Coltrane frequently questioned the questions themselves, to clarify the meaning. It was obviously a very cumbersome process. Our transcription (by Chris DeVito) includes all the hesitations (rendered as “um, ah”) and other characteristics, to make the transcription as accurate as possible and to show how difficult the process was. · We may think we can learn everything we need to know about John Coltrane through his music, but Coltrane on Coltrane teaches us more. Edited by Chris DeVito, one of the authors of ’s The John Coltrane Reference, the book collects every known interview Coltrane gave, along with selected interview-based liner notes and articles and some of Coltrane’s own writings. The portrait Author: Jeff Tamarkin. · Spanning a body of work that stands with the greatest of the 20th century, this autobiographical perspective of John Coltrane reveals the quiet man behind the fiery music through interviews, liner notes, personal correspondence, and more. As complete a record as possible, this book includes every known Coltrane interview—many in new and more accurate transcriptions and several Cited by: 9.
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In Coltrane on Coltrane, Chris DeVito has compiled over 50 interviews given by John Coltrane during his career. At times, Coltrane sounds like a man trying to explain himself to himself by way of a conversation with someone else; at other times, he sounds like he is trying to make clear to others, as simply as possible, just who he is and what he is trying to do; and at other times still he seems like he is trying to understand where he is taking the music, and where the music is taking him. We may think we can learn everything we need to know about John Coltrane through his music, but Coltrane on Coltrane teaches us more. Edited by Chris DeVito, one of the authors of ’s The John Coltrane Reference, the book collects every known interview Coltrane gave, along with selected interview-based liner notes and articles and some of Coltrane’s own writings. The portrait that emerges is one of an acutely self-aware, intelligent, gracious man, given to in-depth, candid, often. Coltrane frequently questioned the questions themselves, to clarify the meaning. It was obviously a very cumbersome process. Our transcription (by Chris DeVito) includes all the hesitations (rendered as “um, ah”) and other characteristics, to make the transcription as accurate as possible and to show how difficult the process was.
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