Out of This World: John Coltrane in Seattle
Originally published in Earshot Jazz , April 1995 by Keith Raether Late in the morning on October 1,1965, drummer Elvin Jones was rummaging through Jan Kurtis' kitchen in Lynnwood, banging on cast iron skillets, tapping on stainless steel pans. Searching for new sound. Saxophonist John Coltrane sat quietly at the kitchen table, interrupting his inner focus only to smile at Jones or talk about song charts. Saxophonist Pharoah Sanders, pianist McCoy Tyner, bassists Jimmy Garrison and Donald Rafael Garrett — the rest of Coltrane's band on a West Coast tour that began in San Francisco — listened with purpose. Seattle saxophonist Joe Brazil completed the circle. "Coltrane seemed to be thinking about a lot of things," says Kurtis, 30 years after he recorded Coltrane's seminal Live in Seattle double album and the otherworldly Om later released on Impulse Records. "There must have been an enormous amount of music going on inside of him." Jones, meanwhile, had ...