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A Love Supreme: The Story of John Coltrane's Signature Album

A Love Supreme: The Story of John Coltrane's Signature Album
Author: Ashley Kahn
Publisher: Viking Adult
Category: Book

List Price: $27.95
Buy New: $10.08
You Save: $17.87 (64%)



New (4) Used (7) from $7.00

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 16 reviews
Sales Rank: 1147186

Format: Bargain Price
Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 256

ASIN: B0002Y1256

Publication Date: October 1, 2002
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - A Love Supreme: The Story of John Coltrane's Signature Album
  • Hardcover - A Love Supreme: The Making of John Coltrane's Masterpiece

Similar Items:

  • Kind of Blue: The Making of the Miles Davis Masterpiece
  • The House That Trane Built: The Story of Impulse Records
  • A Love Supreme
  • John Coltrane: His Life and Music (The Michigan American Music Series)
  • Ascension: John Coltrane And His Quest

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Few albums in the canon of popular music have had the influence, resonance, and endurance of John Coltrane's 1965 classic A Love Supreme-a record that proved jazz was a fitting medium for spiritual exploration and for the expression of the sublime. Bringing the same fresh and engaging approach that characterized his critically acclaimed Kind of Blue: The Making of the Miles Davis Masterpiece, Ashley Kahn tells the story of the genesis, creation, and aftermath of this classic recording. Featuring interviews with more than one hundred musicians, producers, friends, and family members; unpublished interviews with Coltrane and bassist Jimmy Garrison; and scores of never-before-seen photographs, A Love Supreme balances biography, cultural context, and musical analysis in a passionate and revealing portrait.


Customer Reviews:   Read 11 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars The Dream That Became A Love Supreme   September 13, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

I love stories of how things come to be. There is always a story behind EVERYTHING in the world of form. Things don't just "appear" out of sheer nothingness...there is always an originating point...a seed, if you will and sometimes those seeds that seem so tiny and insignifigant bring forth blooms that are so beautiful and so bright that their beauty seems to echo an eternalness about it.

When I bought my first copy of a Love Supreme on vinyl, I think I was about sixteen or seventeen years old. I heard stories about this fabled record. I heard that it could drive a relatively normal man, crazy with fever. I heard that once you heard it, you would forever echo with a buzz...a hum...that would affect every bit of your life. I wanted to take my chances and as soon as I got home a stripped the cover naked of its celophane dressing, I carefully placed the needle and the shiny, black surface and within moments I had a realization within me that all those stories were true.

I was never going to be the same.

I bought this book because I needed to know more about the magic behind the magic. A lot of people think that words are the end all and be all of creation. Words are symbols. Words can only convey things up to a point. Words are NOT Truth...but they can guide one to the Truth but in the end, one ultimately has to have their own experience with what we so feebly call "Truth". That is why religion fails miserably and why an individual spiritual experience is ultimately necessary.

Ashley Kahn, however, does a remarkable job of articulating his message. A Love Supreme is an open acknowledgement of the Divine...it is a Love Song to God...and even though I really didn't have a clue in my seventeen year old brain of what this musc was ultimately about, I knew on some level I was transcending the mundane. I also believe that I didn't come to the music, the music came to me...somehow from the realms of my unconscious, I was summoned and to tell you the Truth, I still feel very lucky to have been one of those who have been called.

This book has an energy all its own. Just like the recording, the story behind the music vibrates at a very High Frquency. After reading it, it simply validates that NOTHING IN THIS UNIVERSE is ever by accident. There is some kind of beautiful orchestration always taking place and isn't that Love Itself just meeting/greeting Itself in and through and as EVERYTHING?

You are reading this review because something within you called it forth. I really recommend this incredible book for people who love Coltrane as well as for those who just don't understand what the big deal is about Coltrane's music. All I ask you to do is just STAY OPEN and one day, without warning, it'll come to you and you'll remember.

A must have book!

Peace & Blessings,
john, 'the Light Coach'



5 out of 5 stars An Excellent, Informative Read   July 14, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

You KNOW the music. Now learn about the events in the life of John Coltrane that lead up to the pinnacle, the mountaintop of his career.

First of all, let me explain that I have a substantial library on jazz music - mostly about Miles and Trane. I found this book to be very insightful, regardless of what anyone else has written in their review. I don't want to be disrespectful of those reviews but I fail to see how some arrived at a mediocre or low opinion of this book. Not at all! In fact, I've learned so much and enjoyed this book so much that I'm definitely going to purchase Kahn's Making of Kind of Blue and Impulse the House That Trane Built. Personally, I can't wait to read 'em!

