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John Coltrane Album - Stellar Regions
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| Album Information : |
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Customers rating:
(32 ratings)
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Release Date:1995-10-10
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Type:Audio CD
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Genre:Avant-Garde Jazz, Jazz, Jazz Music, Pop
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Label:Grp Records
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UPC:001110501692
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Approx. Price:$14.98
(USD)
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| Track Listing : |
| 1 |
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Seraphic Light |
| 2 |
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Sun Star |
| 3 |
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Stellar Regions |
| 4 |
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Iris |
| 5 |
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Offering |
| 6 |
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Configuration |
| 7 |
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Jimmy's Mode |
| 8 |
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Tranesonic |
| 9 |
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Stellar Regions [Alternate Take] |
| 10 |
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Sun Star [Alternate Take] |
| 11 |
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Tranesonic [Alternate Take] |
Review - Amazon.com :
This set is drawn from a February 15, 1967, recording session--one of John Coltrane's last days in the studio. The tapes had been in Alice Coltrane's care since the recording, and she gave titles to the pieces, overseeing their release on CD in 1995. All are previously unreleased with the exception of "Offering" which appeared on Expression. As on that release, there's evidence here that Coltrane's relentless musical search was drawing him ever further out. The performances are shorter, focused, with a magisterial lyricism seamlessly integrated with exclamatory shrieks and cries. There is an aching, though rough-hewn, beauty to Coltrane's playing on these tracks. With the exception of "Tranesonic" where he is on alto, he plays tenor sax throughout. His command of the instrument from the very bottom of the low register to the stratospheric heights of the altissimo is staggering--note in particular his "duet" with himself on "Sun Star" where he questions and answers with himself on the extreme ranges of the horn. There's a depth and wisdom to these recordings that only further extends the Coltrane legacy. --Michael MonhartCustomer review - 2002-10-07
- a quick notei found this cd in the used bin and decided to pick it up because it was on the cheap. normally i would hesitate to buy MORE late era coltrane - i mean how much do i need, right? boy was i wrong... i loved this album from the very first time i put it on the stereo. i would recommend that this be the first late era coltrane cd that you purchase if you're not versed in abstract/avant music. why? because it's just as complex as coltrane's releases that surround it, but it's easier to get initially get into. how can that be? i mean, how can something be just as complex, yet more accessable? it's because of the feel of the record. with Ascension and Interstellar Space, the music was not only insanely complex, but also almost harsh on the ears. the volume and the (i hesitate to use the word) harshness of those records provided the listener with an additional barrier they had to break through before they could get into the record. here, that barrier is gone. the music, while complex and abstract, has a very soothing feel to it. the title is very befitting, as coltrane's notes sound as beautiful and natural as stars in the sky. his wife, alice, plays piano here, and her spacey, beautiful contribution complements the music perfectly. even when the music is impossible, the sound is always inviting. that's what i love about this - it sounds natural, beautiful and complex. for those who have been hesitating to get late era Coltrane, this is the place to start. gorgeous.
Customer review - 2004-08-25
- Stellar regions indeed...This was one of John Coltrane's last studio sessions. It is obvious here that what he had in mind in the studio was very different from what he had in mind for his live performances. The studio was a laboratory for him; he experimented constantly during recording sessions. Stellar Regions represents yet another of his studio explorations in which he stretched the neverending limits of free jazz. To be complelety honest, some of the music here is very resemblant of classical music, especially "Seraphic Light," "Iris," "Jimmy's Mode," and the title track, which is actually "Venus" from Interstellar Space, not "Stellar Regions," as Alice Coltrane mistakenly titled it when she helped put together this posthumous release.
The music on this album gives some good clues as to what sort of stuff Coltrane may have done had he lived on into the '70s: shorter pieces, longer, more developed melodies (which he briefly explored on Living Space with the classic quartet), and extensive study of different modes and harmony. Of course, he was always exploring the melodic and harmonic aspects of the music, but he never focused that much on rhythm. Toward the end of his life, he said that he wanted to experiment more with rhythm and different ways to use rhythm. Rashied Ali was the perfect drummer for that. He developed a method of playing freely but still counting in his head; it was just brilliant. The absence of Pharoah Sanders here may also be indicative of what Coltrane had in mind. Maybe he just wanted to go back to working with a quartet in the studio, while still using an expanded lineup for live performances (The Olatunji Concert, Coltrane's last recording before his death, is an amazing exploration featuring both Trane and Pharoah.. one of the greatest recordings ever made). Who knows what may have been in store for us (and him) if Trane had lived just a little bit longer. A week after Stellar Regions was recorded, Coltrane went back into the studio with only Rashied Ali to record a suite-like collection of duets honoring the cosmos. Who knows, maybe he was planning to record some solo performances.
