Your Cart UMS

Miles and Trane on Record: A Critic’s Favorites

Miles and Trane on Record: A Critic’s Favorites

Mark Stryker is the writer and producer of the documentary film The Best of the Best: Jazz from Detroit (2025, now streaming on Prime Video). He is also the author of Jazz from Detroit (2019, University of Michigan Press). An updated edition will be published in paperback on Feb. 11, 2026.

Here is a YouTube playlist of my favorite Miles Davis and John Coltrane recordings. I avoided posthumous box sets since large compilations run contrary to the spirit of the game. These are not my picks for the “greatest” or “most influential” records, through everything here is great and influential. These are my 10 desert island picks for each as a leader, presented in reverse order. Because I am making the rules, I allowed myself bonus tracks, too, to include individual performances I couldn’t leave out.

— Mark Stryker

Read More:

Miles Davis and John Coltrane at 100

 

Miles Davis

10. ‘Round About Midnight (1955-56), Columbia.

Miles’s debut on Columbia presents the finest group of its era throwing down in a perfectly programmed LP, leading with a stunning reading of Thelonious Monk’s “Round Midnight.” With Coltrane on tenor sax, Red Garland on piano, Paul Chambers on bass, and Philly Joe Jones on drums. Beautifully recorded too by Columbia’s ace engineer Frank Laico.

9. Jack Johnson (1970), Columbia.

Embracing his inner Sly Stone, Jimi Hendrix, and James Brown, Miles ditched the murky sprawl of Bitches Brew for a streamlined band and a funk-rock knockout punch. Miles floats like a butterfly and stings like a bee. By design, much of Miles’ ‘70s electric music sounds in a state of becoming, but Jack Johnson has the bracing clarity and expression of music fully arrived.

8. Bag’s Groove (1954), Prestige.

Two dates in one. First, Miles, tenor saxophonist Sonny Rollins, and pianist Horace Silver on the brink of stardom; the exceptional rhythm section of Silver, bassist Percy Heath, and Kenny Clarke swing with pristine unity. Second, the pellucid perfection of the title blues in two takes, with pianist Thelonious Monk and vibraphonist Milt Jackson.

7. Nefertiti (1967), Columbia.

Iconic material abounds by saxophonist Wayne Shorter, pianist Herbie Hancock, and drummer Tony Williams. Shorter’s title track, a miracle of lyric melodic-harmonic expression sums up ‘60s post-bop. The performance still startles: The horns keep repeating the melody; the rhythm section, including bassist Ron Carter, gets loose as Williams improvises a drum concerto.

6. The Lost Quintet (1969), Sleepy Night.

Taped in Rotterdam, 11/9/69, the final document of the band with tenor saxophonist Wayne Shorter, pianist Chick Corea, bassist Dave Holland, and drummer Jack DeJohnette without extra players. The concert sounds like the end of the world. Audaciously free, wild, incendiary, amped up to 11. Good God. Dubbed the “Lost Quintet” because it was never recorded commercially.

5. Miles Ahead (1957), Columbia.

Miles’s first large-scale collaboration with arranger Gil Evans unfolds like a luminous hallucination, a concerto for Miles (on flugelhorn) that segues between numbers in the manner of a suite. The ballads vibrate with the warm breath of human feeling, the swingers bloom like roses. Evans’s insanely creative writing is gorgeously textured, translucent. Miles plays like a God.

4. Relaxin’ (1956), Prestige.

Best of the five Prestige LPs by the First Great Quintet. “If I Were a Bell” is THE defining track by the band: Miles’s muted trumpet dancing, the contrast with Trane’s brash tenor. Red Garland’s grooving. Paul Chambers’s purr and melodic walking. Philly Joe Jones’s fire. Melody in “2,” solos in “4.” The recurring tag. Swing! Plus, Miles’s voice: “I’ll play it and tell you what it is later.”