Kahn provides first hand accounts of both the December 9 & 10 sessions at Rudy Van Gelder's studio from Archie Shepp, Art Davis, McCoy Tyner, Elvin Jones, Bob Theil, and of course Rudy himself.

The book tells us what made recording at Rudy's so special, he describes the studio and even gives a high-level look at Van Gelder's methodology (the details are Rudy's closely guarded secret).

There is a title by title analysis of the suite in layman's terms but he & Ravi Coltrane DO give the listener some sign-posts to listen for each time you listen to the suite. I know that as a semi-professional jazz musician, I've learned new things about this music that I can actually apply to my own playing.

The description of how Impulse started, how they packaged and produced the recordings and took them to market was fascinating (to me anyway). I learned some things that I'd always wondered about. There is some discussion on Billboard and how the news about this fantastic work of art quickly spread 'round the USA.

There is a chapter toward the end "The Unbroken Arc of A Love Supreme" where I felt like Kahn was flirting with becoming trite and a little over-the-top but thankfully, he didn't quite go there... but it was close. That is my only criticism of this book. He just goes a little over-board with the reverence for this music, i.e., he sort of hits the reader over the head again and again with it. Ok, I get it. This is a special recording. Of course, we already KNOW that otherwise we wouldn't be reading a book devoted to a specific recording. Duh? It's not an annoyance but some reader may begin rolling their eyes, let's put it that way.

This book is perfect for the non-musician and a great read for musicians. The only downside (if you can call it that) for musicians is that there really isn't a detailed analysis of the music - no transcripts. If you are a musician you will want to purchase Lewis Porter's John Coltrane: His Life and Music. That book will give you transcripts galore. In fact, Porter is cited often in this book & this book is cited often in the Porter book. I enthusiastically recommend both books and of course, the deluxe edition of A Love Supreme. Buy them all, I guarantee whether you are a musician or just a jazz lover, you are going to learn something.



5 out of 5 stars One More Session For A True Expressionist   September 6, 2007
What can be said about this album?; on this book are mentioned details about this historic spiritual session that any music, jazz fan must indeed know. Read it and grow.


5 out of 5 stars Great book!   February 11, 2007
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

"A Love Supreme" was already one of my favourite jazz record before I read this, but after having read the book, now I listen to the music in a totally different way.

I'm not a spiritual or religious person at all, but the book helped me understand what was probably going through Coltrane's mind (from a spiritual point of view) when he composed and recorded "A Love Supreme".



3 out of 5 stars Homage or Adulation?   October 14, 2005
 9 out of 9 found this review helpful

Kahn's stellar research for this volume on Coltrane's best known album, "A Love Supreme," is undermined by sloppy prose and lack of focus. Kahn does a great job showing just how powerful the album has been for generations of listeners, from Wayne Shorter to Bono. The biographical material on Coltrane is very good, but profoundly impersonal, skipping over key aspects of his life. The best part of the book is his meticulous documentation of the December 9 & 10, 1964 sessions that resulted in this album. Kahn describes the music with vivid language, and includes details about where Elvin Jones' drums were placed and how Rudy Van Gelder lit the studio to create a Jazz Club atmosphere for the performers. After that, Kahn's book loses focus. It's as if he had a 100 page manuscript, but then the folks at Penguin asked him to make it 250, and he had scratch around for any extra material he could find. His assessment of Coltrane's career post-"A Love Supreme" is very tepid, and the chapter on the legacy of the recording, especially from the vantagepoint of JOWCOL publishing, shows promise, but ultimately goes nowhere. Kahn's major problem here is that he doesn't know who his audience is. Is it for die-hard Trane-iacs, or is it for the casual listener that has "A Love Supreme" and no other Coltrane album? Some of this might not be Kahn's fault, as the content suggests this is for experts, but the formating of the book, with its wide margins and coffee-table book size, make it seem as if it's simply for show and tell in some bourgeois apartment. The book could have been better organized, more historically contextual, and filled with glossaries and footnotes for the more casual fans. Also, Kahn's lack of historical grounding makes it seem as though "A Love Supreme" was the only album released in 1965, and that jazz was the most popular music at that time, which is far from the case (just as it is today). Here, his homage to this wonderful album bleeds over into the realm of adulation. If this was a book for the "experts," it would be more critical of the album, instead of an all-out gush-fest. But Kahn's research must be commended (especially since he seems to be responsible for getting the December 10th performance of "Acknowledgment," with Davis and Shepp as added musicians, unearthed and onto the Deluxe Edition reissue of "A Love Supreme).

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