John Coltrane

Farewell Tour with Miles Davis in Europe

John Coltrane had already decided to leave Miles Davis when he reluctantly agreed to make a 22-city European tour with the trumpeter in the spring of 1960. Davis’s quintet was part of a Jazz at the Philharmonic package presented by Norman Granz. The tour began in Paris on March 21 and lasted till early May. The bill also included the Oscar Peterson Trio and the Stan Getz Quartet. Here’s Trane and Getz with Peterson, Paul Chambers, and Jimmy Cobb playing “Hackensack.”

In Miles: The Autobiography, Davis said, “Trane didn’t want to make the European trip and was ready to move out before we left. One night I got a telephone call from this new tenor on the scene named Wayne Shorter, telling me that Trane told him that I needed a tenor saxophonist and that Trane was recommending him. I was shocked. I started to hang up and then I said, ‘If I need a saxophone player I’ll get one!’ And then I hung up. BLAM! So when I saw Trane I told him, ‘Don’t be telling nobody to call me like that, and if you want to quit then just quit, but why don’t you do it after we get back from Europe’?”

Miles added, “If he had quit right then he would have really hung me up because nobody else knew the songs, and this tour was real important. He decided to go with us, but he grumbled and complained and sat by himself all the time we were over there. He gave me notice that he would be leaving the group when we got home. But before he quit, I gave him [a] soprano saxophone…and he started playing it. I could already hear the effect it would have on his tenor saxophone playing, how it would revolutionize it. I always joked with him that if he had stayed home and not come with us on this trip, he wouldn’t have gotten that soprano saxophone, so he was in debt to me for as long as he lived. Man, he used to laugh until he cried about that, and then I would say, ‘Trane, I’m serious.’ And he’d hug me real hard and just keep saying, ‘Miles, you’re right about that.’ But this was later, when he had his own group and they was killing everybody with their shit.”

Miles could also have made the broader claim of having brought Coltrane out of obscurity five years earlier. They were the same age, born in 1926, but where Miles was a presence in the bands of Coleman Hawkins and Charlie Parker before his 20th birthday, Coltrane was nearly 30 before he played his first significant solo on record. Who knows what would have become of Trane had Sonny Rollins accepted the job that Miles initially offered him? Rollins was Miles’s man, a mature stylist at 25 and a player who’d already appeared on three Davis dates, and one more after Coltrane was hired. But Rollins was recovering from heroin addiction and wanted to take a break from the New York scene, which he eventually did by moving to Chicago and that’s where Max Roach and Clifford Brown looked him up and recruited him for their quintet.

Davis had first met Coltrane in 1947 at a jam session at the Audubon Ballroom in Harlem that the 17-year-old Rollins also made. But it was largely on the recommendation of Red Garland and Philly Joe Jones that Miles followed up eight years later with the offer that proved to be the most important stepping stone of Coltrane’s career. Trane had gained little notice in the bands of Eddie “Cleanhead” Vinson (where he first worked with Garland), Dizzy Gillespie, Earl Bostic, and Johnny Hodges, and he was back in Philadelphia working with Jimmy Smith in 1955. At the time, Smith was emerging as the modern master of the Hammond organ, but his music offered a different and less demanding challenge than Davis’s for a front line player like Coltrane. In a more essential way than would have been the case with Gillespie, Hodges, or Smith, Miles’s music required Trane to play solos on a par with the iconic trumpeter, who was one of the most creative improvisers in modern jazz, and a player who followed his solos not only by leaving the stage, but with the emotional charge of the tune in the balance. Coltrane matured quickly under Miles’s leadership.

The quintet’s concert in Stockholm has circulated for years as a bootleg and is now available in its entirety on YouTube.

According to Granz’s biographer Tad Hershorn, there was additional friction between Miles and Trane on the tour over money. “Granz offered to supplement what Davis paid him to increase his pay to a thousand a week,” Hershorn writes in Norman Granz, The Man Who Used Jazz for Justice. He quotes a conversation in which Granz told journalist John McDonough,”He got $1,000 a week from me. Now that’s the story. Miles was getting enough to pay him, but he wouldn’t pay him any more.”