3. Miles Smiles (1966), Columbia.

Spontaneous perfection. The Second Great Quintet coming into its own, widening its play of formal abstraction, redefining improvised music every night on the bandstand and in the studio. Everything here remains state-of-the-art 60 years later: The compositions (including Wayne Shorter’s immortal minor blues, “Footprints”), exploratory solos, group dialogue, overarching aesthetic.

2. My Funny Valentine (1964). Columbia

A true peak, especially epic ballads “Stella by Starlight” and “My Funny Valentine.” The expressive control of Miles’s sound and solos are a high bar; he didn’t start with chops but sure as hell developed them. Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter, and Tony Williams equal a magic triangle of intuition and intellect. “Stella” is saxophonist George Coleman’s shining hour; Herbie on “All of You”!

1. Milestones (1958), Columbia.

I can’t say it any better than Tony Williams: “Milestones is the definitive jazz album. If you want to know what jazz is, listen to that album. It embodies the spirit of everyone who plays jazz.” The closing “Straight No Chaser” is EVERYTHING. Miles, Cannonball Adderley, John Coltrane, Red Garland, Paul Chambers, and Philly Joe Jones fulfilling their swinging destiny at the highest level.

Bonus Track 1: “Country Son” (1968).

An extended, suite-like track, encompassing furious, harmonically open swing, a premonition of funky jazz-rock, and dreamy rubato sections. Composed by Miles, from Miles in the Sky, the most underrated of his ‘60s LPs.

Bonus Track 2: “I Waited for You” (1953).

I adore Miles on the Blue Note label (1952-54). Still struggling to wean himself from drugs, his sound smolders with wounded vulnerability. This plaintive ballad includes lovely support from pianist Gil Coggins.

Bonus Track 3: “Love for Sale” (1958).

Euphoric swing! Kind of Blue sextet breaks loose. Dig how Miles phrases the melody, especially the tension-and-release of the dotted quarter notes floating behind the beat starting at 51 seconds. Peak ebullience from alto saxophonist Cannonball Adderley.

John Coltrane

10. Soultrane (1958), Prestige.

The best of Coltrane’s 11 LPs made for Prestige in 32 months from 1956-58. Sharp execution, a gleaming tenor sound, a fabulous program of swinging standards, bebop and ballads, and the A+ trio that Coltrane favored in those days: pianist Red Garland, bassist Paul Chambers, and drummer Art Taylor. Trane’s three choruses on “You Say You Care” roar out of the gate like a Triple Crown winner.

9. Interstellar Space (1967), Impulse!

Lucid, deeply moving duets in rubato time with drummer Rashied Ali that reveal how much control Coltrane had over his horn and materials. The music may sound totally free at first, but defined structural arcs, thematic and motivic development, and key centers unify the polymodal flurries of scales, variegated sonics, and orchestral effects. “Venus” is pick of the litter.

8. Coltrane’s Sound (1960), Atlantic.

Giant Steps and My Favorite Things get the most ink of the Atlantic LPs, but potent originals, a famous arrangement of “Body and Soul” with pedal points and “Giant Steps” substitutions, and a definitive “The Night Has a Thousand Eyes” capture the early Coltrane Quartet discovering its greatness. With pianist McCoy Tyner, bassist Steve Davis, and drummer Elvin Jones.

7. The Mastery of John Coltrane, Vol. II: To the Beat of a Different Drum (1963
and 1965), Impulse!

Fantastic 2-LP compilation from 1978 collecting performances with drummer Roy Haynes, who subbed occasionally for Elvin Jones. The 1963 Newport set transcends: “I Want to Talk About You,” “Impressions,” “My Favorite Things.” Haynes’s chattering way of breaking up the
beat provides a trampoline for Coltrane, compared to Jones’s enveloping tornado of rhythms.

6. Ballads (1962), Impulse!

A record with bedroom eyes, this romantic LP provided a powerful argument against conservative critics who accused Coltrane of being anti-jazz. He sings these love songs on tenor with tenderness, patience, and sensitive lyricism, especially when he slides into his high register where the notes float softly among the clouds. McCoy Tyner’s piano accompaniment is to die for.

