music.wikisort.org - CompositionAfrica/Brass is the eighth studio album by jazz musician John Coltrane, released on September 1, 1961 on Impulse! Records.[1] The sixth release for the fledgling label and Coltrane's first for Impulse!, it features Coltrane's working quartet augmented by a larger ensemble to bring the total number of participating musicians to 21. Its big band sound, with the unusual instrumentation of French horns and euphonium, presented music very different from anything that had been associated with Coltrane to date. While critics originally gave it poor ratings, more recent jazz commentators have described it as "amazing"[8] and as a "key work in understanding the path that John Coltrane's music took in its final phases."[9]
1961 studio album by John Coltrane
Africa/Brass |
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Released | September 1, 1961 (1961-09-01)[1] |
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Recorded | May 23 and June 7, 1961 |
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Studio | Van Gelder (Englewood Cliffs) |
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Genre | Modal jazz |
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Length | 33:50 |
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Label | Impulse! |
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Producer | Creed Taylor |
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Professional ratingsReview scores |
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Source | Rating |
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AllMusic |     [2] |
Down Beat (Original Lp release) |     [3] |
Jazz Shelf | favorable[4] |
The Rolling Stone Jazz Record Guide |     [5] |
Tom Hull | A−[6] |
Encyclopedia of Popular Music |     [7] |
Background
In 1961, Coltrane came into his own as a front-rank force in jazz, his influence growing from years of live performances with Thelonious Monk, Miles Davis and leading his own groups, and from the impact of the albums Giant Steps and My Favorite Things.[10]
Impulse Records executive Creed Taylor bought out Coltrane's contract with Atlantic Records, making Coltrane the first artist to be signed to the new company's roster.[11] It was the best contract a jazz musician had ever received after Davis with Columbia, one year followed by two-year options for two albums per year with a $10,000 advance against royalties the first year rising to a $20,000 advance for the second and third years.[12] Backed by the resources of ABC Records and set up to be an instant major player in the jazz market, Impulse! offered him greater scope. Coltrane would remain with Impulse! the rest of his life, and to inaugurate his move to the new label he planned a large-group recording.
Coltrane had not been in a recording studio as a leader since the October 1960 sessions for My Favorite Things, although on March 20 and 21, 1961, he had made a last recorded contribution for Davis, guesting on two tracks for Someday My Prince Will Come.[12] Earlier in 1961, Coltrane had invited multi-instrumentalist Eric Dolphy to join his band, making it a quintet.[13] Around the same time, bassist Steve Davis departed, replaced by Reggie Workman, at times Coltrane pairing him with a second bassist, Art Davis.[14] With this group in tow, on May 23 Coltrane entered the new Van Gelder Studio in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, for the first time; Rudy Van Gelder had been the sound engineer for most of his earlier sessions with Prestige Records.[15] Coltrane would make the bulk of his recordings at the Van Gelder studio for the remainder of his career.
Content
Apparently, Coltrane had initially contacted Gil Evans to assist with the arrangements; however nothing came of this and Coltrane called on Dolphy and Tyner to orchestrate.[16] Originally credited to Dolphy alone on the initial release, that has been corrected with the appearance of the 1995 reissue.[17] Coltrane chose the traditional English folk ballad "Greensleeves," arranged in a similar major/minor contrast as his popular "My Favorite Things."[18] For the two original pieces, "Africa" and "Blues Minor," Dolphy and Coltrane adapted Tyner's piano voicings for the orchestra. A second set of recording sessions for the album took place on June 7.
In 1974, Impulse released a second album culled from the same sessions, The Africa/Brass Sessions, Volume 2. Two additional outtakes appeared on another posthumous Coltrane compilation, Trane's Modes. On October 10, 1995, Impulse released the complete sessions on a two-disc set entitled The Complete Africa/Brass Sessions. Rather than placing the original album on one disc and the outtakes on the other, it divides the disc content by session, with the May 23 results on the first disc and those from June 7 on the second disc.
Reception and influence
In a contemporaneous review that appeared in the January 18, 1962, issue of DownBeat magazine critic Martin Williams had this to say: "In these pieces, Coltrane has done on record what he has done so often in person lately, make everything into a handful of chords, frequently only two or three, turning them in every conceivable way..."[3]
The album impressed minimal music composer Steve Reich, who called it "basically a half-an-hour in E. Jazz musicians say, 'Hey man', what's the changes?' 'E.' 'No! E for half-an-hour!' ".[19]
Track listing
Side oneTitle | Writer(s) |
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1. | "Africa" | John Coltrane | 16:28 |
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Side twoTitle | Writer(s) |
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2. | "Greensleeves" | traditional, arranged by McCoy Tyner | 10:00 |
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3. | "Blues Minor" | John Coltrane | 7:22 |
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1995 reissue disc one
All tracks recorded May 23, 1961.