Davis’s biographer Ian Carr reports that there was “savage controversy over Coltrane in Germany and France…and at one major concert in Germany, when Coltrane was booed, Miles had angrily stopped the music and taken his group offstage.” Such behavior by Miles would have infuriated the autocratic Granz, and Hershorn says he “bit his lip…when Davis decided at the last minute not to play on three half-hour shows that Granz had negotiated with German television.”

Carr’s 1982 biography, Miles Davis, reports that Granz was “furiously angry when he tried to set up a jam session involving Coltrane and Stan Getz for a television program, and Trane had the audacity to refuse to do it.” While the YouTube clip above reveals that at least one “jam session” took place before television cameras, Carr writes insightfully about the cultural shift that Miles and Trane then epitomized in jazz. “Given the direction and development of Coltrane and Miles since 1955, it should have been obvious that neither of them would want to indulge in this kind of activity. Their battle was not an external one with other instrumentalists, but an internal affair against old, received ideas and old habits of thought.”

Coltrane went ahead and made a television appearance with Davis’s rhythm section of Wynton Kelly, Paul Chambers, and Jimmy Cobb. The trio had backed Trane on his November/December 1959 sessions that produced “Naima” and seven other titles that appeared on the Atlantic album, Coltrane Jazz, and they’d backed Cannonball Adderley and Coltrane on The Cannonball Adderley Quintet In Chicago. This excerpt includes the Davis classics, “Walkin’” and “The Theme.”

Why Miles laid out is open to speculation. Maybe it was his dismay with the German audience’s hostility toward Coltrane, a personal gripe with Granz, or his own lack of interest in jamming with Peterson and Getz. Or maybe he just didn’t want this last tour with Trane framed and fossilized by a German TV studio. Like everyone else he ever knew, Miles had mercurial feelings about Coltrane, but he conveyed a great deal of respect and tenderness for the man in his memoir and in interviews. Along with Charlie Parker, Coltrane was Miles’s truest peer as an artist, and Trane’s personal demons were ones Miles also knew, and their commonality elicited some of Davis’s most empathic reflections. “He used to tell me that he had messed up enough, had wasted too much time and not given enough attention to his own personal life, his family, and most of all to his playing.” After returning from Europe, the quintet played a concert in Philadelphia that Carr says brought Miles close to tears. “He went to the microphone and made a brief announcement about the saxophonists’s imminent departure from the group,” Carr wrote. “And as Jimmy Cobb said, ‘He never talks with nobody about nothing, so you know, he really must have felt something for Coltrane’.”

Jackie McLean said of his formative experience with Charles Mingus, “He gave me my exploration papers.” Miles did the same for numerous musicians, perhaps none more than Coltrane. It was Miles who heard something intrinsically true to John when he bought him the soprano saxophone at an antiques shop in Paris. Davis later observed, “[Coltrane] found he could also think and hear better with the soprano than he could with the tenor. When he played the soprano, after awhile it sounded almost like a human voice, wailing.” Miles’s prescience was confirmed only a few months later, on October 20, 1960, when Trane recorded “My Favorite Things,” a record he described to Francois Postif in a 1961 interview that appears in Coltrane on Coltrane, as “My favorite piece of everything we’ve recorded. I don’t think I’d like to redo it in any other way, although all the other records I’ve done could be improved by a few details.”

As for Miles’s impact on him, Coltrane told Postif, “I stayed in obscurity for a long time, because I was happy to play what was expected of me, without trying to add anything. I saw so many guys get fired from bands because they tried new things that I was somewhat disgusted to try anything else. I think that it was with Miles, in 1955, that I started to realize what else I could do.

“Miles is sort of a strange guy: he doesn’t talk a lot, and he rarely discusses music…It’s very hard, in a situation like that, to know exactly what you should do, and maybe it’s because of that that I started to do what I wanted.”

In this interview recorded on the tour, Coltrane counters his interlocutors concern that working with Miles was confining. “I’ve been free, I’ve been so free here, that most anything I want to try I’ve been free to do it.”

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