An engaging, deeply cerebral jazz saxophonist,
Ravi Coltrane is the son of legendary jazz icons saxophonist
John Coltrane and pianist
Alice Coltrane. He first emerged as a player in the '90s working with
Steve Coleman's M-Base, and on tour with drummer
Elvin Jones. Despite his family legacy and strong affinity for both of his parents' musical output, he has established himself as a distinctively engrossing player in his own right. Albums like 2005's
In Flux and 2012's
Spirit Fiction showcase his rich harmonic approach and warm sounds that are his own.
Born in Long Island, New York in 1965,
Coltrane is the second child of
John and
Alice Coltrane. Named after legendary Indian sitar player
Ravi Shankar,
Coltrane grew up Los Angeles where the family ultimately moved following his father's death in 1967. Under his mother's guidance, he gained a well-rounded education, developing interests in photography and filmmaking, and playing clarinet in the school band. In 1982, right before leaving high school,
Coltrane's older brother died tragically in a car accident, an event that found him going through a period of soul searching before finally rediscovering jazz and landing on the saxophone as his life's calling. He enrolled for courses at the California Institute of the Arts, where he dodged quick and easy comparisons to his father with his own assured, cerebral sense of purpose. Nonetheless, he sought out familial connections, spending summer breaks in New York City mentored by drummer
Rashied Ali, and eventually, he accepted a job, fresh out of school, with storied
Coltrane quartet drummer
Elvin Jones where he further honed his skills.
Despite his affinity for his father's music,
Coltrane was not a clone and over time established his own style of playing, with broad influences and his own approach to investigative modern creative jazz. He met saxophonist
Steve Coleman and cornetist
Graham Haynes and became a member of the M-Base consortium of artists. Signed to RCA in 1997, he issued the
Coleman-produced Moving Pictures with close associate/trumpeter
Ralph Alessi. A second album for RCA,
From the Round Box, followed in 2000 featured contributions from
Alessi again and pianist
Geri Allen. It found him covering
Thelonious Monk,
Ornette Coleman, and
Wayne Shorter while adding a pair of his own tunes. His father's influence was still evident, but nonetheless,
Coltrane proved he was working his sound out for himself.
By the time he released 2002's
Mad 6, he had firmly established himself as an ego-free and forward-thinking jazz musician with a strong musical identity influenced by, but set apart from, his father's legacy. This impression was only reinforced in 2004 as he produced and played on his mother
Alice Coltrane's album
Translinear Light, her first studio album after coming off an almost thirty-year hiatus. The following year, he issued his own
In Flux, a softly expansive quartet date with pianist
Luis Perdomo, bassist
Drew Gress, and drummer
E.J. Strickland. The album also helped him pick up his first Grammy Award nomination for Best Jazz Instrumental Solo for his performance on the track "Away." There were similarly engaging dates with trumpeters
Alessi and
Jason Palmer, pianist
Mark Soskin, and others, before the saxophonist returned with 2009's
Blending Times, which featured a guest appearance by bassist
Charlie Haden.
In 2012,
Coltrane delivered the
Joe Lovano-produced
Spirit Fiction, for which he earned his second Grammy Award nomination for Best Jazz Instrumental Solo for "Cross Roads." The following year, he began playing with guitarist
Tisziji Munoz and his various ensembles -- reprising a role he'd held in the early 2000s -- recording four albums and a live concert video through 2014. He began working in earnest with drummer
Jack DeJohnette and electronic bassist
Matthew Garrison (scion of
John Coltrane bassist
Jimmy Garrison) in a trio. Their
ECM debut
In Movement was issued in 2016, and garnered the saxophonist his third Grammy Award nomination for Best Jazz Instrumental Solo. Another
ECM album followed in 2019, Imaginary Friends, with trumpeter
Alessi. ~ Matt Collar