5. Blue Train (1957), Blue Note.

Quintessential hard bop and a high point of Coltrane’s early discography. Four alluring originals include two challenging tunes that became standards (“Moment’s Notice,” “Lazy Bird”). The groovy title blues launches one of Trane’s most memorable recorded solos. With trumpeter Lee Morgan, trombonist Curtis Fuller, pianist Kenny Drew, bassist Paul Chambers, drummer Philly Joe Jones.

4. Crescent (1964), Impulse!

The most sublime and elegantly proportioned of the Coltrane Quartet’s masterpieces. Keatsian poetry bathes the title track and “Wise One.” The jaunty “Bessie’s Blues” captures a universe in 3-½ minutes. The heartfelt “Lonnie’s Lament” brings pianist McCoy Tyner and bassist Jimmy Garrison to the fore. Not a note is wasted, even on “The Drum Thing” for Elvin Jones.

3. Live at the Half Note: One Down, One Up (1965), Impulse!

A holy grail bootleg tape until commercially released in 2005, this music captures the Coltrane Quartet at its most incendiary. The combustible, 28-minute version of “One Down One Up,” an exploration of whole tone and augmented scales, is from another planet; Coltrane and Elvin Jones speak in tongues during their ultimate saxophone- drums duet.

2. Transition (1965), Impulse!

A valedictory statement, taped mostly in June 1965, pushes the quartet to the outer limits of its language and intensity. The title track is a wild fever dream. Coltrane’s tenor strains to reach as high as he can go, climaxing in a beautiful nightmare of screams—yet the music never stops swinging or loses touch with the blues. Some days I even prefer this LP to A Love Supreme.

1. A Love Supreme (1964), Impulse!

After living with this music for 45 years, what strikes me most has little to do with the Aristotelian unity of its four movements, musicological insights, or the elevated technical resources and intellect of the quartet—and everything to do with the overwhelming power of its impassioned expression: It represents the peak of human feeling in art. Hearing it often brings tears to my eyes.

Bonus Track 1: “Bye Bye Blackbird” (1962), Pablo.

An irresistible swinger captured in concert in Stockholm. The 5-½ minute tag starting at 12:25 is some of my favorite music ever. Trane and Elvin! To paraphrase Amiri Baraka, they sound like the wild pulse of all living.

Bonus Track 2: “They Say It’s Wonderful” (1963), Impulse!

A gift for lovers of singers and song, the one-off LP collaboration between Coltrane and suave baritone Johnny Hartman lands like Cupid’s arrow. Romance is in the air. They say it’s wonderful, and they’re not wrong.

Bonus Track 3: “But Not for Me (1960), Atlantic.

I love the elation the quartet achieves in this swinging version of a beloved Gershwin tune, reharmonized with “Giant Steps” substitutions.
The extended tags capping each solo and the final tenor ride out at the end really sends me.

Bonus Tracks 4 and 5: “Impressions” and “Chasin’ the Trane (1961),
Impulse!

Gotta have these extended, volatile performances from a landmark run at the Village Vanguard. They set new standards for improvisation, group dynamics, and extended saxophone techniques. A Coltrane anthem at a racehorse tempo, “Impressions” explores the same modal territory as Miles Davis’s “So What.” The swift “Chasin’ the Trane” an ad-lib, 12-bar blues in F, is taken to extremes of abstraction. Coltrane mostly goes it alone with Jimmy Garrison and a maniacal Elvin Jones, whose elevated volume and aggressive dialogue on drums erases distinctions between foreground and background.

Miles Davis and John Coltrane at 100

Detroit-based author and jazz historian Mark Stryker shares some historical context behind the lasting legacies of Miles Davis and John Coltrane in advance of UMS’s presentation of a  centennial tribute to the great jazz icons on Sunday, February 15, 2026, by Terence Blanchard and Ravi Coltrane.

