A look at the dates and the label easily give the story away, for on this single disc, you are going to hear the formative
Coltrane when he was still working for
Miles Davis and
Thelonious Monk, not the spiritual visionary of the 1960s. Nevertheless, there are plenty of indications of what was to come in these sessions, as distilled from the massive 16-CD Prestige Recordings box. To cite just one of many examples where
Coltrane seems to be leaving his sidemen and the era behind, on "Come Rain or Come Shine,"
Coltrane's sheets of sound are already blazing, while the rest of the expert rhythm section and trumpeter
Donald Byrd seem stuck in the 1950s.
Trane also rips up-tempo into as unlikely a vehicle as
Irving Berlin's "Russian Lullaby," and the alternating Latin and straight-ahead grooves of the rhythm section in "Bahia" play as foils to the increasingly outside flurries of the restless leader. The gentle side of
Coltrane took shape in the 1950s as well; that wonderfully majestic yet compassionate tone can be felt in the ballad "Theme for Ernie."
Coltrane is also heard as a sideman on albums by
Mal Waldron ("The Way You Look Tonight"),
Tadd Dameron in a rare quartet setting ("On a Misty Night");
Trane sounds more clearly his own man in the latter than the former, though the recording date is earlier. There's no work with
Miles here; you can find some of that on the
Best of Miles Davis volume in this series. And there is no attempt at putting things in chronological order, in the service of better pacing. For those unable, or unwilling, to invest in the big box, this single disc will do fine as a stopgap. ~ Richard S. Ginell