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Ascension

Remastered

4.0 4.0 out of 5 stars 46 ratings

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Audio CD, Original recording remastered, June 6, 2000
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Track Listings

1 Ascension-Edition II - John Coltrane
2 Ascension-Edition I - John Coltrane

Editorial Reviews

Product Description

Trane is joined by Pharoah Sanders, Freddie Hubbard and four (!) other horn players for an explosion of fiery solos and free improvisation on this famous 1965 session.

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Few works remain genuinely controversial 35 years after their inception, but Ascension can generate as mixed a response today as it did when it was released. In May 1965, Coltrane assembled 10 other musicians for one of his most ambitious recordings, a 40- minute piece that was a landmark in the free-jazz movement and a key moment in Coltrane's sponsorship of the younger members of the New York avant-garde. Along with his regular rhythm section--McCoy Tyner, Jimmy Garrison, and Elvin Jones--the band includes trumpeters Dewey Johnson and Freddie Hubbard, tenor saxophonists Archie Shepp and Pharoah Sanders, altoists Marion Brown and John Tchicai, and Art Davis playing bowed bass. The improvised ensembles shout and cry with galvanizing power, their tension testifying to Coltrane's influence and the saxophone's dominance in the style. It's both brilliant and flawed work, however, in ways that go to the heart of Coltrane's musical thought. It's rooted in modal music, with a brief pentatonic figure (a variation on the opening motif of A Love Supreme) as its basis. While it's broken up by the intense ensembles, the string of solos seems too close to a Jazz at the Philharmonic approach to free jazz. The horns stretch toward energy music, while the rhythm section, particularly Tyner, seems rooted in modality. As a result, the soloists often come off the soaring blowouts to find themselves with little more support than a reiterated chord, and they sometimes seem to merely run out of steam. It's still startling music, though, and necessary listening, whether for the sheer power of the ensembles, the sustained creativity of Coltrane and Sanders, the stylistic contrasts in the horn players, or the acerbic understatement of Tchicai, so effective in the midst of the maelstrom. Coltrane couldn't decide on which of the two versions he preferred, and Edition II was covertly substituted for Edition I during the run of the original LP. This CD manages to include both. --Stuart Broomer

Product details

  • Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 1.18 x 8.27 x 8.27 inches; 3.45 ounces
  • Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ Polygram Records
  • Item model number ‏ : ‎ 731454341325
  • Date First Available ‏ : ‎ December 7, 2006
  • Label ‏ : ‎ Polygram Records
  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00004TA40
  • Number of discs ‏ : ‎ 1
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.0 4.0 out of 5 stars 46 ratings

