Ravi Coltrane
Biography
Ravi Coltrane - tenor and soprano saxophonist, bandleader, and composer - has fronted a variety
of jazz lineups, recorded critically-hailed albums as leader, produced recordings by other artists -
including his mother, worked as sideman for jazz luminaries, overseen important jazz reissues,
and founded an independent record label. Seventeen years since finding his life's path, it seems
music was Ravi's destiny from the outset.
Born the second son of John and Alice Coltrane in 1965 in Long Island, New York and raised in
the Los Angeles area, he was named after Indian sitar legend Ravi Shankar. Starting in middle
school, Ravi began playing clarinet, though he grew up hearing a variety of music. ("My mother
was playing piano and organ in the house, everyday. She took us to her performances and to
recording sessions. She played my father's LPs and recordings of classical music. Early on, I
listened to a lot of R&B, Soul music, popular music of the day - James Brown, Stevie Wonder, Sly
Stone, Motown music, Earth Wind and Fire. Later I got into Prince, The Beatles, I listened to more
Symphonic music - Stravinsky, Dvorak. I was a big fan of film scores. Jazz music was something I
always appreciated but I had to reach my late teens and go through profound family changes
before the music became a dominate force in my life.") In 1986, Ravi entered the California
Institute of the Arts to pursue musical studies, focusing on the saxophone.
In 1991, Ravi hooked up with Elvin Jones, his father's renowned drummer from the 60s and
received his first taste of the jazz life. Within a year, he relocated to New York City and began
playing with a variety of players: Jack DeJohnnette, Rashied Ali, Wallace Roney, Antoine Roney,
Geri Allen, Kenny Barron, Cindy Blackman, Joe Lovano, Joanne Brackeen, Gerry Gibbs, Graham
Haynes, and Steve Coleman. Ravi's relationship with Coleman through most of the 90s was
particularly influential on the budding saxophonist, including tours and appearances on several
Coleman albums.
In 1997, after performing on over thirty recordings as a sideman, Ravi entered the studio to
record his first album as leader. Moving Pictures was his well-rounded debut on RCA Victor,
leading Ravi to assemble his first touring group (pianist Andy Milne, bassist Daryl Hall and
drummer Steve Hass, with bassist James Genus and pianist George Colligan frequently filling in)
and to travel widely in North America and Europe. In 1999, he married Kathleen Hennessy and
his son William was born. From the Round Box, Ravi's second album as leader, was released in
2000 and was warmly received by critics and revealed a growing sense of self-challenge,
balancing esoteric covers with compelling originals.
In 2002, to acknowledge a void slowly developing at major label jazz departments Ravi launched
his own recording company - RKM Music - with albums by trumpeter Ralph Alessi and
saxophonist Michael McGinnis. Partnered with Kathleen Hennessy and McGinnis, he is currently
preparing projects with pianist Luis Perdomo, guitarist David Gilmore and poet Julie Patton.
That same year, Ravi produced Legacy, a four-disc, thematic study of his father's career, for
Verve, and co-produced and penned liner notes for the Deluxe Edition repackaging of A Love
Supreme. Ravi continues his role as family archivist of his father's unreleased material and is
working closely on preparing new projects with Verve. 2003 brought the release of Ravi's third
album -- Mad 6, on Columbia Records. Well received by critics and musicians alike, Mad 6
emulates the pace and energy of an intimate club performance and features two rhythm sections
showcasing the talents of Ravi's working bands at the time.
Most recently, Ravi was the driving and guiding force behind his mother Alice Coltrane's return
to recording after a 26-year hiatus; Translinear Light, featuring performances by Alice and Ravi
along with Charlie Haden, Jack Dejohnette, James Genus, Jeff Watts, Oran Coltrane and others,
was released in late September, 2004 on Impulse!. Shaping his own quartet through a series of
recent tours and appearances, February of 2005 saw the release of Ravi's fourth album as a leader
- In Flux - for the Savoy Jazz label. The recording features pianist Luis Perdomo, bassist Drew
Gress and drummer E.J. Strickland - his primary working unit since 2003. Of "In Flux", Ben
Ratliff of the New York Times wrote, "Mr. Coltrane avoids tired song structures and doesn't
want to bore you. He's fascinated on one hand by miniatures and on the other by the idea of
longer songs that sound like collective improvisation from start to finish. It's a record that you
can point to and say: This is what jazz sounds like now in New York."
In addition to working and traveling with his own group, Ravi recently has made several guest
performances with McCoy Tyner, Pharoah Sanders, Carlos Santana, Wayne Shorter, Herbie
Hancock, Chick Corea, John McLaughlin, Michael Brecker, George Duke, Stanley Clarke, Jeff
"Tain" Watts, Branford Marsalis, Mark Turner, Jacky Terrasson and others.
Ravi Coltrane remains busy, dedicated and remarkably clear as to the spirit behind his decision
to pursue music as his profession.
"I want to be involved with music that is truly honest - that's not trying to follow trends or fit
into someone's idea about what jazz "is". For Bird, Miles, Monk, Coltrane, and Wayne Shorter, I
hold the highest level of appreciation because their love and knowledge of tradition was never
greater than their need to follow their own path. The need to be themselves. This is my goal - my
aspiration - to acknowledge with love my influences while attempting a move forward Ð to be
open and receptive to shifts in the musical terrain - to make music that is relevant to my present
day experience".
Ravi Coltrane Discography
Moving Pictures, 1997, RCA Records
From The Round Box, 2000, RCA Records
Mad 6, 2003, Columbia Records
In Flux, Savoy Jazz
*Translinear Light, 2004, Impulse!-Ravi performed on this album-his mother's first recording in 26 years.
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