Honest Jon's
278 Portobello Road
London
W10 5TE
England

Monday-Saturday 10 till 6; Sunday 11 till 5

Honest Jon's
Unit 115
Lower Stable Street
Coal Drops Yard
London
N1C 4DR

Monday-Saturday 11 till 6; Sunday 11 till 5

+44(0)208 969 9822 mail@honestjons.com

Established 1974.

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John Coltrane

Song Of Praise, New York 1965 Revisited

Ezz-Thetics

Two dates from an extended stay at the Half Note club, March 26 — May 7, 1965; originally captured for radio broadcast, but issued by Impulse! in 2005 as One Down, One Up: Live At The Half Note.
Here it is again, with vastly improved sound, re-sequenced to culminate in the stunning saxophone-drums duet One Down, One Up.

Writing in All About Jazz, Chris May quotes Alice Coltrane, reminiscing about this period: ‘Someone in the audience would stand up, their arms upreaching, and they would be like that for an hour or more. Their clothing would be soaked with perspiration, and when they finally sat down, they practically fell down. The music just took people out of the whole material world; it lifted them up.’ And Archie Shepp, specifically about these Half Note gigs: ‘It was like being in a church. I mean, Coltrane brought something which raised this music from secular music to a religious world music.’

John Coltrane

Favorites Revisited

Ezz-Thetics

John Coltrane

Blue Train: The Complete Masters

Blue Note / Tone Poet

John Coltrane

In The Winner's Circle

Bethlehem

John Coltrane

Standard Coltrane

Prestige / Craft Jazz Essentials

John Coltrane

Afro Blue Impressions

Pablo / Craft Jazz Essentials

John Coltrane

Impressions From Graz 1962 Revisited

Ezz-Thetics

Duke Ellington And John Coltrane

Duke Ellington And John Coltrane

Impulse!

Thelonious Monk

With John Coltrane

Jazzland / Craft

Crucial music from three different 1957 sessions, originally released in 1961, after the opining emergence of Coltrane. Different lineups introduce Art Blakey, Wilbur Ware, Coleman Hawkins, Gigi Grace, Ray Copeland…
Newly all-analogue-mastered from the original tapes and presented in a tip-on sleeve with obi.

Thelonious Monk

With John Coltrane 1957 Revisited

Ezz-Thetics

Miles Davis And John Coltrane

The Final Tour: Copenhagen, March 24, 1960

Columbia

John Coltrane And Don Cherry

The Avant-Garde

Atlantic

The trumpeter in particular thriving in the strangeness of the set-up — Trane with Ornette’s band, on soprano, playing three Colemans, a Monk and a Cherry.
Superior 180g vinyl via Rhino, in mono.

John Coltrane With Eric Dolphy

Evenings At The Village Gate

Impulse!

‘In August of 1961, the John Coltrane Quintet played an engagement at the legendary Village Gate in Greenwich Village, New York. Coltrane’s Classic Quartet was not as fully established as it would soon become and there was a meteoric fifth member of Coltrane’s group those nights — visionary multi-instrumentalist Eric Dolphy. Ninety minutes of never-before-heard music from this group were recently discovered at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, offering a glimpse into a powerful musical partnership that ended much too soon. In addition to some well-known Coltrane material (My Favorite Things, Impressions, Greensleeves), there is a breathtaking feature for Dolphy’s bass clarinet on When Lights Are Low, and the only known non-studio recording of Coltrane’s composition Africa, from the Africa/Brass album. This recording represents a very special moment in John Coltrane’s journey — the summer of 1961 — when his signature, ecstatic live sound, commonly associated his Classic Quartet of ‘62 to ‘65, was first maturing. He was drawing inspiration from deep, African sources, and experimenting with doubled-up basses both in the studio (Ole) and on stage. This truly rare recording of Africa captures his expansive vision at the time.’

John Coltrane, Paul Quinichette, Frank Wess, Mal Waldron

Wheelin' And Dealin'

Prestige / Craft

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