John Coltrane | Offering: Live at Temple University
A Long-Awaited Recording of An Historic 1966 Performance Features Coltrane
in Rare Form, Exhorting Through The Saxophone & Vocal Chants
With Alice Coltrane (piano), Pharoah Sanders (saxophone), Rashied Ali (drums),
Sonny Johnson (bass), & Local Percussionists
In High-Fidelity Audio Taken From Recently Discovered Tapes
To Be Released September 23, 2014, Coltrane’s 88th Birthday
via Impulse! / Resonance Records
Resonance Records and UME are proud to present Offering: Live At Temple University, documenting a legendary concert by John Coltrane at Temple University in his adopted hometown of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on November 11, 1966, six weeks after his fortieth birthday and nine months before his untimely death.
Offering, available in both 2-CD and 2-LP vinyl sets on September 23, 2014, is the first officially sanctioned release of an undiscovered complete Coltrane performance since 2005, when Impulse! Records put out the 1965 radio broadcasts comprising One Down, One Up: Live At the Half Note and Blue Note Records issued Thelonious Monk Quartet with John Coltrane At Carnegie Hall, from 1957. It captures Coltrane in exemplary form, navigating the language he had developed during the last phase of his musical path with passion and pellucid logic.
Saxophonist Ravi Coltrane, son of John and Alice Coltrane, was instrumental in the assembling of this historical release, celebrating a performance thought to be evidence of his father’s frustration with the limitations of his instrument. To Ravi, the recording is instead proof of his enduring mastery. “For me, the Temple recording is an affirmation that no, he didn’t exhaust the saxophone. The saxophone was just a tool—one over which he had a master’s command. His voice was an extension of the saxophone, as the saxophone was an extension of his voice. When you hear that transition on ‘Leo,’ it’s totally seamless in energy, vibe and intention.”
Offering is, as noted by the set’s co-producer Ashley Kahn in the package’s accompanying liner notes, “a ninety-minute session of sustained intensity: experimental, frenzied at times, and deeply spiritual.” Operating at equivalent levels of invention and energy are three members of his working quintet of one year’s standing—his wife, Alice Coltrane, on piano; Pharoah Sanders on reeds and flute; and Rashied Ali on drums—that, earlier in 1966, made the luminous Live At The Village Vanguard Again and the majestic, posthumously issued Concert In Japan. Bassist Sonny Johnson substitutes for Jimmy Garrison, and two guest saxophone players and four percussionists rise to the occasion, contributing to the flow.
For Offering, Resonance upholds the high production standards that it established on such critically acclaimed prior releases as Wes Montgomery’s Echoes of Indiana Avenue and Bill Evans’s Live at Art D’Lugoff’s Top of The Village Gate.
Until now, the proceedings from the 1966 concert were available only in fragmentary form and with inferior sound. On Offering, Resonance achieves the highest possible audio quality, using direct transfers of original master reels from a location recording by Temple’s WRTI-FM, remastered at 96kHz/24 bit, that were tracked down by Coltrane scholar Yasuhiro Fujioka. In addition, the album is presented in a deluxe format 2-CD digi-pak as well as a gatefold 2-LP edition. Both incorporate a look that is contiguous with the graphic identity of Impulse! Records, Coltrane’s exclusive label from 1961 until the end of his life.
The 24-page booklet included with the CD set features extensive liner notes by Kahn, the author of A Love Supreme: The Story of John Coltrane’s Signature Album and The House That Trane Built: The Story of Impulse Records, who draws on perceptive interviews with witnesses of and participants in the event to render a vivid portrayal of the milieu. Adding texture to the story are five contemporaneous, rarely seen photographs by jazz scholar Frank Kofsky, author of John Coltrane and the Jazz Revolution of the 1960s.
The 2-LP edition is mastered for vinyl by state-of-the-art engineer Bernie Grundman and pressed on 180-gram vinyl at 33-1/3 rpm by audiophile avatars R.T.I. (Record Technology Inc.). Resonance Records, which is a 501 (c)(3) non-profit foundation, will contribute a portion from every CD or LP sale to the John Coltrane Home, an organization devoted to the preservation of Coltrane’s former home in Dix Hills, New York.
Full Story
John Coltrane | Offering: Live at Temple University
- Ron Thorne
- Fadda Timekeeper
- Posts: 3072
- Joined: June 27th, 2013, 4:14 pm
- Location: Anchorage, Alaska
John Coltrane | Offering: Live at Temple University
"Timing is everything" - Peppercorn
http://500px.com/rpthorne
http://500px.com/rpthorne
- Steve Reynolds
- Founding Member
- Posts: 121
- Joined: July 24th, 2013, 8:02 am
Re: John Coltrane | Offering: Live at Temple University
A number of people have already ordered and received this despite the obviously erroneous September 23rd release date.
- bluenoter
- Concierge
- Posts: 1514
- Joined: July 1st, 2013, 1:37 am
- Location: DC (Taxation Without Representation)
Re: John Coltrane | Offering: Live at Temple University
Steve Reynolds wrote:A number of people have already ordered and received this despite the obviously erroneous September 23rd release date.
Where did they receive it from? It can be pre-ordered, but Amazon, for example, shows
the same September 23rd release date, for both the 2-CD set and the 2-LP ("Vinyl") set. And
at Resonance Records, too, the release date is listed as September 23; the LP set will be shipped
a few days earlier, though.
Maybe the people who have already received the album succeeded because they were ready to receive themselves.
- Ron Thorne
- Fadda Timekeeper
- Posts: 3072
- Joined: June 27th, 2013, 4:14 pm
- Location: Anchorage, Alaska
Re: John Coltrane | Offering: Live at Temple University
Steve Reynolds wrote:A number of people have already ordered and received this despite the obviously erroneous September 23rd release date.
Steve, will you please elaborate on this? Thanks.
"Timing is everything" - Peppercorn
http://500px.com/rpthorne
http://500px.com/rpthorne
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 24 guests