Wayne Shorter Talks Saxophone and Saxophonists
This 1992 interview of Wayne Shorter by fellow saxophonist Mel Martin is wonderfully in-depth and revealing. Wayne talks about horns, meeting John Coltrane and Lester Young, joining Blakey and Miles and other early career highlights.
-Michael Cuscuna
Follow: Mosaic Records Facebook Tumblr Twitter
Read More
Sun Ship: The Complete Sessions: John Coltrane’s Musical Documentary
An in-depth look at this new release in The New Yorker…“The album Sun Ship captures that vast musical and moral change; the complete session documents it in action, like a sonic documentary film. It’s a treasure, a joy, and a revelation.”
Read Article… Follow: Mosaic Records Facebook Tumblr Twitter
Read More
Sun Ship: The Complete Sessions: John Coltrane’s Musical Documentary
Jimmy Garrison, After John Coltrane
Wow, a nice nod to Jimmy Garrison by Doug Ramsey, on what would have been his 79th birthday, plus a posted 1968 video of the Elvin Jones trio with Joe Farrell and Garrison. I had no idea there was any footage on this trio. A lovely discovery. I only worked with Jimmy Garrison once on an Archie Shepp album about a year before he died. For such a large talent on his instrument, he was modest and kind person.
-Michael Cuscuna
Follow: Mosaic Records Facebook Tumblr Twitter
Read MoreJohn Coltrane: Giant Steps
Wow, this is a riveting transcription of Coltrane’s “Giant Steps” that unfolds as the music is being played. It reminds me how miserably I failed at being able to sight read and how thoroughly amazed I am at what Coltrane played and at how someone could commit it to musical notation in less than ten years of time! Have fun, watch this and be amazed.
-Michael Cuscuna
Follow: Mosaic Records Facebook Tumblr Twitter
View Video
Saving the John Coltrane House in Philadelphia
This is a very cool article about Coltrane’s house in North Philly, where he lived from 1952 to ’58 when he moved to New York City. It’s gratifying to see the street named in his honor and the house declared a landmark. I lived in Philly from 1966 to ’70 and these photos remind me of what a three-story city Philadelphia was. I’m sure that’s no longer the case.
-Michael Cuscuna
Follow: Mosaic Records Facebook Tumblr Twitter
Read More
Kenny Garrett Blows Them Away on emGiant Steps/em
Doug Ramsey recounts a tale of awe on watching this video clip of Kenny Garrett’s blistering solo on the John Coltrane classic Giant Steps. It’s the kind of story you would have expected to hear about Coltrane himself. Anyone who would play Giant Steps in public, at this tempo, naturally invites such comparison. Looks like Kenny Garrett can take it.
-Nick Moy
Follow: Mosaic Records Facebook Tumblr Twitter
Read MoreSaxophone Summit: Brecker, Lovano and Liebman Play Coltrane
Everyone is on fire in this 1999 webcast of three contemporary tenor saxophonists re-igniting John Coltrane’s Locomotion. The rhythm section, Phil Markowitz, Rufus Reid and in particular, Billy Hart, nearly set off Birdland’s sprinkler system, too. Many thanks to the Jazz Video Guy, Bret Primack.
-Nick Moy
Follow: Mosaic Records Facebook Tumblr Twitter
View Video
John Coltrane’s Neighborhood: Philadelphia as Post-War Jazz Capital
All About Jazz is hosting a series of articles about the Philadelphia where John Coltrane spent his formative years. And not just Coltrane: the Heath Brothers, McCoy Tyner, Jimmy Smith, Philly Joe Jones, Benny Golson, Lee Morgan and Reggie Workman, among many others. In this article, Rob Armstrong revisits the Philadelphia local culture that, as Odean Pope asserts, harbored the most important US jazz scene between World War II and the mid 1960s.
Follow: Mosaic Records Facebook Tumblr Twitter
Read More
The Early Years of Jimmy Heath
We’ve been relating in the Gazette the resurgent interest in John Coltrane’s formative years in Philadelphia. Another distnguished musical citizen of that City was saxoophonist and composer Jimmy Heath. In this 2009 JazzWax interview, Marc Myers adroitly elicits Jimmy Heath’s impressions of the jazz world in the late 1940s — especially his first foray into Dizzy Gillespie’s world, from the eyes of youth — albeit highly talented youth.
-Nick Moy
Follow: Mosaic Records Facebook Tumblr Twitter
Read More
John Coltrane Slept Here: Preserving His Home in Philadelphia
This All About Jazz column involves the preservation of the house in which John Coltrane lived from 1952 to ’58 in Philadelphia, where he was raised. Philly is only 90 minutes from New York City, but it seems worlds away. It’s a more provincial, insular community than Manhattan, which may be why all the great jazz musicians that it generated, including Coltrane, Lee Morgan, Benny Golson, Ray Bryant, the Heath brothers and dozens more left Philly to make their mark on the world.
-Michael Cuscuna
Follow: Mosaic Records Facebook Tumblr Twitter
Read More


















