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John Coltrane: Evenings At The Village Gate
ByAnd sometimes the music is downright holy. Welcome to the church known as the Village Gate. Welcome to Evenings At The Village Gate: John Coltrane With Eric Dolphy.
For thirty eight years (1958-1994), on the corner of Thompson and Bleecker Streets in NYC, (as if any other city could possibly boast the same) the Village Gate presented many of our holy seekers

Jimi Hendrix
guitar, electric1942 - 1970

Nina Simone
piano and vocals1933 - 2003

Dexter Gordon
saxophone, tenor1923 - 1990

Woody Allen
clarinetb.1935

Art Blakey
drums1919 - 1990

Aretha Franklin
vocals1942 - 2018

Lee Morgan
trumpet1938 - 1972

Horace Silver
piano1928 - 2014

Blue Mitchell
trumpet1930 - 1979

Elvin Jones
drums1927 - 2004

McCoy Tyner
piano1938 - 2020

Reggie Workman
bassb.1937

Jimmy Garrison
bass, acoustic1934 - 1976
August 1961. Just three months (and an eight-minute walk) before the start of Coltrane's mind-bending, soul-searching run at the Village Vanguard that culminated in the release Coltrane Live at the Village Vanguard?(Impulse!, 1962) and expanded in 1997 with the 4CD box set The Complete 1961 Village Vanguard Recordings (Impulse!).
Recently unearthed at The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts by an archivist tracking down the work of another of our few geniuses, Bob Dylan, Evenings At The Village Gate: John Coltrane With Eric Dolphy, recorded by Village Gate recording engineer Rich Alderson as part of a test of the club's new sound system, is a scorched earth, no-holds-barred excursion into the possible. First cited by Downbeat as "a horrifying demonstration of what appears to be a growing anti-jazz trend" Coltrane and Dolphy continued on their journey fearlessly, choosing sagely to listen to their souls and not the drumbeat of naysayers.
And so we have "My Favorite Things," (which due to mainstream radio play was Coltrane's best-known release to that point) seemingly stirring into consciousness from the basement vapors of the Gate. Dolphy's bright, balletic flute spinning its way through the rhythmic propulsion, gearing up for the acrobatics to follow as Coltrane's melodically biting soprano comes screaming in full force. Jones, as ever, never lets up, giving the frontline ample tectonics to pursue what some small-mindedly labeled anti-jazz at the time.
Imagine where any of this, or any of us, would be had Coltrane, Dolphy, and company bought into the hasty criticism and let it stunt their art, their search, their liberation? Where would Dolphy's inspired bass clarinet reverie on

Benny Carter
saxophone, alto1907 - 2003
Tyner rollicks throughout "Impressions" like a kid on a downhill sled, as Workman pulls and holds, pulls and holds. As if to celebrate and introduce the then soon-to-be-released Africa/Brass (Impulse!, 1961), "Greensleeves" and the only known live recording of the exotically polyrhythmic "Africa" (with

Art Davis
bass, acoustic1934 - 2007

Wynton Marsalis
trumpetb.1961

Lakecia Benjamin
saxophone, alto
Reggie Workman
bassb.1937
Track Listing
My Favorite Things; When Lights Are Low; Impressions; Greensleeves; Africa.
Personnel
John Coltrane
saxophoneEric Dolphy
woodwindsMcCoy Tyner
pianoReggie Workman
bassArt Davis
bass, acousticElvin Jones
drumsAdditional Instrumentation
John Coltrane: soprano saxophone (1-4), tenor saxophone (5); Eric Dolphy: flute (1), bass clarinet (2-4), alto saxophone (5);
Album information
Title: Evenings At The Village Gate | Year Released: 2023 | Record Label: Impulse! Records
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