la percussion « à mains » et le bolon, une harpe luth à trois cordes du Mali semblable au n’koni.
Tout comme pour le précédent CD Fuoco Sacro, nous avons droit une superbe musique qu’on pourrait qualifier valablement de « folklore imaginaire » proche de ces musiques traditionnelles développées dans des cultures asiatiques ou africaines. Cela pourrait être un cliché ou un « dérivé » facile…. Mais l’inspiration, le sens de l’improvisation et de la recherche sonore des trois musiciens créent une magnifique empathie, un univers musical particulier, un partage musical visionnaire et créatif. La conjugaison du lyrisme, des audaces et des sonorités des deux flûtistes est fascinante, étirant les possibilités expressives parfois mystérieuses pour en faire une musique de transes, d’élévation spirituelle ou sensitive enivrante. Les notes et les timbres sont systématiquement glissée, vocalisée subtilement, interférant leurs auras dans l’action des deux souffleurs respectifs comme si leurs cerveaux étaient branchés sur la même fascinante inspiration, les mêmes écarts / intervalles de notes et couleurs / vibrations musicales fusionnelles. Tout à fait dans l’esprit de cette musique et confirmant la réussite de Fuoco Sacro, on se félicite du guembri d’Antonio Bertoni de ses pizzicati fugaces au cello, et ses percussions sauvages multiples. L’étrangeté de leur musique est exprimée par le dessin noir, blanc, gris d’un étrange serpent à tête de mammifère imaginaire reproduit sur la pochette et dans un insert à l’aquarelle de plus grande dimension en papier glacé plié et fiché dans le rabas de l’élégant digipack. Un superbe support graphique pour une curieuse et magnifique musique hors des sentiers battus.
La flûte sulittu de Sardaigne comme celle jouée par Stefano Leonardi.
Consacré aux musiques improvisées (libre, radicale,totale, free-jazz), aux productions d'enregistrements indépendants, aux idées et idéaux qui s'inscrivent dans la pratique vivante de ces musiques à l'écart des idéologies. Nouveautés et parutions datées pour souligner qu'il s'agit pour beaucoup du travail d'une vie. Orynx est le 1er album de voix solo de J-M Van Schouwburg (1996 - 2005). https://orynx.bandcamp.com
19 mars 2026
1 mars 2026
John Coltrane 's Ascension piece performed and recorded by John Coltrane Quartet in concert or in Studio. Paris Salle Pleyel & Half Note NYC 1965 concerts.
In 1965, John COLTRANE recorded a large scale composition under the title ASCENSION with trumpet players Freddie Hubbard & Dewey Johnson, tenor saxophonists Pharoah Sanders & Archie Shepp, alto saxophonists Marion Brown & John Tchicaï and his three J.C. Quartet members pianist Mc Coy Tyner, bassist Jimmy Garrison and drummer Elvin Jones. Two different takes were recorded and both were issued successively, the second take was issued on the very first pressing (Edition I) and the, Coltrane changed his mind. Impulse issued quickly a second pressing - edition of the first take as "Edition II". Both were reissued on the same CD and in the CD-Box John Coltrane Masterworks. This Ascension piece wasn't recorded seemingly in a studio by the J.C. Quartet. But ...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-81AEUqHPzU
But there are some live concert versions of this "Ascension" composition recorded by the John Coltrane Quartet at the Half Note in N.Y.C. From these concerts were culled the tracks of "One Down One Up" Live at The Half Note issued by Impulse on a double CD.
The John Coltrane recorded at least three different versions issued on various "bootlegs", unofficial vinyles during the seventies and CD's afterwards.
The first "Ascension" occurrence went on two Japanese BYG label LP's "John Coltrane Live in Paris" which were hard to find in Europe. But the British Affinity label issued a John Coltrane double LP "Live in Paris" on which two tracks on both sides of on vynile displayed a tune titled "Blue Valse". This double LP was filled by versions of Naima & Impressions recorded at Antibes Jazz Festival on 27th July 1965. Also the festival audience were treated by a fantastic Love Supreme performance which went recorded by the O.R.T.F. and issued on French label Esoldun (a branch of the FNAC, an important book, music and hi-fi large chain store very supportive of jazz musics) with the help of the INA, a French government institution, owner of the rights. Later on it was included in to a double Impulse CD of Love Supreme with both studio and the Antibes live versions. The remaining of this Live in Paris 2LP are the tracks recorded in Paris Salle Pleyel on the 28th of July, among them, this lengthy Blue Valse, Afro Blue and Impressions. The choice of these three compositions and subsequent improvisations was absolutely convincing all three carrying such force, energy, inner modal connections and complex improvising. I have no idea about the order of performances but this Blue Valse became a vehicle of hard hitting, complex and furious "speaking in tongues" playing in empathy with Afro-Blue and Impressions which are with Mr PC, the "chevaux de bataille" of the whole Coltrane music. Think about the North Indian Raga virtuosi who can make tremendous variations ad infinitum with modes, patterns and rythms though the same materialof one Raga. This is just mindblogging.
