Two days prior to the recording of Olé Coltrane, Coltrane had made Africa/Brass, his inaugural recording session for his new label, Impulse! Records, at the new Van Gelder Studio in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey. With one further album due his old label Atlantic, he brought in his working quintet along with two participants in the Africa/Brass sessions, Art Davis and Freddie Hubbard. Owing to his concurrent contract with Prestige Records, Eric Dolphy was listed on the credits under the pseudonym George Lane.

Coltrane’s interest in the music of Spain evident in “Olé”, may have been spurred by his ex-employer Miles Davis’s Sketches of Spain from the previous year. The structure and melody of the modal jazz vamp “Olé” was borrowed from the Spanish folk song “El Vito” (maybe better known as “El Quinto Regimiento” from the Spanish Civil War (also known as “Venga Jaleo”), which was made known by Pete Seeger), while the soprano saxophone work recalled 1961’s “My Favorite Things”.

The titles for the songs on side two reflect the band’s continued interest in African forms as expressed on the May 23 Africa/Brass recordings. McCoy Tyner commented: “On ‘Dahomey Dance’ [Coltrane] had a record of these guys who were from Dahomey, which is why he used two bassists. He showed that rhythm to Art Davis and Reggie Workman. So the influence was there.”

On September 19, 2000, Rhino Records reissued Olé Coltrane as part of its Atlantic 50th Anniversary Jazz Gallery series. Included was a single bonus track which had appeared on The Heavyweight Champion: The Complete Atlantic Recordings in 1995…read more.

Artists

Soprano & Tenor Sax

Bass

Flute & Alto Sax

Drums

Album Data

Released: November 1961
Recorded: May 25th, 1961
Record Label: Atlantic Records
Location Recorded: A&R Studios, New York City
Producer: Nesuhi Ertegun
Album Length: 36 min / 50 sec

John Coltrane — soprano saxophone on “Olé” and “To Her Ladyship”; tenor saxophone on “Dahomey Dance” “Aisha” and second part of To Her Ladyship
Freddie Hubbard — trumpet
Eric Dolphy — flute on “Olé” and “To Her Ladyship”; alto saxophone on “Dahomey Dance” and “Aisha”
McCoy Tyner — piano
Reggie Workman — bass on “Olé,” “Dahomey Dance” and “Aisha”
Art Davis — bass on “Olé,” “Dahomey Dance” and “To Her Ladyship”
Elvin Jones — drums

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