On Coltrane
Just before I began to study with Dennis Sandole in Philadelphia in the mid seventies, a great part of my anticipatory thrill was knowing that John Coltrane had been a former student. Dennis seldom talked about Coltrane to me, but when he did it was with certain pride and a big smile. In one anecdote I remember, Dennis described attending a show at a Philadelphia club where Trane's band was booked. According to Dennis, when Trane, who was on stage playing, saw him come into the club, he immediately began to quote some of what Dennis typically referred to as "my literature" (his students will remember the use of this term, and the accompanying gleam in the Maestro's eye). I can believe this, too, because the only player I've ever heard who really sounded like he completely absorbed what Sandole had to teach was Coltrane.
Outside of that incidental connection, Coltrane has had, and continues to have, a powerful influence on me.
I fell in love with the guitar in 1968 when I heard the sounds of the "British Invasion" players, all playing electric guitars through cranked up amplifiers. There was a very expressive vocal quality to those sounds, a result of the way the amp allowed the notes to sustain and the way a light gauge string could be shaken and bent and made to scoop into notes, yielding a sound more like a saxophone or a cello than an acoustic guitar.
I fell in love with jazz in 1974 when I heard the sound of John Coltrane's saxophone playing. I had listened to quite a lot of jazz players by then, but there was an unrelenting power in Trane's playing that drew me in deeper, and led to a lifetime commitment to learning and listening to jazz.
I realize now these two epiphanies of mine are connected by the expressive power of the human voice and the capacity of melody to "light up" the musical mind. Learning to produce those sounds and listening to Coltrane turned out to be two peak experiences for me on my music making journey.
In listening to the whole breadth of his work, it's clear that by 1964 (perhaps my favorite year of Coltrane's), his approach sounded increasingly more "vocal;" his playing regularly included a more blues-based vocal-like shout; and he was clearly interested in reclaiming some of the early blues and spiritual roots of jazz. He also seemed to want his playing to express a struggle or a striving, much like many blues guitar players, though unlike many other jazz players who seemed to aim for more of an effortless sounding, controlled virtuosity. I know that Trane's approach spoke to me, and ultimately led to my refusal to give up the sound of an electric guitar through a cranked up amp, in spite of all my efforts to embrace a more traditional jazz guitar tone (still through an amp but without the distortion that comes from cranking it up).
For a while I came to feel that jazz and the traditional sounds of jazz guitar were like my second musical language. I had started out with the language and the sound of blues and rock guitar, and in a way, for me, jazz and most jazz players' sounds felt like an adopted tongue. But eventually I came to feel that the style of music was less important than the feeling of having a natural, expressive power as a player. Coltrane has often been a great reminder of that: In both of those epiphanies I had fallen in love with the way instruments can imitate the human voice, and to this day the blues and rock sounds of the electric guitar feel like my most natural, expressive tools for making music.
Click below on the link below for the chart for my guitar arrangement of NAIMA
NAIMA by John Coltrane,
arrangement by Jon Herington
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(MORE!) ARRANGEMENTS FOR GUITAR
When I decided to release my first book of arrangements for solo guitar a few years ago, I spent time collecting and revising a lot of work I had done over 30 years earlier, as a student of my one great guitar teacher, the late Harry Leahey. Back when I was studying with him, each week, with an ever increasing line of students waiting outside his music room, Harry would spend more and more extra time with me, clearly enjoying our little discoveries as we’d compare notes in our mutual love for the challenges and rewards of arranging music for solo jazz guitar.
Putting that first book together renewed my appetite for this style of guitar arranging and playing, and I found myself inspired to do more. This second volume is the result of that inspiration.
This collection of 14 songs includes standard notation for guitar coupled with tablature.
Django * When You Wish Upon A Star * Duke Ellington's Sound Of Love * For All We Know * Everything Happens To Me * Betcha By Golly Wow * In The Wee Small Hours Of The Morning * Maxine * Spring Is Here * Sophisticated Lady * Never Let Me Go * This Nearly Was Mine * We'll Be Together Again * Bess You Is My Woman
(MORE!) ARRANGEMENTS FOR GUITAR is available only in the JON HERINGTON ONLINE STORE