#1
Bill Evans 1961 Village Vanguard
#2
John Coltrane Complete 1961 Village Vanguard
#3
Miles Davis Live at The Plugged Nickel
#4
Charles Mingus Live At Antibes
#5
Duke Ellington Live at Newport
#6
Sonny Rollins At The Village Vanguard
#7
John Coltrane Live at Birdland
#8
Wes Montgomery & Wynton Kelly Smokin' at the Half Note
#9
Erroll Garner Concert By The Sea
#10
Gillespie, Parker, Powell, Mingus and Roach The Quintet-Jazz at Massey Hall, Volume 1
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The Top Ten Best Live Jazz Recordings - #7
By C. Michael Bailey
#7 - John Coltrane
Live at Birdland, MCA/Impulse! 33109
In the early morning of Sunday, September 15, 1963, a gaggle of
malcontents planted 12 sticks of dynamite in a window well outside the 16th
Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama. The dynamite exploded eight
hours later killing Denise McNair, 11, and Cynthia Wesley, Carole Robertson
and Addie Mae Collins, all 14, in the process galvanizing the Civil Rights
Movement. Three months later, on November 18, 1963, John Coltrane stepped up
to the microphone in fabled Englewood, NJ studio of one Rudy Van Gelder and
over a McCoy Tyner Tremolo, blew his searing and definitive statement on the
subject of the bombing-- "Alabama." "Alabama" is the single most provocative
piece on what is considered one of the most well rounded John Coltrane live
recordings Coltrane Live at Birdland. The piece is most certainly why
this Coltrane live recording was chosen for this series.
The odd thing is that "Alabama" and its sister piece "Your Lady" (also
recorded in Englewood) are not even live recordings and the live recordings
included on Coltrane Live At Birdland are not all that were recorded
on October 8, 1963. Like many jazz recordings (particularly live jazz
recordings) Coltrane Live at Birdland is actually a patchwork of
recording events. The original release was comprised of 5 pieces, three
recording in the club on October 8, 1963 ("Afro-Blue," "I Want to Talk About
You," and "The Promise") and the remaining two ("Alabama" and "Your Lady") a
little over a month later. The original vinyl LP was released in January
1964. The first compact disc release was 1992. The original recording was
augmented with an additional song ("Vilia" recorded in Englewood, March 6,
1963) and re-released in 1996. Why the original recording was not
re-released with all of the live pieces (versions of "Rockin ["Tranin'
In"]," "Mr. P.C.," and "Lonnie's Lament") remains a bit of a mystery.
All of this begs the question- How are we to consider Coltrane Live At
Birdland one of the best live jazz recordings? I suspect that we must
forgive the imperfections of the disc (or those of the writer's premise) and
accept the release as a complete work of art as we do other incomplete or
otherwise imperfect endeavors such as Coleridge's Kubla Khan and
Mozart's Requiem. In that, we might suspend our compulsive
dependency on by-the-letter definition and turn our attention to the
important thing, the music.
Coltrane Live at Birdland displays Coltrane's most famous quartet:
McCoy Tyner on piano, Jimmy Garrison on bass and the thermonuclear Elvin
Jones on drums. With respect to the saxophonist's constantly evolving style,
Coltrane Live at Birdland falls squarely between Ballads and
A Love Supreme and on those Birdland dates, John Coltrane does
sound like he is passing through. The Mongo Santamaria standard "Afro-Blue"
was long a Coltrane concert favorite. The 10-minute performance here is
thought to be his best and most accessible performance of this piece. Elvin
Jones's drumming is at its bombastic densest with great emphasis on the
cymbals. The Billy Eckstein composition, "I Want to Talk About You" like
"Afro-Blue" was a favorite performance piece for Coltrane and he recorded it
more than ten times. Here, the piece has a riveting solo Coltrane coda
giving light for things to come.
Down Beat critic John McDonough in his review of the last recorded
public appearance of the tenor saxophonist (The Olatunji Concert: The
Last Live Recording-- Impulse! 314 589 120) echoed another critic in
touting Coltrane as "Jazz's most boring genius." Coltrane's later music
largely leaves me with the same feeling. I far prefer his Atlantic Hard Bop
days when he was just beginning to transform jazz as Charlie Parker had done
the generation before and before his vision reached light speed and his
invention, critical mass. However, let there be no mistake. If the listener
wishes to hear the master in transition, look no further than Coltrane
Live at Birdland.
Writer's Note: Having recently completed a survey of the Top Ten Best Live Rock Albums, I have learned a couple of valuable things. One is a list of this sort should be presented in descending order starting with number 10 and descending to number 1. Second, it is better to poll a group for their opinions and develop the list from an analytical (or pseudoanalytical) evaluation of the results. This is how the Top Ten Best Live Jazz Recordings were selected. I polled the writership of All About Jazz, combined the results and ranked the recordings. For recordings that tied in number of votes, I arbitrarily selected the order (I had to exert editorial control somewhere!).
Live Jazz is perhaps the most natural creative state in music. Performing jazz means a musician must create a work of art on the spot, composition in real time. In this series, I hope to highlight historic events where this invention has not been merely successful, but transcendent.
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