Spirit Seeker (BOOK REVIEW)
Spirit Seeker:
John Coltrane’s Musical Journey
by Gary Golio
with artwork by Rudy Gutierrez
Clarion Books
Hardcover, $17.99
44 pages, Illustrated
ISBN: 978-0-547-23994-1
Book
Review by Kam Williams
“Music
and religion were the twin forces that shaped John Coltrane’s early years. Both
of his grandfathers were Methodist ministers, and each of his parents was a
skilled musician.
In
North Carolina
during the 1930s, the church was the center of black community life. At a time
when discrimination was widespread, the church offered comfort, hope, and
guidance. One way it did this was through music…
Perhaps
more than any other jazz musician, John Coltrane let his religious feelings
guide and inspire his work. Of his recovery from drug use, he wrote, ‘During
the year 1957, I experienced, by the grace of God, a spiritual awakening which
was to lead me to a richer, fuller, more productive life. At that time, in
gratitude, I humbly asked to be given the means and privilege to make others
happy through music.’
It
was his commitment to sobriety for the last ten years of his life that allowed
him to pursue his vision and to create some of the most enduring music in the
field of jazz.”
--
Excerpted from the Afterword (pg. 39)
John
Coltrane (1926-1967) pioneered a new sound on the saxophone prior to passing
away at an early age, but not before leaving behind a much beloved collection
of innovative recordings. Sadly, his untimely demise from liver cancer was likely
the result of the heroin habit he had kicked a decade before.
But is the
life of a legendary jazz great with such a checkered past the appropriate
subject of an illustrated children’s book? Yes, argues Gary Golio, author of Spirit
Seeker: John Coltrane’s Musical Journey.
After all, over
a million of African-American men are currently behind bars for non-violent narcotics
offenses, and millions more are ostensibly dealing with drug addiction. For
that reason, a biography detailing Coltrane’s failings and ultimate triumph
over substance abuse might serve as a warning to kids apt to face similar temptations.
Golio
relates how ‘Trane’s troubles started with alcohol while still in his
teens, in the wake of the deaths in rapid succession of his father and several
other close family members. Regrettably, when the young man subsequently encountered
adversity in the form of racism, relationship problems and money woes as an
aspiring musician moving around the country, he gradually graduated from that
gateway drug to harder stuff.
In the end,
we learn that he cleaned himself up with the help of a return to his religious
roots, a spiritual path that undoubtedly provided considerable comfort when he was
forced by an incurable affliction to prepare to meet his Maker. A warts-and-all,
cautionary tale chronicling both Coltrane’s personal flaws and incomparable genius.
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