
| 1. Monk's Mood | 7:52 | |
| 2. Evidence | 4:41 | |
| 3. Crepuscule with Nellie | 4:26 | |
| 4. Nutty | 5:03 | |
| 5. Epistrophy | 4:29 | |
| 6. Bye-Ya | 6:31 | |
| 7. Sweet and Lovely | 9:34 | |
| 8. Blue Monk | 6:31 | |
| 9. Epistrophy [Incomplete Take] | 2:24 |
Monk's Mood; Evidence; Crepuscule With Nellie; Nutty; Epistrophy; Bye-Ya; Sweet and Lovely; Blue Monk; Epistrophy (Incomplete).
Thelonious Monk, Piano; John Coltrane, Tenor Sax; Ahmed Abdul-Malik, Bass; Shadow Wilson, Drums.
Although there have been thousands of talented jazz musicians through the years and hundreds of stylists, only a small handful can be said to have permanently changed the music. John Coltrane, along with Miles Davis, is considered the most significant jazz musician of the past half-century. Born in Philadelphia in 1926, Coltrane picked up important early experience during the bebop era playing with Dizzy Gillespie's big band. Originally influenced by Dexter Gordon, Coltrane did not emerge as a soloist until 1955 when he joined the Miles Davis Quintet.
From 1955 until his death in 1967, Coltrane evolved quickly, and there were periods where his playing drastically improved and changed from month to month. He displayed an original sound on tenor, became a master at sheets of sound (playing flurries of notes), took chordal improvisation to the breaking point with Giant Steps, formed a classic quartet in the 1960s, became a major innovator on soprano-sax, explored intense two-chord vamps and played free improvisations. The jazz world followed him closely every step of the way.
After he left the Miles Davis Quintet in early-1957, 'Trane teamed up with the highly original pianist-composer Thelonious Monk for six months. Their nightly sessions at the Five Spot became legendary, helping Coltrane musically and giving Monk long overdue fame. Until recently, only a few studio numbers were released of their legendary collaboration. However tapes of a radio broadcast were discovered at the Library Of Congress and the music on At Carnegie Hall, from Nov. 29, 1957, is quite brilliant. Monk and Coltrane team up for nine selections with bassist Ahmed Abdul-Malik and drummer Shadow Wilson, including Evidence, Nutty, Bye-Ya and Blue Monk. The results are quite exciting and historic, adding greatly to the musical legacy of both John Coltrane and Thelonious Monk.
Highly recommended.
-Scott Yanow