Miles Davis and John Coltrane

American jazz musicians Miles Davis and John Coltrane play together on stage at the Blue Note jazz bar in Chicago, IL, 1950s.

Walk into almost any jazz club in 2026, from Ann Arbor to New York to Berlin to Tokyo, and the ghosts of trumpeter Miles Davis and tenor and soprano saxophonist John Coltrane will be hovering ringside like hip guardian angels. Invisible to the eye but audible to the ear, their spirits pulsate through the music — as instrumentalists, improvisors, composers, bandleaders, and conceptualists.

Sometimes their influence resonates on the surface. Sometimes it wafts up faintly from the lower frequencies, braising within the collective unconscious of jazz history. One way or another, however, a century after Davis and Coltrane were born in 1926, their innovations remain an everyday presence in contemporary American music. Equally remarkable, in an age in which jazz and popular culture are rarely on speaking terms, Davis and Coltrane retain broad cultural currency and cache.

Stars during their lifetimes, they remain strikingly popular. Davis died in 1991 and Coltrane in 1967, but the public can’t get enough of an endless stream of their reissues, previously unreleased material, audiophile vinyl, and luxury box sets. Madison Avenue employs their music and likenesses to sell the Chrysler Jeep Grand Cherokee and Lexus RZ electric vehicle. Even listeners whose primary allegiance is to rock, country, hip hop, or classical music recognize Miles Davis and John Coltrane as brand names.

Recordings such as Davis’s Kind of Blue (1959) and Coltrane’s A Love Supreme (1964), revered as masterpieces by musicians, connoisseurs, and critics, were also bona fide hits upon release and rank among the best-selling jazz records in history. Certified lifetime sales have now passed five million for Kind of Blue (which includes Coltrane) and one million for A Love Supreme. Both LPs regularly top lists aimed at novices that purport to identify the best jazz records of all time.

Bonus Playlist

Miles and Trane on Record: A Critic’s Favorites
Mark Stryker selects his top 10(ish) records of Miles Davis and John Coltrane

Common touch, emotion, charisma

Davis and Coltrane owe their mass appeal to a unique confluence of music and culture. Most importantly, their music moves people emotionally. It retains a common touch through nearly every period in their stylistic development.

The moody lyricism of Davis’s trumpet tone, whether open horn or tightly muted, manifests a seductive marriage of vulnerability and virility. Signature ballads like “My Funny Valentine” and “Stella by Starlight” unfold in plaintive eloquence and erotic shivers. His melodic ideas at swinging tempos make virtuoso use of the negative space of dramatic silence. Davis is rarely prescriptive; he leaves room for listeners to find their own way into a sound world of feints and parries, arresting honesty, and the biting blues of an African American man at midcentury who knows the score about race relations and refuses to suffer fools.

Coltrane’s laser-like sound on tenor and soprano saxophone compels attention. He takes listeners on a trip, elevates the spirit, offers catharsis. On anthems like his epic reinvention of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s waltz “My Favorite Things” or his scorching original “Impressions,” Coltrane rides the turbulence of drummer Elvin Jones’s crashing waves. His saxophone tone splinters into expressive squalls and split tones. He plays with the energy and passion of a Black Pentecostal preacher in the pulpit. The sheer intensity was never for everyone, and dissenters still walk among us. But for true believers, Coltrane remains a pied piper of the most profound sort.

Davis and Coltrane also embody a certain celebrity charisma that speaks to the masses. The trumpeter as the ultimate avatar of cool: Black, proud, badass, rebellious, handsome, taciturn, admired by Bohemians and the intelligentsia, speaks in a famously raspy growl, drives a red Ferrari, wears natty Italian suits and seersucker back in the day that land him on Esquire’s Best Dressed list. He dates Juliette Gréco, pals around with Richard Pryor and Prince, marries Cicely Tyson, appears in an episode of “Miami Vice.”