here BLUE VALSE a/k/a Ascension during 14:23 minutes recorded seemingly in Paris Salle Pleyel 28 July 1965. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EsHggpYA3zo
Curiously, if the theme of this Blue Valse has the same melodic pattern than the one of Ascension, it was not noted in the liner notes. Following an information read on a youtube "notes", it seems that there was a version of the Blue Valse recorded at Antibes or in the mind of these notes's author, he has perhaps made the confusion as Blue Valse is featured on albums with both recordings from the Antibes Festival and Salle Pleyel on both dates 27th and 28th July 1965.
Nevertheless, there were some rare bootlegs ("pirate" in French) LP's of various labels, sometimes "dubious", carrying tracks from the 1965 Half Note N.Y.C broadcasts concerts. The Half Note was home for Warne Marsh around that time and of course for the John Coltrane Quartet. Among the tunes recorded there and issued on these bootleg vinyle albums, there are at least two versions that are printed on two "serious" labels, I mean with a better sound than the average bootleg. I haven't any of these on CD's but only vinyle. Also if the (technical) origin of the CD or vinyles seem dubious to me, I don't buy it.
So, I have never bought or ordered through mail ordering business items who could be of (very)low quality while I was diving in Brussels' (and London's) second hand record shops (during decades), hoping to find some rare and "audible" (free-)jazz and improvised music albums. Being an absolute fan of Evan Parker from the mid-seventies, and then, of Paul Dunmall, good albums of "freer" John Coltrane LP's and CD's were obviously always in my mind. So in the eighties, I discovered a British edition of Live Concerts of Coltrane on the Blue Parrot label with the title " Brazilia" , a tune which was issued on the official Impulse double LP "The Other Village Vanguard Tapes" in 1977, when I was buying also Incus, FMP, Ogun and Ictus brand new vinyles when they popped into the racks of Caroline Music, Rue de l'Athénée in Ixelles (also Milford Graves Andrew Cyrille, Braxton, Lacy, Ayler and Taylor albums. So this Brazilia tune made my brain tilt, although there was no mention about the Half Note. There is also a lengthy version of My Favourite Things of which I had at that time enough versions on discs. The liner notes of the Blue Parrot AR 705 LP mentions a second Coltrane Quartet LP on Blue Parrot, AR 700 with the title "Creation". Decades later, but for me like in an instant, I witnessed the existence of one of its copy at Open Door, Freudenstadt, a very honest and serious mailing order in Germany, run by a music devotee, Peter Schlegel. This LP copy was Mint and at a fair price. Peter is the gentleman by excellence, he kept his business from Dieter Hahne himself ! So when I heard the Creation tune on side B, I jumped, the top of my head banging on the ceiling. This is ASCENSION for QUARTET ... oolyakoo! So, I was told that these tracks were mainly recorded in 1965 at the Half Note, but for sure it is evidently 1965 Coltrane, no doubt !!
Afterwards, more recently a Brussels famous second hand disc shop displayed two John Coltrane LP's on the Audiofidelity - Chiaroscuro Records, a company for which I made a favourable judgement considering their Earl Hines, Borah Bergman (first solo recordings) and even Frank Wright's. So, I read "recorded at the Half Note" (of course I had already the double CD At the Half Note with its huge rendition on One Down One Up). The LP's bearing the titles "Reflections Volume One" and "Reflections Volume Two". The first Volume includes "Untitled Original", Impressions and a lengthy Chim Chim Cherie. About this "Untitled Original" the author of the liner notes referred its beginning six notes motif to the Coltrane tune "Big Nick" , describing the music as "whimsical" and "the piece's simple motive provides a launching pad for cascades and fragmented phrases blurted out ferociously". This motive is the full Ascension tune strectched to its limit during around 7 - 8 minutes. Coltrane's music is working on the time (lengthy) extension of improvising.... and its intensity can match any extended improvisation during shorter durations' recordings as well like in the Sun-Ship LP or First Meditations LP masterworks, three of them spanning one vinyle side each.
Here at the 41 minutes mark : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mb8Ouz24iY0 .
The youtube channel mentions John Coltrane - Creation: The Lost Half Note Tapes (1965/2023) [Full Album]. Wow!
