- Say It (Over And Over Again)
- You Don't Know What Love Is
- Too Young To Go Steady
- All Or Nothing At All
- I Wish I Knew
- What's New
- It's Easy To Remember
- Nancy (With The Laughing Face)
Personnel:
John Coltrane, tenor sax
McCoy Tyner, piano
Jimmy Garrison, bass
Elvin Jones, drums
Throughout John Coltrane's
discography there are a handful of decisive and controversial albums
that split his listening camp into factions. Generally, these occur in
his later-period works such as Om and Ascension, which push into some pretty heady blowing. As a contrast, Ballads is often criticized as too easy and as too much of a compromise between Coltrane
and Impulse! (the two had just entered into the first year of label
representation). Seen as an answer to critics who found his work
complicated with too many notes and too thin a concept, Ballads has even been accused of being a record that Coltrane
didn't want to make. These conspiracy theories (and there are more)
really just get in the way of enjoying a perfectly fine album of Coltrane
doing what he always did -- exploring new avenues and modes in an
inexhaustible search for personal and artistic enlightenment. With Ballads he looks into the warmer side of things, a path he would take with both Johnny Hartman (on John Coltrane & Johnny Hartman) and with Duke Ellington (on Duke Ellington and John Coltrane). Here he lays out for McCoy Tyner
mostly, and the results positively shimmer at times. He's not
aggressive, and he's not outwardly. Instead he's introspective and at
times even predictable, but that is precisely Ballads' draw.
(By


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