Coltrane as the humble, relentless seeker of truth and transcendence. Though never linked to Hollywood royalty like Davis, his stature in the culture has only grown since his death. A hero and metaphor to Black scholars like Cornel West, there is even a church founded in his honor, the Saint John Coltrane African Orthodox in San Francisco.

Both Davis and Coltrane accrued street cred from the multiple generations of rock bands, singer-songwriters, rappers, producers and others who cited them as favorites and influences, among them: the Byrds, Grateful Dead, MC5, Joni Mitchell, Carlos Santana, J Dilla, Yasiin Bey (Mos Def), John Legend.

Searching for the new

Davis and Coltrane were prophets in their day and ours. Each remade modern jazz fundamentals in their own image, disseminating their vision through nightclub performances, concerts, and recordings. They led landmark ensembles resembling laboratories stocked with some of the finest musical minds of their time, players who connected on a cellular level of craft, chemistry, creativity, adventure, originality, emotional expression, groove, and swing.

Students in and out of conservatories have for decades studied their music like scripture. A huge swath of the jazz mainstream—the common-practice language governing improvisation, rhythm, harmony, melody, form, repertoire, group interaction, even the literal sound of the trumpet and saxophone—is still defined by what Davis and Coltrane played with their groups in the 1950s and ‘60s. (This includes the roughly five years Coltrane spent as a sideman in Davis’s band between 1955 and 1960.)

Davis and Coltrane model careers that define jazz as a never-ending quest for new avenues of expression. They each reinvented their music myriad times, sometimes radically. The mythology of jazz elevates the relentless drive to innovate as a sine qua non, and Davis and Coltrane stand as primary architypes, although this is by no means the only path to enlightenment or immortality.

After forging new ground, many jazz pioneers have concentrated on refining their artistic victories rather than willfully seeking new stylistic mountains to conquer. Examples include heroes as diverse as trumpeters Louis Armstrong and Dizzy Gillespie, pianist Bill Evans, and drummer Art Blakey.

But Davis and Coltrane, no less than Stravinsky and Picasso (and Duke Ellington for that matter), were wired differently. For them, artistic growth demanded shedding styles the way snakes shed their skin. The modernist charge to make it new coursed through Davis’s veins. He described his obsessive need to change as a curse; the blessing for the rest of us is that Davis, as he once put it, changed music five or six times.

Coltrane’s headstrong experimentation and practice regime—he sometimes fell asleep with the horn in his mouth—was the result of an intrinsic need to dig as deeply as possible to see how much more there was to discover, not only about music but about himself. He linked self-knowledge, musical evolution, and spiritualism into a homegrown cosmology that blended strains of Western and Eastern religions and saw the unity in all things.

Every new stylistic shift in Davis and Coltrane’s music either opened a new chapter in jazz history or made defining contributions to important developments already under way.

Miles Ahead

After apprenticing in the mid-1940s with alto saxophonist Charlie Parker, the Prometheus of bebop, Davis inaugurated the so-called Birth of the Cool by leading a series of record sessions in 1949-50. He fronted a gossamer nonet that featured meticulously orchestrated arrangements by Gil Evans, Gerry Mulligan, and others. The music turned down the temperature of bebop; it simmered rather than boiled. Though recorded in New York, Davis’s records created a blueprint for West Coast cool jazz, which emerged in the 1950s. They also foreshadowed the trumpeter’s majestic and beloved orchestral collaborations with Evans, Miles Ahead (1957), Porgy and Bess (1958), and Sketches of Spain (1959-60).

Lacking an explosive technique, Davis developed a nuanced style in which he created maximum feeling with minimum fuss. He played far fewer notes yet always seemed to land on the most expressive ones. He solidified his influence as a sound innovator, creating a new sonic template for the trumpet—dark, intimate, smokey, introspective (especially with the Harmon mute) yet girded by deceptive strength, with little vibrato and redolent of a plea for truth and beauty in a world gone mad.

