Inevitably, certain jazz titles will be reissued over and over.
Miles Davis' seminal
Kind of Blue has been reissued many times, and you can safely assume that
A Love Supreme will continue to be a decent seller (by jazz standards) as long as it keeps getting reissued. What separates this deluxe 2002 reissue of the
John Coltrane classic from all of the previous versions that have come out over the years? For one thing, this version is a two-CD set; the previous versions were either single CDs or single LPs. While disc one offers the digitally remastered (again) contents of the original
A Love Supreme, disc two is devoted to previously unreleased material -- all of which is aimed at serious collectors. Part of disc two focuses on a July 26, 1965, appearance at the Antibes Jazz Festival in France, where
Coltrane, pianist
McCoy Tyner, bassist
Jimmy Garrison, and drummer
Elvin Jones perform
A Love Supreme's four-piece suite in its entirety. The quartet favors an inside/outside approach, and their live performances of "Acknowledgment," "Resolution," "Pursuance," and "Psalm" are more accessible than the atonal free jazz that
Coltrane provided in 1966 and 1967. The rest of disc two is devoted to studio material from December 1964, including alternate takes of "Resolution" and "Acknowledgment." Collectors will be thrilled to learn that the two "Acknowledgment" outtakes find tenor saxman
Archie Shepp and bassist
Art Davis joining
Coltrane's quartet; neither
Shepp nor
Davis are present on any of the previous
A Love Supreme reissues. Casual listeners are advised to pass on this double CD and stick to a single-CD version of
A Love Supreme -- this two-disc set is strictly for collectors and hardcore fans, and those who fit that description will no doubt find it to be fascinating. ~ Alex Henderson