Customer reviews

4 out of 5 stars
46 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on January 10, 2010
Unbelieveable... Play this Lp in an enclosed room at full volume (as far as you can go) on a decent turntable set up with a tube amp. You will never experience music like this again and you will question "just how powerful is heroin?" Play the Lp 100 times and you will notice something different each and every time.
3 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on March 21, 2024
I first listened to Coltrane at the recommendation of my local record shop guy in 1981, after I told him that I listened to all kinds of rock, especially progressive rock like Mike Oldfield. He pulled out A Love Supreme from the stack and recommended to me. Immediately I fell in love with the record. From there I went into all of his great albums but did not have the guts to listen to this one because the Japanese Jazz media back then was trashing it. I left it at that for sometime and started appreciating Ornette Coleman and electric Miles after Bitches Brew. It took me 20 years up to that point from my first listen to Coltrane, and finally I listened to this. I did not like it at all. My listening was limited to a Sony Walkman combined with a somewhat upscale pair of ear pieces then. Then a decade or so later, I started appreciating audiophile equipment which allowed me to play music with loud speakers. That was when I realized how great, exciting and beautiful this album was. Like a former reviewer recommended, this music is meant to be played with a good set of speakers turned up loud. It's beautiful.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 30, 2002
Im sorry, I love Trane and really enjoy live at the viilage vanguard, a love supreme, etc. I like the three Ornette Coleman albums I own. But this is nonsense. An experiment of making noise and see if something interesting happens. Put some little kids in a room with musical instruments and ask them to play as loud as they can and it probably sounds pretty close to this. Maybe that is art for some people, but please, at least listen to the sound clips in amazon before you buy this album, you'll get the idea.
9 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on October 26, 2008
I'm not a complete stranger to experimental music whether its prog-rock sojourns, free jazz explorations or psycedelic freak outs, but Ascension remains one of the most challenging listens in my collection.
I have to admit it took me at least half a dozen tries before I made it through the whole thing. My previous experience with Coltrane was with the spiritually and musically ecstatic album A Love Supreme, and his magnificent collaboration with Duke Ellington, but with this one Coltrane fled into the outer reaches and dared anyone brave enough to follow.
There's something bold, brash and perhaps a bit foolish about this one, like setting off fireworks in a phone booth. (Remember phone booths kiddies?) It's nearly pure cocophony, but every so often something coalesces and becomes musically tangible. Here and there a riff, a groove or a melody floats up out of the frenzy and is quickly consumed once again. You're either going to find something wonderful in the daring and raw energy or this work, or you're going to think it's utter junk, nothing more then a bunch of musicians having a blind free for all.
For my part I'm still getting to know this album, but I find there's something in the talent and tenacity of the musicians that just barely holds this mad beast together. It's a rare occasion that I listen to it, but always find myself a little bit better for it, each time I do.
4 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on July 18, 2007
After A Love Supreme, Coltrane took his music in a new, controversial direction: the avant-garde. Up until then, he was a widely respected figure in jazz, but Ascension marked the point where he fully moved into free jazz, never looking back, with total disregard to what his fans would think. Ascension is arguably his most challenging work in the avant-garde, if just for the sheer length of the composition: both takes run either close to or over forty minutes. This is not an instant gratification album, as several of Coltrane's earlier albums (Blue Train; Giant Steps; My Favorite Things; A Love Supreme; etc.) had been. It takes a couple of listens to assimilate, I'll grant: the first time I heard it, I liked it, but that liking was more out of respect to the creative, daring nature of the music than actual enjoyment. In plain English, I thought it was just noise. But what noise!
This is one powerful album, that's for sure. The closest thing to a traditional "chorus" is three tenor saxes (including Pharaoh Sanders), two alto saxes and two trumpet players blasting away. And that's about all the traditional structure you'll hear on the song. It's screaming to be mocked, yes, but the level of emotion and intensity put into this piece is very much what makes it work. I'm a big fan of soulful music (and "soul" music, the offshoot of R&B, but that's off-topic), and Coltrane and his group put all his soul into recording this. The original liner notes described it as "strong stuff", and indeed that's accurate. Excellently performed, too: there is not a single wasted note in any of the numerous solos. On the contrary, this is some of the best playing I've ever heard the group do, especially the wonderful piano playing McCoy Tyner (incredibly talented guy!) contributes near the end. And the use of two basses does not muddle the sound, as I have found multiple basslines often do: rather, it adds to the wonderful pseudo-cacophony that is this album. Oh, and the "bass duet" near the end is amazing.
To be honest, I'm not quite sure which take of the two I prefer, but I think the drum solo on the slightly shorter "Edition 1" adds a lot to the music's power. Originally, Coltrane released one take of Ascension (don't know which), then changed his mind and put out the second. Both are essential additions to Coltrane's catalog. Both are found here. Do not make this your first Coltrane purchase, though: Try A Love Supreme, Giant Steps, Blue Trane, Village Vanguard or My Favorite Things first, as they make for a much more user-friendly introduction to the man. But please, give this a chance. You may love it, you may hate it, but it should be listened to just once either way.