Davis formed his First Great Quintet with Coltrane, pianist Red Garland, bassist Paul Chambers, and drummer Philly Joe Jones in 1955. Fueled by the tightest, hippest rhythm section in jazz, the band was at the forefront of hard bop, a stout and extroverted reaffirmation of the African American values of blues and swing: a counter-reformation to the cool jazz that Davis had inspired in the first place. The group towered over its era, especially when it grew into a sextet in 1958 with the addition of alto saxophonist Cannonball Adderley. The records? Start with Milestones, Relaxin’, and ’Round About Midnight.

With Kind of Blue, Davis codified modal jazz—improvisation based on static harmony and scales rather than the recurring chord cycles of bebop. He also doubled down on melody and an existential lyricism with an assist from the poetic Ravelisms of his new pianist, Bill Evans. The simple, 32-bar structure of “So What,” for example, is 16 bars of D minor, followed by 8 bars of E-flat minor and a final 8 bars of D minor; Davis’s improvised solo, one of his most memorable on record, is pure song. The LP’s alluring vibe, sophisticated simplicity, and all-star cast makes it nearly every critic and fan’s No. 1 recommendation for newcomers to jazz.

Modalism would become a foundational sound of 1960s jazz; Coltrane was a prime exponent. Davis himself left the development of modal ideas largely to others until his Second Great Quintet coalesced in 1964 with a new generation of innovative sidemen: saxophonist and composer Wayne Shorter, pianist Herbie Hancock, bassist Ron Carter, and drummer Tony Williams.

The quintet transformed familiar standards and penetrating originals into cubist abstractions of harmony, rhythm, and group interaction. The balance of freedom and form on records like Miles Smiles, Sorcerer, and Nefertiti remade the idiom. Davis’s trumpet playing grew increasingly aggressive. Where he was once said to sound like a man walking on eggshells, he was now able to power his way through high and fast passages with the potency he brought to ballads.

In the late ‘60s, Davis’s ears turned toward electric instruments and amalgamations of jazz, rock, soul, funk, and eventually even European avant-gardist Karlheinz Stockhausen. Bitches Brew (1969), a mysterious sprawl of billowing densities, launched the jazz fusion era. Starry plugged-in bands of the ‘70s such as Mahavishnu Orchestra, Weather Report, and Chick Corea’s Return to Forever sprouted from its roots. Davis’s electric period, a diverse progression of bands and ideas, from the brilliant to the banal, lasted the rest of his life, save the five years he was off the scene from 1976-1980.

Express Trane to the future

While Davis remained a pacesetter for 45 years, Coltrane packed his innovations into a dozen years, from 1955-67. The swiftness of his development is a miracle. The basic sonic profile of his tenor sax, an ardent and metallic cry, was in place when he joined Davis, but he still sometimes stumbled over his ideas.

Coltrane rebooted his career in 1957: He kicked a debilitating drug habit (as Davis had done several years earlier), experienced a spiritual awakening, and worked extensively with pianist-composer Thelonious Monk, a musical architect of the first order. The focused clarity of the saxophonist’s sound, execution, improvising, and composing on Blue Train (1957) make it a tour de force of hard bop.

In the late ‘50s, Coltrane’s solos became thick and textural. He dissected harmony, stacking chords on top of chords. This led to wall-to-wall, scale-based passages, often asymmetrical, played at supersonic speed. Critic Ira Gitler memorably dubbed these “sheets of sounds.” Back with Davis in 1958-60, Coltrane found the freedom to experiment with his complex harmonic ideas, as well as the nascent modal landscape that promised liberation from the potential tyranny of chords.

Davis knew the dramatic rewards of yin and yang, of showcasing a saxophonist whose brash sound and volubility contrasted sharply with his own economy. He teased Coltrane playfully in print: “He is beginning to leave more space—except when he gets nervous.”

Coltrane worked on both sides of the street. The lickety-split title song on another masterwork, Giant Steps (1959), is a harmonic obstacle course that challenges musicians to this day. Meanwhile, the beautiful melody of “Naima” unfolds over serene and slow-moving chords anchored by sustained bass notes known as pedal points—another inescapable sound of ‘60s modal jazz and beyond.

