Saturday, July 19, 2025

John Coltrane - 'Blue World'

 

In 1964, filmmaker Gilles Groulx and the National Film Board of Canada asked John Coltrane to record the soundtrack for a French-language film titled "Le chat dans le sac" ("The Cat in the Bag").

Gilles Groulx was a jazz lover and wanted Trane's music as the film score.  After talking, Trane and Gilles, decided that instead of original compositions, Trane would record slightly different versions of older recordings.

On June 24, 1964, Trane and his legendary classic quartet, with McCoy Tyner on piano, Jimmy Garrison on bass, and Elvin Jones on drums entered Rudy Van Gelder's studio and recorded five previously-recorded Coltrane originals.





Trane and his quartet recorded thirty-seven minutes of music, with versions that differ (often significantly) from previously issued ones.  Gilles Groulx used only 10 minutes of Coltrane’s music for 'Le chat dans le sac', but in prominent places, with an obvious touch of pride.  The film became an early touchstone for Québec cinema.

Tracklist:
01. Naima (Take 1)
02. Village Blues (Take 2)
03. Blue World
04. Village Blues (Take 1)
05. Village Blues (Take 3)
06. Like Sonny
07. Traneing In
08. Naima (Take 2)

'Blue World' was released in September 2019.  It was remastered from the original 1/4" analog mono tapes by Kevin Reeves.  The Sonics have a warm, alive, and round sound with well-defined individual instruments.

The freeload has 
24-bit/192kHz audio.

For the freeload, if you could make a film, who would you want (dead or alive) to score, and perform the soundtrack?

17 comments:

  1. Jerry Goldsmith or Bernard Herrmann.

    Gbrand

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  2. Johnny Mercer, Cole Porter, Duke Ellington, Allen Toussaint...

    hmmmm....Joey Ramone? Lucinda Williams.

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  3. Miles Davis with Gil Evans.

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  4. It's an enigmatic noire set in exotic locales, scored and performed by Monk, and since I'm fantasizing here, joining Monk are Trane, Dolphy, Mingus, and Roy Haynes with Rahsaan Roland Kirk getting a featured spot in the obligatory nightclub scene.

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  5. Hans Zimmer. Only available as movie, not as soundtrack, would make me lots of money.

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  6. I'd bring Chris Whitley to do some solo atmospherics...

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  7. Ry Cooder, Louis Armstrong, Chicano Batman.

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  8. A melange of Henry Mancini, Brian Eno & Lalo Schifrin. Don't ask me what kind of film that would be...
    Kindly regards, Mike

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  9. Bill Conti if he'll do stuff like this

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xk1ZLXzDZnQ

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  10. Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn.
    John Cage for the incidental music.

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    Replies
    1. sublime, but is any music ever incidental...

      Delete
  11. Jimi Hendrix, Don Cherry & Pharoah Sanders.

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  12. Phantom Of The Rock OperaJuly 19, 2025 at 10:57 PM

    i have to go for one of the 'experts'

    My 5 favourite soundtracks are

    1. Thomas Crown Affair (Michel Legrand)
    2. Blow Up (Herbie Hancock)
    3. Coogan's Bluff/ Bullitt / Magnum Force (Lalo Schifrin)
    4. James Bond (John Barry)
    5. The Good The Bad & The Ugly (Ennio Morricone)

    With honourable mentions to The Magnificent Seven / The Great Escape (Elmer Bernstein), Shaft (Isaac Hayes) and The Lord of The Rings And The Hobbit trilogies (Howard Shore)

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  13. Phillip Glass, George Russell, Aster Piazzolla with the screaming guitar of Robert Rodriguez throughout. Thanks Babs

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  14. Link
    https://workupload.com/file/hVjMcTtgdrb

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  15. Vangelis in the 70's

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