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Chasin the Trane

Front Cover
6 Reviews
Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, Jun 6, 2012 - Biography & Autobiography - 252 pages
He was always elusive, on and off the stand; like his music, he was constantly moving, incessantly changing. Just as Charlie Parker stood astride the jazz world of the late 40s and 50s, so did John Coltrane in the late 50s and 60s.

Trane was a giant of the saxophone and a major composer.  His music also influenced rock and classical musicians, such as Roger McGuinn and David Amram. Yet he was more than a musician; there was a mystical quality, a profound melancholy that emanated from this quiet, self-contained man and moved listeners, some of whom knew little of music but heard something beyond music’s boundaries from the sounds his saxophone created. Many even had their lives changed as a result.

J. C. Thomas traces John Coltrane’s life and career from his North Carolina childhood through his apprenticeship under Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonious Monk, and Miles Davis, culminating in the saxophonist’s classic quartet that played to steadily increasing audiences throughout America, England, and Japan.

The author has drawn on the recollections of those who knew Coltrane best—boyhood friends, band members like Elvin Jones, spiritual mentors like Ravi Shankar, and the women who loved him. Chasin’ The Trane is the story of a man who struggled against drug addiction, studied African and Eastern music and philosophy, admired Einstein’s expanding universe and the shimmering sounds a harp makes, and left behind the enduring legacy of a master musician who was also a beautiful man.

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Review: Coltrane: Chasin' the Trane

User Review  - Heshima - Goodreads

This book, helped introduce me to the personality of the man who's music I loved for ever!. I have read it several times. To hear the insight of those who knew him, lived with him, loved him, and worked with him is invaluable!. Read full review

Review: Coltrane: Chasin' the Trane

User Review  - doug bowman - Goodreads

I keep a poster of Coltrane in my classroom for inspiration. Other books have discussed Coltrane's musical importance, which is not minimal, but this book goes more in to the nature of his spiritual journeying and how he affected those people whom he came into contact with. Read full review

All 6 reviews »

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About the author (2012)

J. C. Thomas, a kinsman of Welsh poet Dylan Thomas, makes his home in Manhattan, where he writes for the New York Times, Down Beat, Village Voice, and hosts a weekly show, “Talking with Thomas,” over TelePrompter Cable TV.

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