For the record, while Ascension on its own is a highly recommended release, if you can find the double-album Major Works of John Coltrane (which contains both takes of Ascension, as well as other key free-jazz items Om, Kulu Se Mama and Selflessness), buy that instead. Not to detract from the music here though, which is excellent.
Those interested in Coltrane's avant-garde period should also try Meditations; Sun Ship, Stellar Regions and the oddly restrained, but still quite avant-garde Expression, an interesting alternate look at the free-jazz genre and Coltrane's last recorded work. All are of a very high quality, very recommendable for those who enjoy the avant-garde sound of later John Coltrane, arguably the best and most controversial musician to ever work in the jazz genre.
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R. Bawden jazz fan
5.0 out of 5 stars ...and now for something completely different!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on November 4, 2014
Although I give this album five stars it doesn't mean that I play it often. I have had it more than ten years yet have played only perhaps a dozen times. It's that sort of music. With both of the two "takes" on one album (both were released independently because Coltrane couldn't decide which version he preferred) and each lasting continuously about forty minutes it is an endurance test. This certainly isn't "dinner jazz", nor even to do the housework to. It needs attention.
The concept of forty minutes of essentially free form music is in itself unusual and daunting. Ornette Coleman had produced a similar concept album several years earlier, incidentally with some of the same musicians. (I prefer Coleman's album).
The structure is different from Coleman's (who had two quartets playing along side each other) but otherwise there is a great deal of similarlty. This seems to oscillate between group improvisations (the group having eleven musicians) and solo passages.
Listeners will have to decide whether this is a cacophony (I have read reports that some of the musicians really didn't have a clue what they were to do) or whether this is music making at the highest level for themselves.
It is not music to be dismissed; it is challenging and certainly has sections that work, but I think that it doesn't work fully for forty minutes.
Historically interesting.
Wolfgang Herrmann
5.0 out of 5 stars Ein riesiger und rätselhafter Obelisk in der Landschaft des Freejazz
Reviewed in Germany on February 11, 2009
Ob man John Coltranes «Ascension», das (bis auf den zweiten Aufnahmetake) niemals wiederholt und nie öffentlich aufgeführt wurde, als ein Musikstück ansehen soll, ist eine durchaus offene Frage. Dem Rezensenten erscheint es eher als ein für die Nachwelt gut dokumentiertes spirituelles Ereignis. Das digitale Remastering hat sich hier wirklich gelohnt, manche klanglichen Schärfen sind abgemildert, auch an den dynamischen Höhepunkten bleibt das dichte Stimmgewebe durchhörbar und man hört jetzt tatsächlich gelegentlich die Schreie, von denen der Saxophonist Marion Brown gesprochen hatte (Joachim Ernst Berendt hatte «Ascension» mal als 40-minütigen Orgasmus bezeichnet, na ja ...). Es ist eine reine Freude, das Stück mehrfach anzuhören - wonach ein jedes Meisterwerk der Musik verlangt -, denn unglaublich viel gibt es darin zu entdecken!
Schon der Beginn, der majestätische Aufstieg des (einzigen) Themas, das offenbar aus dem Hauptmotiv von «A Love Supreme» abgeleitet ist, aber im Unterschied dazu nicht nach horizontaler Entwicklung sondern gleichsam in die Höhe drängt, ist bemerkenswert, denn die Instrumente setzen wie im Kanon nacheinander ein und fast gleichzeitig sind abwärts fallende Skalen zu hören, als ob (wie bei der biblischen Jakobsleiter) aufsteigende und absteigende Bewegung einander durchdringen würden. Je öfter man dem Stück lauscht, desto klarer werden die Struktur der Großform, die fein abgestimmte Dramaturgie von kollektiven Improvisationen und solistischen Episoden, sowie die vielen überraschenden harmonischen Modulationen, die das auseinander driftende Kollektiv wieder auf ein tonales Zentrum ausrichten (bei 20:45 in Ed. II hört man ansatzweise einen richtigen Choral!).
Überhaupt gibt es viel mehr tonale und klassische Elemente in diesem Werk als man meinen sollte. So gewinnt das tierhaft fauchende Solo von Pharoah Sanders seine Wirkung erst vor dem Hintergrund der Rhythmusgruppe, die Sanders' hochexpressiven Klänge auf durchaus klassisch zahme Art begleitet. McCoy Tyner, der sich ohnehin seit «A Love Supreme» innerhalb des Quartetts mehr und mehr zurückgezogen hatte, wagt sich am Piano auch nicht ansatzweise so weit vor wie etwa sein Zeitgenosse Cecil Taylor sondern spielt im Hintergrund einfache Bluesakkorde, als ruhenden Pol gewissermaßen. Tyners Solo ist interessant, erinnert aber eher an Debussys impressionistische Klavierstücke als an Freejazz. Am meisten atonal wirkt noch das inspirierte Duett der beiden Bassisten. Elvin Jones, der immerhin sieben Bläser gegen sich hat, bringt eine beachtliche Energie auf sich durchzusetzen und webt unverdrossen, wie schon jeher im klassischen Quartett, seine polyrhythmischen Muster.
Nicht dass es keine wirklich «chaotischen» Elemente in den ungeheuer dichten kollektiven Improvisationen gäbe! Die ständig wechselnde Mischung der individuellen Klangfarben ist atemberaubend: die schnatternde Trompete von Freddie Hubbard, die traurigen Vierteltöne von Archie Shepp, John Tchicais asthmatisches Hüsteln usw. Auf manche Hörer mag das gewiss verstörend wirken, der Rezensent jedoch hört darin eine unwiderstehliche Fröhlichkeit und wird an die «Guggemusig» der alemannischen Fasnet erinnert. Eine übermütig heitere Himmelfahrt ist das! Und bleibt immer noch rätselhaft, auch nach über 40 Jahren...
Am Ende, wenn das erhabene Hauptthema ganz in der Art einer klassischen Reprise zurückkehrt und bedeutungsvoll in den Bässen verklingt, ist dem Rezensenten klar: Dieses Werk wurde nicht für menschliche Ohren geschaffen, es ist auf seine eigene Art - ein Lobpreis Gottes.
RAB
5.0 out of 5 stars AScension John Coltrane
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 18, 2014
A very, very good Cd and I am enjoying it very much , Would recommend it to anyone as it is lovely. Postage and packing was great as usual!
dave lambert
4.0 out of 5 stars Four Stars
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 3, 2016
not as difficult to get into as some others had suggested it would be