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Interstellar Space

 
Album Review: Interstellar Space

  • Artist: John Coltrane
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: February 22, 1967
  • Total Time: 53:47
  • Genre: Jazz

Review

Not released for the first time until 1974 but now available in expanded form as a CD, this set of duets by tenor saxophonist John Coltrane and drummer Rashied Ali are full of fire, emotion and constant abstract invention. The original four pieces ("Mars," "Venus," "Jupiter" and "Saturn") are joined by "Leo" and "Jupiter Variation." Coltrane alternates quiet moments with sections of great intensity, showing off his phenominal technique and ability to improvise without the need for chordal instruments. Rousing if somewhat inaccessible music. ~ Scott Yanow, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Mars John Coltrane John Coltrane (10:43)
Venus John Coltrane John Coltrane (8:36)
Jupiter John Coltrane John Coltrane (5:25)
Saturn John Coltrane John Coltrane (11:43)
Leo [*] John Coltrane John Coltrane (10:56)
Jupiter Variation [#][*] John Coltrane John Coltrane (6:43)

Credits

David Gibb (Graphic Design), Ali Tabatabaee (?), John Coltrane (Producer), John Coltrane (Sax (Tenor)), Dave Grusin (Executive Producer), Ben Young (Research), Michelle Lewis (Production Coordination), Michael Cuscuna (Producer), Tom Greenwood (Research), Hollis King (Art Direction), Chuck Stewart (Photography), John Wriggle (Research Assistant), Rudy Van Gelder (Engineer), Andy Ruggirello (Graphic Design), Rashied Ali (Drums), Dan Serrano (Graphic Design), Scott Johnson (Graphic Design), Andy Baltimore (Creative Director), Rashied Ali (Percussion), Edward Odowd (Design), Larry Rosen (Executive Producer), Sherniece Smith (Art Producer), Peter Keepnews (Notes Editing), Bryan Koniarz (Producer), John Coltrane (Bells), Jamie Krents (Research Assistant), Tom Greenwood (Producer)
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Wikipedia: Interstellar Space
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Interstellar Space
An orange photo of the sun above the clouds with "JOHN COLTRANE" written in brown and "INTERSTELLAR SPACE" written in orange at the top.
Studio album by John Coltrane
Released 1974
Recorded February 22, 1967
Genre Free jazz
Length 54:06
Language Instrumental
Label Impulse!
Professional reviews

Interstellar Space was the one of the final studio albums recorded by the saxophonist John Coltrane before his death in 1967, originally-released posthumously by Impulse! Records on LP in 1974.

Contents

Composition

Interstellar Space consists of an extended duet suite in four parts with the drummer Rashied Ali, and was recorded at the Van Gelder Studios on February 22, 1967, the week after the session that produced Stellar Regions. As a result, the melodies often overlap; "Venus" has the same melody as the title track of the previous LP, "Mars" quotes the melody of what became known as "Iris", and many note choices and runs are similar.

The structure of each track is fairly uniform: Coltrane plays some largely ceremonial wind-chime like bells, while Ali sets a shifting pattern on the drums; then the theme is stated by Coltrane on tenor saxophone. The album is an important example of highly improvised free jazz, which was Coltrane's principal interest in the latter part of his career. Coltrane's improvisations are thus extremely free here, stating tacit modes and harmonies briefly and modulating constantly, fitting extremely dense, twisting expressions into breath-length phrases. The folkish "Venus" is probably the most accessible number; "Saturn", the longest piece, does feature hints of swing by song's end. Its melody is rather similar to the canonical, almost cantor-like quality of the material on Stellar Regions.

"Leo", also listed as such on Coltrane's Live in Japan box set, is presumably a variation on "The Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost" from the 1965 album Meditations. (The theme for "Leo" was frequently played in conjunction with the two-tenor opening for "The Father, the Son and Holy Ghost" in concert, though it is always called "Leo" in Impulse! sessions.) It is distinct, in title and structure, from the rest of the album. Firstly, it is named for an astrological sign rather than a planet; furthermore, the track opens not with an introduction by Ali, but rather, by an immediate statement of the theme by Coltrane. As well, the use of bells is different, appearing intermittently, and mostly towards the end. In this sense it is similar to the track "Saturn", which contains no bells at all.

Covers

In 1999 guitarist Nels Cline and drummer Gregg Bendian collaborated on Interstellar Space Revisited: The Music of John Coltrane. This version saw Cline and Bendian offering their vision of "Mars", "Leo", "Venus", "Jupiter" and "Saturn", from the Interstellar Space sessions.

Track listing

  1. "Mars" – 10:41
  2. "Venus" – 8:28
  3. "Jupiter" – 5:22
  4. "Saturn" – 11:33
2000 Compact Disc bonus tracks
  1. "Leo" – 10:53
  2. "Jupiter variation" – 6:44

The 2000 CD reissue also includes a brief rehearsal fragment as well as two false starts of "Jupiter Variation" and studio chatter between Coltrane and Ali. These outtakes are hidden in the pre-gap before "Mars".

Personnel


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Interstellar Space" Read more