Other facets of Coltrane’s playing continue to shape the sound and mechanics of today’s saxophonists: multiphonics (playing more than one note at a time); using the overtone series to produce new timbres and vocalized effects including split-tones, and screams; extending his range into the altissimo register high above the conventional limits of the saxophone; helping revive the soprano saxophone; standard-setting technical command; and the literal sound of his tenor as he tamed his early brittleness with additional colors, depth, and resonance
through the 1960s.

Coltrane formed his own quartet in 1960, and the personnel soon solidified as McCoy Tyner on piano, Jimmy Garrison on bass, and Elvin Jones on drums. As with Davis’s Second Great Quintet, every member of the Coltrane Quartet was an innovator, and the group’s aesthetic victories, like those of Davis’s band, were foundational to ’60s post-bop and entered the DNA of jazz. The Freedom Principal became paramount.

On epochal records like Impressions, Live at Birdland, Crescent, and A Love Supreme—the latter a suite in four movements inspired by Coltrane’s spiritual beliefs—the foursome breathed as one. The group explored modal harmony and forms, pedal points, and incantatory improvisations that embodied a search for the infinite. A single song might last an hour and include a 30 or 40-minute saxophone-and-drums duet. The quartet’s vehement performances get most of the attention, but Coltrane grew into an exceptional balladeer (“You Don’t Know What Love Is,” “I Want to Talk About You,” “Dear Lord”). He also remained an exceptionally soulful bluesman, who never lost touch with jazz fundamentals (“Bessie’s Blues.”)

By mid-1965, Coltrane, the most influential jazz musician of his time, leaned increasingly into the avant-garde. He pursued a free jazz that dispensed with steady time in favor of volatile rhythm and unrelenting extremes of texture, dissonance, color, and emotion. Recorded with an 11-piece ensemble, Ascension (1965) is an audacious and cacophonous group improvisation lasting 40 minutes.

Before his classic quartet broke up, Coltrane recorded Meditations (1965), a five-movement suite with enfant terrible Pharoah Sanders as a second tenor saxophonist and Rashied Ali as a second drummer. The most rewarding of Coltrane’s late-period ensemble recordings, it exhibits formal unity and poetry that elude much of Coltrane’s other work in his final chapter. The simple written material on Meditations is tonal and melodic; it frames and balances explosive, atonal improvisation.

By early 1966, Coltrane’s final quintet included his wife, pianist and harpist Alice Coltrane, Sanders, Garrison, and Ali—though at many appearances, Coltrane invited others to sit in with the group for open improvisations. His final great recording, Interstellar Space, an astounding set of clarified and deeply felt saxophone-drum duets with Ali, was taped in February 1967, five months before Coltrane’s tragic death in July at age 40 from liver cancer.

Where Coltrane might have taken his music had he lived remains sadly unknowable. Many have noted that his death left a hole that has never been filled. Davis’s most adventurous music was clearly behind him at his death at 65, but it’s still enticing to wonder what kind of elder statesmen he might have become had he lived another decade. But enough. We are lucky to have had Davis and Coltrane for as long as we did, and if there is one thing clear about their monumental legacies at 100, it is that their influence will still be with us in force at 200.


Mark Stryker is the writer and producer of the documentary film The Best of the Best: Jazz from Detroit (2025), now streaming on Prime Video). He is also the author of Jazz from Detroit (2019, University of Michigan Press). An updated edition will be published in paperback on Feb. 11, 2026.

Hear Terence Blanchard and Ravi Coltrane celebrate the Miles Davis and John Coltrane Centennial, live in Hill Auditorium, Sunday February 15, 2026.

Get Tickets

Tickets start at just $20 (+ fees); $15-20 student tickets available.

Love great music, theater, and dance?

Love great music, theater, and dance?

Surely your inbox has room for one more email... Sign up for notifications on upcoming events and season updates.

Thanks! We'll keep you updated.