As always, the music here is absolutely wonderful. This was a wonderful group, and it's too bad that a lot of people bailed on Trane once he started trying new things. Every solo he takes here is priceless; the same goes for the other three musicians. Also, I would like to point out an interesting thing about this album: Coltrane plays alto sax on both takes of "Tranesonic." I'm not 100% sure, since he is only listed as playing the tenor, but it definitely sounds like an alto to me. I believe another reviewer pointed this out as well. I know that he and Pharoah received complementary altos from Yamaha during their tour of Japan, and they played them at their performances there (they can be heard on the Live In Japan box set). Stellar Regions was Coltrane's next recording session after the tour, so I would assume that Trane would have wanted to use the smaller horn at least a little bit in the studio. I didn't even notice it at first, seeing as how Trane played in the high register a lot anyway, but the alto just rings differently from the tenor.
This is an amazing collection of compositions and improvisations from a master of Sound. Don't waste your money on something you won't understand, though. Only buy this if you are open to enlightenment.
Customer review - 2003-01-03
- A Gift from the Spirit of JohnThis music sat for 30 years before Alice Coltrane made it public. ... the music is such an intensely personal cry of love and pain. ... They are so tinged with beauty, grief, and compassion, they are at times unendurably poignant. ... Sometimes John was all power without poetry, and sometimes he was pure poetry verging on the sentimental ... But here he combines all his power and all is poetry. It is the gentle side of John Coltrane together with the adventurer. Here he beckons us to the final adventure into universal love and cosmic freedom. But the journey is not without terror and pain. Of all his albums (and I have 25 of them) this is my favorite.
Customer review - 2005-04-07
- One of Coltrane's Deepest !Coltrane's music was always spiritual. His sound, even in the 50's, always had that yearning, that searching quality. The searching never stopped, and in 1964, with "A Love Supreme", Coltrane added a religious content to his music, also through his song titles. That religious feeling was always universal, and in a way even Pagan - focusing on space and the cosmos.
This marvellous CD, was apparently titled by Coltrane's wife Alice, after his death. The general direction is outer space - Stellar Regions, Tranesonic, Sun Star. There is also Jimmy's Mode, a rather Bopish name, and Offering, Iris, and Configuration - earthy but spiritual.
This diversity is not reflected in the music. This is one of the most coherent albums I have ever heard. It seems Coltrane was absolutely sure of what he wanted to do at that moment in his ending life. Coltrane's sound is sharper than ever, and the urgency of it is as deep as it ever was. Going back to a quartet after a period of larger ensembles, Coltrane plays some of the more magical Tenor of his magical career.
Despite the spacy titles, this music is for me deep Earth, deeply Human, and deeply Enriching. Every human being should listen to it.
Customer review - 2001-09-18
- stars to INFINITY > Coltrane leaves it hanging very far out.I like to think of Coltrane's prestige years as a time of myth. His time with Bethlehem, Blue Note and Columbia (w/ miles) his education. His Atlantic Years as his "prime" as an entertainer and touring musician. And finally his Impulse! years as a period in time that took him from being a very spiritual artist to an absolute GOD. He seemed to get more and more far out as his life came to an end. Miles davis said (after coltrane's death) "John took it so far out and just left it there, he was the leader, nobody knows what to do with it now". allegedly starting a few months before this recording and really peaking during the sessions, John was getting haunting visions of GOD whenever he played music. He didn't know he was sick but he knew he was going to die. You can definately hear that in this music. It's amazing this stuff collected dust for so many years. I have every Coltrane Impulse! album as well as bootlegs and japanese only releases. This one is my very favorite. This is the one I go back to time and again. This album gets me higher than any herb or chemical ever has. I can not recommend it enough. If you are looking for a blown mind start here then pick up "ascension", "interstellar space", and the "village vanguard master takes". you won't be sorry.
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