Qobuz Store wallpaper
Categories:
Cart 0

Your cart is empty

John Coltrane|Transition

Transition

John Coltrane

Available in
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo

Unlimited Streaming

Listen to this album in high quality now on our apps

Start my trial period and start listening to this album

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Subscribe

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Digital Download

Purchase and download this album in a wide variety of formats depending on your needs.

Recorded in June of 1965 and released posthumously in 1970, Transition acts as a neat perforation mark between Coltrane's classic quartet and the cosmic explorations that would follow until Trane's passing in 1967. Recorded seven months after the standard-setting A Love Supreme, Transition's first half bears much in common with that groundbreaking set. Spiritually reaching and burningly intense, the quartet is playing at full steam, but still shy of the total free exploration that would follow mere months later on records like Sun Ship and the mystical atonal darkness that came in the fall of that same year with Om. McCoy Tyner's gloriously roaming piano chord clusters add depth and counterpoint to Coltrane's ferocious lyrical runs on the five-part suite that makes up the album's second half. In particular on "Peace and After," Tyner matches Trane's range of expression. The angelically floating "Dear Lord," a meditative pause in the album's center, holds true to the straddling of the line between modes of thinking and playing that define Transition, not quite as staid as the balladry of Trane's earlier hard bop days, but nowhere near the lucid dreaming that followed. Only nearing the end of "Vigil" does the quartet hint at the fury of complete freedom it would achieve later in the year on Sun Ship, or even more, provide a precursory look at terrain Coltrane would explore in duets with drummer Rashied Ali on Interstellar Space in 1967. [The omission of "Dear Lord” on some issues is replaced with the similarly subtle "Welcome" and still other issues include bonus album closer "Vigil"]
© Fred Thomas /TiVo

More info

Transition

John Coltrane

launch qobuz app I already downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS Open

download qobuz app I have not downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS yet Download the Qobuz app

You are currently listening to samples.

Listen to over 100 million songs with an unlimited streaming plan.

Listen to this playlist and more than 100 million songs with our unlimited streaming plans.

From $16.65/month

1
Transition (Album Version)
00:15:31

John Coltrane, Composer, Producer, Tenor Saxophone, MainArtist, AssociatedPerformer - Rudy Van Gelder, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Jimmy Garrison, Upright Bass, AssociatedPerformer - McCoy Tyner, Piano, AssociatedPerformer - Bob Thiele, Producer - Roy Haynes, Drums, AssociatedPerformer

℗ 1970 The Verve Music Group, a Division of UMG Recordings, Inc.

2
Dear Lord (Album Version)
00:05:36

John Coltrane, Composer, Producer, Tenor Saxophone, MainArtist, AssociatedPerformer - Rudy Van Gelder, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Jimmy Garrison, Upright Bass, AssociatedPerformer - McCoy Tyner, Piano, AssociatedPerformer - Bob Thiele, Producer - Roy Haynes, Drums, AssociatedPerformer

℗ 1970 The Verve Music Group, a Division of UMG Recordings, Inc.

3
Suite (Album Version)
00:21:19

John Coltrane, Producer, Tenor Saxophone, MainArtist, AssociatedPerformer, ComposerLyricist - Rudy Van Gelder, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Jimmy Garrison, Upright Bass, AssociatedPerformer - McCoy Tyner, Piano, AssociatedPerformer - Bob Thiele, Producer - Roy Haynes, Drums, AssociatedPerformer

℗ 1970 The Verve Music Group, a Division of UMG Recordings, Inc.

Album review

Recorded in June of 1965 and released posthumously in 1970, Transition acts as a neat perforation mark between Coltrane's classic quartet and the cosmic explorations that would follow until Trane's passing in 1967. Recorded seven months after the standard-setting A Love Supreme, Transition's first half bears much in common with that groundbreaking set. Spiritually reaching and burningly intense, the quartet is playing at full steam, but still shy of the total free exploration that would follow mere months later on records like Sun Ship and the mystical atonal darkness that came in the fall of that same year with Om. McCoy Tyner's gloriously roaming piano chord clusters add depth and counterpoint to Coltrane's ferocious lyrical runs on the five-part suite that makes up the album's second half. In particular on "Peace and After," Tyner matches Trane's range of expression. The angelically floating "Dear Lord," a meditative pause in the album's center, holds true to the straddling of the line between modes of thinking and playing that define Transition, not quite as staid as the balladry of Trane's earlier hard bop days, but nowhere near the lucid dreaming that followed. Only nearing the end of "Vigil" does the quartet hint at the fury of complete freedom it would achieve later in the year on Sun Ship, or even more, provide a precursory look at terrain Coltrane would explore in duets with drummer Rashied Ali on Interstellar Space in 1967. [The omission of "Dear Lord” on some issues is replaced with the similarly subtle "Welcome" and still other issues include bonus album closer "Vigil"]
© Fred Thomas /TiVo

About the album

Improve album information

Qobuz logo Why buy on Qobuz...

On sale now...

Money For Nothing

Dire Straits

Money For Nothing Dire Straits

The Studio Albums 2009 – 2018

Mark Knopfler

Brothers In Arms

Dire Straits

Brothers In Arms Dire Straits

Live 1978 - 1992

Dire Straits

Live 1978 - 1992 Dire Straits
More on Qobuz
By John Coltrane

Blue Train

John Coltrane

Blue Train John Coltrane

Giant Steps (60th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition)

John Coltrane

John Coltrane and Johnny Hartman

John Coltrane

A Love Supreme

John Coltrane

A Love Supreme John Coltrane

Evenings At The Village Gate: John Coltrane with Eric Dolphy

John Coltrane

Playlists

You may also like...

Getz/Gilberto

Stan Getz

Getz/Gilberto Stan Getz

The Köln Concert (Live at the Opera, Köln, 1975)

Keith Jarrett

Kind Of Blue

Miles Davis

Kind Of Blue Miles Davis

The Carnegie Hall Concert

Alice Coltrane

The Carnegie Hall Concert Alice Coltrane

We Get Requests

Oscar Peterson

We Get Requests Oscar Peterson