But this is not all ! In 1978, fortunately, in the wake of the 10th Anniversary of the passing of John Coltrane and the issue by Impulse! of The Other Village Vanguard Tapes of the unreleased tracks of the V.V. November 1961 Concerts, John Coltrane 's label issued a serie of four volumes of unreleased recordings under the title THE MASTERY OF JOHN COLTRANE. Its Volume 1 double LP is titled Feelin'Good and included a track under the title UNTITLED 90320. This track is the only Studio Quartet version of the Ascension piece a/k/a Blue Valse a/k/a Creation or, at least, beginning with the same six notes pattern and mode. It was recorded during the 16th June 1965 session, the last J.C. "Classic" Quartet session before the session of Ascension. Two other tracks recorded then are included in this double LP The Mastery of J.C. Vol.1 : Living Space on soprano sax with overdubs of the saxophone parts and a piece titled Dusk-Dawn.
So you have here the four recordings of the Ascension theme by the Classic John Coltrane Quartet. I think that would have been great if one of its recording by the quartet was included in the subsequent Ascension reissues.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OwwDKY93z-8
Why do I write all of this ? John Coltrane had played and recorded a music without end, trying everything possible in the length of a decade and he is perhaps one of the very very few rare jazz player and improviser who one and i can't stop listening to as his music is journeying in so many contours, detours, logics, ways, spaces and fantasy with such a huge beautiful lyrical , whimsical, furious and so deep... tones and tones. I find that I have made a similar experience listening to Evan Parker and Paul Dunmall.
You find also his approach through the works of Pharoah Sanders or George Adams, Joe Farrell, Alan Skidmore etc... Also, other players of the same generation had grown independantly of Coltrane influence. The best example is Sam Rivers, one of the great masters of polymodal music. I had promised early on that I will revisit all the "untitled original" of Coltrane included in my LP collection in order to find out this tune ... "Promis - en français" . Now it is done . Coltrane Forever !!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-81AEUqHPzU
But there are some live concert versions of this "Ascension" composition recorded by the John Coltrane Quartet at the Half Note in N.Y.C. From these concerts were culled the tracks of "One Down One Up" Live at The Half Note issued by Impulse on a double CD.
The John Coltrane recorded at least three different versions issued on various "bootlegs", unofficial vinyles during the seventies and CD's afterwards.
The first "Ascension" occurrence went on two Japanese BYG label LP's "John Coltrane Live in Paris" which were hard to find in Europe. But the British Affinity label issued a John Coltrane double LP "Live in Paris" on which two tracks on both sides of on vynile displayed a tune titled "Blue Valse". This double LP was filled by versions of Naima & Impressions recorded at Antibes Jazz Festival on 27th July 1965. Also the festival audience were treated by a fantastic Love Supreme performance which went recorded by the O.R.T.F. and issued on French label Esoldun (a branch of the FNAC, an important book, music and hi-fi large chain store very supportive of jazz musics) with the help of the INA, a French government institution, owner of the rights. Later on it was included in to a double Impulse CD of Love Supreme with both studio and the Antibes live versions. The remaining of this Live in Paris 2LP are the tracks recorded in Paris Salle Pleyel on the 28th of July, among them, this lengthy Blue Valse, Afro Blue and Impressions. The choice of these three compositions and subsequent improvisations was absolutely convincing all three carrying such force, energy, inner modal connections and complex improvising. I have no idea about the order of performances but this Blue Valse became a vehicle of hard hitting, complex and furious "speaking in tongues" playing in empathy with Afro-Blue and Impressions which are with Mr PC, the "chevaux de bataille" of the whole Coltrane music. Think about the North Indian Raga virtuosi who can make tremendous variations ad infinitum with modes, patterns and rythms though the same materialof one Raga. This is just mindblogging.
here BLUE VALSE a/k/a Ascension during 14:23 minutes recorded seemingly in Paris Salle Pleyel 28 July 1965. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EsHggpYA3zo
Curiously, if the theme of this Blue Valse has the same melodic pattern than the one of Ascension, it was not noted in the liner notes. Following an information read on a youtube "notes", it seems that there was a version of the Blue Valse recorded at Antibes or in the mind of these notes's author, he has perhaps made the confusion as Blue Valse is featured on albums with both recordings from the Antibes Festival and Salle Pleyel on both dates 27th and 28th July 1965.
Nevertheless, there were some rare bootlegs ("pirate" in French) LP's of various labels, sometimes "dubious", carrying tracks from the 1965 Half Note N.Y.C broadcasts concerts. The Half Note was home for Warne Marsh around that time and of course for the John Coltrane Quartet. Among the tunes recorded there and issued on these bootleg vinyle albums, there are at least two versions that are printed on two "serious" labels, I mean with a better sound than the average bootleg. I haven't any of these on CD's but only vinyle. Also if the (technical) origin of the CD or vinyles seem dubious to me, I don't buy it.