Title | Writer(s) |
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1. | "Greensleeves" (original issue) | traditional | 10:00 |
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2. | "Song of the Underground Railroad" (issued on Africa/Brass Sessions Vol. 2) | traditional | 6:44 |
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3. | "Greensleeves" (alternate take issued on Africa/Brass Sessions Vol. 2) | traditional | 10:53 |
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4. | "The Damned Don't Cry" (issued on Trane's Modes) | Calvin Massey | 7:34 |
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5. | "Africa" (first version issued on Trane's Modes) | John Coltrane | 14:08 |
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1995 reissue disc two
All tracks recorded June 7, 1961.
Title | Writer(s) |
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1. | "Blues Minor" (original issue) | John Coltrane | 7:20 |
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2. | "Africa" (alternate take issued on Africa/Brass Sessions Vol. 2) | John Coltrane | 16:08 |
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3. | "Africa" (original issue) | John Coltrane | 16:29 |
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Personnel
May 23 session only ("Greensleeves")
June 7 session only ("Africa" and "Blues Minor")
Production
- Creed Taylor – production
- Rudy Van Gelder – audio engineering
- Eric Dolphy, McCoy Tyner – orchestration
- Romulus Franceschini – orchestration on "The Damned Don't Cry"
- Dom Cerulli – liner notes
- Pete Turner – photography
- Michael Cuscuna – reissue production
- David A. Wild – reissue liner notes
- Hollis King – reissue art direction
- Jackie Thaw – reissue graphic design
References
- DeVito, Chris; Fujioka, Yasuhiro; Schmaler, Wolf; Wild, David (2013). Porter, Lewis (ed.). The John Coltrane Reference. New York/Abingdon: Routledge. p. 609. ISBN 9780415634632. Retrieved 2 January 2020.
- Africa/Brass at AllMusic
- Down Beat: July 4, 1963, vol. 30, no. 15
- Jazz Shelf website review
- Swenson, J., ed. (1985). The Rolling Stone Jazz Record Guide. USA: Random House/Rolling Stone. p. 46. ISBN 0-394-72643-X.
- Hull, Tom (n.d.). "Jazz (1940s-50s)". tomhull.com. Retrieved March 3, 2020.
- Larkin, Colin (2007). Encyclopedia of Popular Music (4th ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195313734.
- Schnabel, Tom (September 9, 2014). "John Coltrane's Africa/Brass: Still Amazing". KCRW. Archived from the original on 2020-10-30.
- Bogdanov, Vladimir (2002). All Music Guide to Jazz: the definitive guide, Fourth Edition. San Francisco, CA: Backbeat Books. pp. 261-262. ISBN 0-87930-717-X.
- Lewis Porter. John Coltrane: His Life and Music. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, 1999. ISBN 0-472-10161-7, pp. 191.
- Ben Ratliff. Coltrane: The Story of A Sound. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2007. ISBN 978-0-374-12606-3, p. 66.
- Porter, p. 190.
- Porter, p. 192.
- Porter, p. 198.
- Ratliff, pp. 66-7.
- Porter, p. 212.
- Porter, p. 213.
- Ratliff, p. 67.
- Zuckerman, Gabrielle (July 2002). "American Mavericks: An interview with Steve Reich". Music Mavericks Public Radio. Retrieved 16 October 2016.
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Discography |
Prestige albums | |
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Blue Note albums | |
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Atlantic albums | |
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Impulse! albums | |
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Posthumous albums | |
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With Miles Davis | |
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With Thelonious Monk | |
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Live albums | |
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Compilations | |
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Compositions | |
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Documentaries | |
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Related articles |
- List of sessions
- Coltrane changes
- Sheets of sound
- Alice Coltrane
- Ravi Coltrane
- Dix Hills home
- Philadelphia house
- 5893 Coltrane asteroid
- John W. Coltrane Cultural Society
- Tribute albums
- Before John Was a Jazz Giant: A Song of John Coltrane
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Years given are for the recording(s), including the soundtrack albums, not first release. |
Albums as leader or co-leader |
- Open Sesame (1960)
- Goin' Up (1960)
- Hub Cap (1961)
- Minor Mishap/Dedication! (Hubbard/Duke Pearson, 1961)
- Ready for Freddie (1961)
- The Artistry of Freddie Hubbard (1962)
- Hub-Tones (1962)
- Here to Stay (1962)
- The Body & the Soul (1963)
- Breaking Point! (1964)
- Jam Gems: Live at the Left Bank (with Jimmy Heath, 1965)
