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Ascension
 
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Ascension [Original recording remastered]

John Coltrane Audio CD
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)
Price: £9.67 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Biography

John Coltrane (1926-67) was the most relentlessly exploratory musician in jazz history. He was always searching, seeking to take his music further in what he quite consciously viewed as a spiritual quest. In terms of public recognition, this quest began relatively late. The tenor saxophonist, a native of North Carolina who later moved to Philadelphia, was 28 when he joined the Miles Davis quintet… Read more in Amazon's John Coltrane Store

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Product details

  • Audio CD (19 Jun 2000)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Original recording remastered
  • Label: Impulse!
  • ASIN: B00004TA40
  • Other Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 81,969 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

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Samples
Song Title Time Price
Listen  1. Ascension -(Edition II)40:56Album Only
Listen  2. Ascension -(Edition I)38:17Album Only


Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

Few works remain genuinely controversial 35 years after their inception, but Ascension can generate as mixed a response today as it did when it was released. In May 1965, Coltrane assembled 10 other musicians for one of his most ambitious recordings, a 40-minute piece that was a landmark in the free-jazz movement and a key moment in Coltrane's sponsorship of the younger members of the New York avant-garde. Along with his regular rhythm section--McCoy Tyner, Jimmy Garrison, and Elvin Jones--the band includes trumpeters Dewey Johnson and Freddie Hubbard, tenor saxophonists Archie Shepp and Pharoah Sanders, altoists Marion Brown and John Tchicai and Art Davis playing bowed bass. The improvised ensembles shout and cry with galvanizing power, their tension testifying to Coltrane's influence and the saxophone's dominance in the style. It's both brilliant and flawed work, however, in ways that go to the heart of Coltrane's musical thought. It's rooted in modal music, with a brief pentatonic figure (a variation on the opening motif of A Love Supreme) as its basis. While it's broken up by the intense ensembles, the string of solos seems too close to a Jazz at the Philharmonic approach to free jazz. The horns stretch toward energy music, while the rhythm section, particularly Tyner, seems rooted in modality. As a result, the soloists often come off the ring blowouts to find themselves with little more support than a reiterated chord, and they sometimes seem to merely run out of steam. It's still startling music, though, and necessary listening, whether for the sheer power of the ensembles, the sustained creativity of Coltrane and Sanders, the stylistic contrasts in the horn players, or the acerbic understatement of Tchicai, so effective in the midst of the maelstrom. Coltrane couldn't decide on which of the two versions he preferred, and Edition II was covertly substituted for Edition I during the run of the original LP. This CD manages to include both. --Stuart Broomer

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
22 of 22 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Audio CD
Is this extraordinary document an indigestible cacophony of anarchy in brass and bass, or the artistic culmination of a man's desire to explore the outer reaches of tonality and the inner limits of freedom? Is Ascension a transcendental event in jazz history or an anomalous experiment that perseveres in its periphery?

Certainly no one has attempted anything like this again. The only comparable experiment prior to Ascension had been Ornette Coleman's Free Jazz of 1960. But Free Jazz had deliberately placed two quartets side-by-side and ordered the solos into a formal, structured framework that seemed to belie the project's self-conscious aim to challenge rigidity altogether. Coltrane's Ascension subverted even the precedent that Free Jazz had established.

Coltrane had, in less than a decade, transformed the jazz world's expectations of the possibilities of the tenor, even of the role of the solo per se. Now this troubled, intense man turned his attention to the possibilities of a larger group than he normally played in or led. Rather than creating a recognisable background for the musicians to express themselves, he de-contextualised and fragmented the orthodox syntactical elements of jazz, viz. tempo, rhythm and pulse, harmonic progressions and set "changes", keys and tonal centres, thus leaving the musicians to articulate their responses only to each other and not to the support that the syntax would have otherwise provided. There were certain rules, so to speak: built in to the work was a succession of solos, as well as a "juxtaposition of tonally centred ideas and atonal elements" (Archie Shepp's words in the liner notes). The solo opportunities were created to allow the musicians an unfettered dialogue with the ensemble.

The musicians were a mix of contemporary and established stars, such as Coltrane himself, Freddie Hubbard, Archie Shepp, McCoy Tyner and Elvin Jones, and emerging voices such as Marion Brown and Pharoah Sanders. Coltrane's leadership on such an unusual, unprecedented project was crucial. He alone possessed the vision and charisma necessary to push these artists to break the dichotomy between backing and solo. Individual and collective voice became one.

What's the music like? Sound, sound, sound, a vast enveloping texture of brass. Look out for Sanders' solo - it's unlike anything you've ever heard (unless you've been deep in the jungle). It might be useful to follow the order of the soloists: Coltrane (tenor sax), Dewey Johnson (trumpet), Pharoah Sanders (tenor sax), Freddie Hubbard (trumpet), Archie Shepp (tenor sax), John Tchicai (alto sax), Marion Brown (alto sax).

And what's the experience like? Played loud, it'll do something for you that might approximate what it was like for the musicians. In the words of Marion Brown, "wildly exciting."

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
Waves of music 30 Jan 2009
Format:Audio CD
This review refers to Edition Two of Ascension.

