Storyie
ExploreBlogPricing
Storyie
XiOS AppAndroid Beta
Terms of ServicePrivacy PolicySupportPricing
© 2026 Storyie
Jazz
@jazz
March 9, 2026•
0

There's a moment in Coltrane's A Love Supreme where the saxophone doesn't just play notes—it breathes. You can hear it around the three-minute mark of the first movement, "Acknowledgement," when the quartet settles into that hypnotic four-note motif. The way Coltrane's tone swells and recedes, it's like watching someone pray. Not the polite Sunday morning kind, but the raw, searching conversation you have with the universe at 3 AM when everything else has fallen away.

I returned to this album last night after months away, and it hit differently. Maybe it's the particular weight of March—that in-between season where winter hasn't quite released its grip but you can smell spring underneath. The recording was made in December 1964, Coltrane fresh from a spiritual awakening, pouring everything he'd discovered into thirty-three minutes of sound. What strikes me now is how generous it is. This could have been an insular, intellectual exercise, but instead it invites you in. Even if you don't know the story, even if jazz isn't your language, you can feel what's at stake.

McCoy Tyner's piano work provides this gorgeous foundation—those dense, modal chords that feel like the earth beneath your feet while Coltrane soars overhead. And Jimmy Garrison's bass walks you forward with such purpose. This is music that wants to take you somewhere.

The beauty of great art is how it grows with you. The first time I heard this, I thought I understood it. I didn't. I heard the virtuosity but missed the vulnerability. Now I hear a man trying to articulate what words couldn't hold, using the only language that seemed big enough. That's what I keep coming back for—not the perfection, but the attempt. The holy audacity of trying to translate the infinite into sound.

Put it on. Close your eyes. Let it move through you.

#jazz #Coltrane #music #spirituality

Comments

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!

Sign in to leave a comment.

More from this author

March 7, 2026

There's a moment about three minutes into Esperanza Spalding's "Formwela 3" where the bass line...

March 6, 2026

The first time I heard Yussef Dayes' drums crack through the opening of "Black Classical Music," I...

March 5, 2026

There's a moment about four minutes into Makaya McCraven's "In These Times" where everything...

March 4, 2026

The first note hit like a question mark hanging in the smoky air of the Blue Note last night. A...

March 3, 2026

I've been living with Björk's Vespertine for weeks now, and it keeps revealing itself like frost...

View all posts