- The Night of the Cookers (1965)
- Blue Spirits (1965–66)
- Backlash (1966)
- High Blues Pressure (1967)
- A Soul Experiment (1968–69)
- The Black Angel (1969)
- The Hub of Hubbard (1970)
- Red Clay (1970)
- Straight Life (1970)
- Sing Me a Song of Songmy (with İlhan Mimaroğlu, 1970)
- First Light (1971)
- Polar AC (1971–73)
- Sky Dive (1972)
- Keep Your Soul Together (1973)
- Freddie Hubbard/Stanley Turrentine in Concert Volume One (1973)
- In Concert Volume Two (with Stanley Turrentine, 1974)
- High Energy (1974)
- Gleam (1975)
- Liquid Love (1975)
- Windjammer (1976)
- Bundle of Joy (1977)
- Super Blue (1978)
- The Love Connection (1979)
- Skagly (1979)
- Live at the North Sea Jazz Festival, 1980 (1980)
- The Alternate Blues (with Clark Terry, Dizzy Gillespie & Oscar Peterson, 1980)
- The Trumpet Summit Meets the Oscar Peterson Big 4 (with Terry, Gillespie & Peterson, 1980)
- Born to Be Blue (1981)
- Keystone Bop: Sunday Night (1981)
- Outpost (1981)
- Rollin' (1981)
- Splash (1981)
- Above & Beyond (1982)
- Back to Birdland (1982)
- Face to Face (with Oscar Peterson, 1982)
- Ride Like the Wind (1982)
- The Rose Tattoo (1983)
- Sweet Return (1983)
- Double Take (with Woody Shaw, 1985)
- Life Flight (1987)
- The Eternal Triangle (with Woody Shaw, 1987)
- Feel the Wind (with Art Blakey, 1988)
- Times Are Changing (1989)
- Topsy – Standard Book (1989)
- Bolivia (1990–91)
- At Jazz Jamboree Warszawa '91: A Tribute to Miles (1991)
- Live at Fat Tuesday's (1991)
- Blues for Miles (1992)
- MMTC: Monk, Miles, Trane & Cannon (1994–95)
- New Colors (2000)
- On the Real Side (2007)
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With Art Blakey/The Jazz Messengers | |
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With Dexter Gordon | |
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With Herbie Hancock | |
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With Bobby Hutcherson | |
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With Quincy Jones | |
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With Wayne Shorter | |
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With others |
- The Soul of the City (Manny Albam, 1966)
- The Other Side of Abbey Road (George Benson, 1969)
- Out of This World (Walter Benton, 1960)
- True Blue (Tina Brooks, 1960)
- God Bless the Child (Kenny Burrell, 1971)
- Cables' Vision (George Cables, 1979)
- Droppin' Things (Betty Carter, 1990)
- Free Jazz (Ornette Coleman, 1960)
- Olé Coltrane (John Coltrane, 1961)
- Africa/Brass (John Coltrane, 1961)
- Ascension (John Coltrane, 1965)
- Muses for Richard Davis (1969)
- Outward Bound (Eric Dolphy, 1960)
- Out to Lunch! (Eric Dolphy, 1964)
- Undercurrent (Kenny Drew, 1960)
- Leaving This Planet (Charles Earland, 1973)
- Booker 'n' Brass (Booker Ervin, 1967)
- Interplay (Bill Evans, 1962)
- Sonic Text (Joe Farrell, 1979)
- Boss of the Soul-Stream Trombone (Curtis Fuller, 1960)
- Soul Trombone (Curtis Fuller, 1961)
- Cabin in the Sky (Curtis Fuller, 1962)
- Take a Number from 1 to 10 (Benny Golson, 1961)
- Pop + Jazz = Swing (Benny Golson, 1962)
- Slide Hampton and His Horn of Plenty (1959)
- Sister Salvation (Slide Hampton, 1960)
- Drum Suite (Slide Hampton, 1962)
- The Quota (Jimmy Heath, 1961)
- Triple Threat (Jimmy Heath, 1962)
- Big Band (Joe Henderson, 1996)
- Pax (Andrew Hill, 1965)
- Compulsion (Andrew Hill, 1965)
- Sunflower (Milt Jackson, 1972)
- Goodbye (Milt Jackson, 1973)
- 52nd Street (Billy Joel, 1978)
- Reg Strikes Back (Elton John, 1988)
- J.J. Inc. (J.J. Johnson, 1960)
- Echoes of an Era (Chaka Khan, 1982)
- Essence (John Lewis, 1960–62)
- Water Sign (Jeff Lorber, 1979)
- Doin' the Thang! (Ronnie Mathews, 1963)
- Bluesnik (Jackie McLean, 1961)
- MJQ & Friends: A 40th Anniversary Celebration (Modern Jazz Quartet, 1994)
- Fingerpickin' (Wes Montgomery, 1958)
- Roll Call (Hank Mobley, 1960)
- The Blues and the Abstract Truth (Oliver Nelson, 1961)
- Sweet Honey Bee (Duke Pearson, 1966)
- The Right Touch (Duke Pearson, 1967)
- Contours (Sam Rivers, 1965)
- Drums Unlimited (Max Roach, 1965)
- East Broadway Run Down (Sonny Rollins, 1966)
- Numbers (Rufus, 1978)
- Once a Thief and Other Themes (Lalo Schifrin, 1965)
- Giant Box (Don Sebesky, 1973)
- Sugar (Stanley Turrentine, 1970)
- Together (McCoy Tyner, 1978)
- Quartets 4 X 4 (McCoy Tyner, 1980)
- Soundscapes (Cedar Walton, 1980)
- Uhuru Afrika (Randy Weston, 1960)
- Blue Moses (Randy Weston, 1972)
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Years indicated are for the recording(s), not first release |
As leader or co-leader | |
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With Max Roach | |
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With others | |
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Compilations | |
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Authority control  | |
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