So, I have never bought or ordered through mail ordering business items who could be of (very)low quality while I was diving in Brussels' (and London's) second hand record shops (during decades), hoping to find some rare and "audible" (free-)jazz and improvised music albums. Being an absolute fan of Evan Parker from the mid-seventies, and then, of Paul Dunmall, good albums of "freer" John Coltrane LP's and CD's were obviously always in my mind. So in the eighties, I discovered a British edition of Live Concerts of Coltrane on the Blue Parrot label with the title " Brazilia" , a tune which was issued on the official Impulse double LP "The Other Village Vanguard Tapes" in 1977, when I was buying also Incus, FMP, Ogun and Ictus brand new vinyles when they popped into the racks of Caroline Music, Rue de l'Athénée in Ixelles (also Milford Graves Andrew Cyrille, Braxton, Lacy, Ayler and Taylor albums. So this Brazilia tune made my brain tilt, although there was no mention about the Half Note. There is also a lengthy version of My Favourite Things of which I had at that time enough versions on discs. The liner notes of the Blue Parrot AR 705 LP mentions a second Coltrane Quartet LP on Blue Parrot, AR 700 with the title "Creation". Decades later, but for me like in an instant, I witnessed the existence of one of its copy at Open Door, Freudenstadt, a very honest and serious mailing order in Germany, run by a music devotee, Peter Schlegel. This LP copy was Mint and at a fair price. Peter is the gentleman by excellence, he kept his business from Dieter Hahne himself ! So when I heard the Creation tune on side B, I jumped, the top of my head banging on the ceiling. This is ASCENSION for QUARTET ... oolyakoo! So, I was told that these tracks were mainly recorded in 1965 at the Half Note, but for sure it is evidently 1965 Coltrane, no doubt !!
Afterwards, more recently a Brussels famous second hand disc shop displayed two John Coltrane LP's on the Audiofidelity - Chiaroscuro Records, a company for which I made a favourable judgement considering their Earl Hines, Borah Bergman (first solo recordings) and even Frank Wright's. So, I read "recorded at the Half Note" (of course I had already the double CD At the Half Note with its huge rendition on One Down One Up). The LP's bearing the titles "Reflections Volume One" and "Reflections Volume Two". The first Volume includes "Untitled Original", Impressions and a lengthy Chim Chim Cherie. About this "Untitled Original" the author of the liner notes referred its beginning six notes motif to the Coltrane tune "Big Nick" , describing the music as "whimsical" and "the piece's simple motive provides a launching pad for cascades and fragmented phrases blurted out ferociously". This motive is the full Ascension tune strectched to its limit during around 7 - 8 minutes. Coltrane's music is working on the time (lengthy) extension of improvising.... and its intensity can match any extended improvisation during shorter durations' recordings as well like in the Sun-Ship LP or First Meditations LP masterworks, three of them spanning one vinyle side each.
Here at the 41 minutes mark : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mb8Ouz24iY0 .
The youtube channel mentions John Coltrane - Creation: The Lost Half Note Tapes (1965/2023) [Full Album]. Wow!
But this is not all ! In 1978, fortunately, in the wake of the 10th Anniversary of the passing of John Coltrane and the issue by Impulse! of The Other Village Vanguard Tapes of the unreleased tracks of the V.V. November 1961 Concerts, John Coltrane 's label issued a serie of four volumes of unreleased recordings under the title THE MASTERY OF JOHN COLTRANE. Its Volume 1 double LP is titled Feelin'Good and included a track under the title UNTITLED 90320. This track is the only Studio Quartet version of the Ascension piece a/k/a Blue Valse a/k/a Creation or, at least, beginning with the same six notes pattern and mode. It was recorded during the 16th June 1965 session, the last J.C. "Classic" Quartet session before the session of Ascension. Two other tracks recorded then are included in this double LP The Mastery of J.C. Vol.1 : Living Space on soprano sax with overdubs of the saxophone parts and a piece titled Dusk-Dawn.
So you have here the four recordings of the Ascension theme by the Classic John Coltrane Quartet. I think that would have been great if one of its recording by the quartet was included in the subsequent Ascension reissues.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OwwDKY93z-8
Why do I write all of this ? John Coltrane had played and recorded a music without end, trying everything possible in the length of a decade and he is perhaps one of the very very few rare jazz player and improviser who one and i can't stop listening to as his music is journeying in so many contours, detours, logics, ways, spaces and fantasy with such a huge beautiful lyrical , whimsical, furious and so deep... tones and tones. I find that I have made a similar experience listening to Evan Parker and Paul Dunmall.
You find also his approach through the works of Pharoah Sanders or George Adams, Joe Farrell, Alan Skidmore etc... Also, other players of the same generation had grown independantly of Coltrane influence. The best example is Sam Rivers, one of the great masters of polymodal music. I had promised early on that I will revisit all the "untitled original" of Coltrane included in my LP collection in order to find out this tune ... "Promis - en français" . Now it is done . Coltrane Forever !!
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