Listening to Ascension is like listening to Trout Mask Replica. Well, I suppose as Ascension came first I should actually say that listening to Trout Mask Replica (TMR) is like listening to Ascension. Never mind though. The reason I'm drawing a comparison between the two is because for the first few songs of TMR and the first five or ten minutes of Ascension I didn't really know what to make of them. Just as TMR completely changed what I thought pop music could be, Ascension changed (albeit to a lesser degree) my assumptions about jazz. Ascension starts off by blasting you in the face with alto saxophones, tenor saxophones, trumpets, bass, piano and drums all playing together in a hellish and cacophonous manner that took me completely by surprise. It's very jarring the first time you hear it, and looking up at the time left on iTunes and seeing that there's forty minutes it's quite intimidating as well. This boil of racket and noise went on for about three and a half minutes before the first solo of the piece, by Coltrane himself, came in and everyone but Elvin Jones on drums backed off (I think, I can't remember exactly) to let the great man play his beautiful music. Coltrane's solo is filled with high pitched notes, twisting runs and gratuitous amounts of genius. It manages to pull it all right back down to earth. I should mention now, before I forget, that Elvin Jones' drumming on Ascension is just incredible. He plays almost non-stop for the entire forty minutes with only one break during McCoy Tyner's brilliant piano solo. Jones' drumming is so good it puts heavy metal drummers to shame. It really is just awesome.

The entire album follows a strict structure of ensemble playing followed by solo, followed by another ensemble piece followed by another solo, etc, for the full forty minutes, though the music is anything but strict in any sense of the word. Each musician, with the exception of Jones, gets to play a solo and they had complete control of them, except that each one had to finish with a crescendo. This loud quiet loud quiet dynamic of ensemble solo ensemble solo gives the album a sense of journey, literally an ascension to some higher musical plane of existence. During the third ensemble piece it all clicked together for me, the many noises and many lines of music fitting like pieces in a puzzle, sounding like an ocean now, and whereas it was hellish before it was now whatever the opposite of that is. Of course, it still sounds completely cacophonous, like it should. Every solo sounds like a monolith on a beach, playing to the sea as the waves rush forward to drown the beach during the next ensemble piece. It is strikingly beautiful, even when it doesn't seem to make sense, when there are too many voices all playing at once to be able to hear each one individually. It is always beautiful.

I haven't read any of the other reviews here so I don't know what other people are saying, but if you are unsure whether to buy this album, defiantly like jazz, and have heard at least some other Coltrane albums, then I absolutely recommend you purchase this album. It is a masterpiece and one of the greatest albums ever written. It is intense, fiery, bombastic, puzzling, rich, epic, heavenly.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
Coltrane's ascension is considered one of the most complex and ambitious free-jazz records ever attempted. The concept of recording a 40 minute piece with not very clear separate parts (at least the first times one hears it), based on improvisation by some of the most well established new thing jazz musicians aided by some of the most promising free jazz players of that time is to say the least a bold attempt.

Yet as the amazon.co.uk reviewer pointed out correctly this work is both brilliant and flawed. Adding more info about the sessions is probably not necessary so I will comment on the effect it had on me after listening to it once, twice and finally many times. The first time I listened to it I was impressed but could not remember almost a single musical phrase, the second time I was disappointed by the musical chaos and gave up on the CD at least for a month... Until one day I gave it a few more listens and guess what, it was working. After having listened to it for quite some time I was at a point that I really appreciated what was being played here and begun to both admire and enjoy the music that ascension offered. Having both takes is great but I would suggest you first listened to only one take for quite a while and I would suggest take two for a starting point. So if you are looking for a record to really get into and already have some experience from listening to other free-jazz records, by all means, invest your money here. If you are looking for an easy listening in jazz try " A Love Supreme" (still needs some work to get into) or "Ballads" by the same artist and come back to this record later.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
out of this world
Do not buy this album if you're looking for a standard jazz album. Do not buy this album if you intend to play it to get your lady in a romantic mood. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Tom Van San
The Classic Quartet version is better & Ornette was their first
Ascension marks the beginning of Coltrane's "late phase" and it fails to convince on several grounds.

1. Read more
Published 6 months ago by Neil Mawer
Uniquely unique
This album changed everything...Miles went another way, and so did most casual jazz listeners. But it should be heard at least for historical reasons. Read more
Published 17 months ago by LesleyVipers
takes a few listens to get into
This maybe a brilliant album - I don't know. After a few initial listens and switching it off after maybe only ten of the forty minutes or so, thinking what a racket, it becomes... Read more
Published on 19 Dec 2009 by Mr. Robert Marsland
.
Now this is the Trane I wanted! I can sorta dig those early albums packed with standards, although it's more in admiration of the playing than any emotional outpourings from either... Read more
Published on 4 Oct 2007 by 77
Have they actually heard this CD?
A landmark and an uneven one. The enthusiastic reviewers below don't mention that they have not heard this CD - evidently they have warm recollections of their old LPs! Read more
Published on 9 Aug 2006 by animalimitata
Sheer courage
John Coltrane's Ascension deserves 5 stars for its sheer daring and courage in challenging virtually every idiom associated with jazz. It is the sort of the record that Wynton et. Read more
Published on 1 Jun 2006 by Mr. S. J. Jouanny
A Bold Journey into the Avant Garde
Of all the albums by John Coltrane, his 1965 "Ascension" is the one that probably divides listeners the most. Read more
Published on 1 Oct 2004 by Burjiz
Blown away.....!
This is not a record for those with a weak constitution, nor is it in any way dinner party or background music! While not being totally 'free', i.e. Read more
Published on 13 Dec 2002 by Robert Green
THE EMPEROR'S CLOTHES
There are those who will tell you that this is deep, intense, spiritual music from an inspired and profound intellect. Read more
Published on 13 Nov 2001 by A. D. Lewis
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