A Sax Divine
Aaron McCarroll Gallegos The Other Side (www.theotherside.org/core.html)
By the time my wife and I arrived for morning worship at St. John
Coltrane African Orthodox Church, waves of intense sound were
already flowing from the Divisadero Street storefront. Located in
San Francisco's Western Addition district, between the gritty
Tenderloin and groovy Haight-Ashbury neighborhoods, St. John's has
a powerful witness the local community can't ignore. Even the most
jaded pedestrians were poking their heads in the door to see what
all the racket was about.
In spite of the church's huge reputation, the sanctuary is only
the size of your average living room, and it feels even smaller
because of the radiant Byzantine-style icons that cover the walls:
Jesus the Alpha and Omega, Mary the Mother of God, the Tree of
Life, and, above the altar, the icon that testifies to the
uniqueness of this congregation--a noble image of the church's
patron saint, jazz musician John Coltrane, complete with golden
halo and holy fire streaming from his saxophone.
While some might find it odd that a church would so honor a jazz
musician, this diverse gathering of church members, music lovers,
tourists, and the spiritually curious didn't seem to mind.
Throughout several hours of worship, the brilliantly colored church
pulsated with Coltrane's music, led by a drum-beating, sax-playing
team of clergy. Shouts of 'Hallelujah!' 'Amen!' and 'Praise God!'
punctuated chants and melodies from Coltrane's masterwork, A Love
Supreme.
Some recent accounts in the press about this church have missed
the point, mistakenly concluding that the church worships Coltrane
himself. In fact, its theology is quite traditional. What makes
this church wildly different--and somewhat controversial--is its
use of the music and words of a jazz musician to express devotion
to God. But something else is going on at St. John's as well. I
believe their unique form of worship raises important issues about
the changing nature of modern American religion, especially
mainstream Christianity, as we enter the 21st century.
John Coltrane is certainly not the most likely candidate for
Christian sainthood. He wasn't a conventional Christian, nor was he
a conventional musician. Until his death in 1967, 'Trane,' an
endless seeker, pursued an eclectic spiritual path influenced by
Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, the Kabbalah, astrology, and
Einstein's theory of relativity. He expressed this spiritual search
in his music, and he invited his listeners along on the
pilgrimage.
Coltrane had a strong Christian upbringing in the North Carolina
home of his minister grandfather, but music--not religion--was his
life's passion. He took up the clarinet and saxophone in high
school, then moved to Philadelphia in search of work. Coltrane
practiced hard, often silently fingering his sax late into the
night in the boardinghouse room he shared with his cousin Mary.
After a short stint in the navy, Coltrane became deeply involved
with the postwar jazz scene, backing some of the era's top
performers, including Dizzy Gillespie, Johnny Hodges, and Miles
Davis. But jazz wasn't the only thing consuming Trane. Like Charlie
Parker, one of his idols, he got hooked on both heroin and alcohol.
While opinions vary as to how severely Coltrane's addictions
affected his music, he did get fired from several gigs, including
his most prominent one, with trumpeter Davis.
In 1957 Coltrane overcame his addictions and, like many others
who conquer their personal demons, found his way to a greater
spiritual depth. 'I experienced, by the grace of God,' he later
wrote, '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.' Coltrane produced an amazing amount of work in the
10 years he had left to live. By the time he died of liver cancer
in 1967 at age 40, he had taken the saxophone, and jazz itself, to
new places, raising the art of improvisation to a level that few if
any have equaled.
Coltrane's hallowed status at St. John's is largely the work of
the church's founder and bishop, Franzo Wayne King. King founded
the church in 1971 as the One Mind Temple Evolutionary Transitional
Body of Christ. In 1982 the church joined the African Orthodox
Church, a small denomination started by African Americans who had
been drawn to aspects of Greek, Russian, and Coptic Orthodox
liturgy. Appointed the church's bishop, King dropped its old name
and chose Coltrane as its patron saint. As a young man, King--not
unlike Coltrane--had fled the religion of his Pentecostal parents
for the jazz clubs. Seeing Coltrane play in 1965 was the 'sound
baptism' that started King on a 'very serious and earnest journey
to seek out God.' At St. John's, he hoped to lead others to the
transformative spiritual experience he had encountered in
Coltrane's music.
St. John's attracts a diverse group of seekers: disaffected
Gen-Xers, affluent African American businesspeople, dreadlocked
hippies, aging beats. Even those who are familiar with Coltrane's
music may not be prepared for the positive vibrations of 'St. John,
the sound Baptist,' as the church calls him. On the Sunday I
attended, the tiny chapel was nearly full when the service began,
but within minutes people started slipping out. The din of
saxophones, drums, congas, bass, and percussion quickly overwhelmed
the uninitiated. A trumpet inches from the back of my head
screeched and honked the artist's avant-garde music throughout the
service. But the worship style, flowing out of the Pentecostal and
black church traditions, is as fervent and powerful as you'll find
anywhere.
Many Christians have criticized St. John's for granting
sainthood to a jazz musician and former addict; but given
Coltrane's spiritual impact on the African American community and
beyond, the decision isn't so strange. In many ways, mainstream
Christianity's refusal to consider canonizing exceptional people
like Coltrane parallels the dominant Western culture's assertion
that the only truly 'classical' music is by Beethoven, Mozart, and
other white Europeans. Yet the music of Duke Ellington, Miles
Davis, Billie Holiday, Bob Marley, and, yes, John Coltrane is
equally 'classic'--or more so, some would argue.
On another level, the service at St. John's challenges
mainstream assumptions about worship itself. While people around
the world spend hours, if not days, celebrating their spiritual
traditions, North American churchgoers often get irritable if
services last more than an hour. At St. John's, the hours of
worship filled with unsettling sounds are a challenge to mainstream
churches that have conformed in many ways to the dominant paradigms
of Western society: consumerism instead of personal sacrifice,
entertainment instead of prophecy, the individual instead of
community.
In the coming decades, as the center of Christianity moves from
Europe and North America to Africa, Asia, and Latin America, other
cultural expressions of worship are destined to become more
influential. St. John's is an indication of that trend. Indeed, the
cultural reshaping of spiritual expression has been going on as
long as humans have gathered for religious worship. Still, many
find it hard to equate worship with 'ugly' music, which is how some
would describe much of Coltrane's later work. Can art that
challenges our sense of aesthetics be said to inspire us? Or can
only the art we consider beautiful and attractive lift our hearts
and souls toward the divine?
Coltrane's later work is, in fact, beautiful, at least for many
who have delved deeply into it. Some Coltrane critics have called
it 'anti-jazz,' but others would disagree. In his recent biography,
John Coltrane: His Life and Music (University of Michigan, 1998),
Lewis Porter, professor of jazz theory at Rutgers University,
explores one of Coltrane's most obtuse works, 'Venus,' recorded in
1966 with drummer Rashied Ali. Porter concludes that 'Venus' is an
exceedingly complex study of chord contortions based on systematic,
almost mathematical, musical theory.
But what Coltrane was doing went far beyond technical
virtuosity. After recording A Love Supreme in 1964 (a work he said
had come to him as a vision from God), Coltrane stated that 90
percent of his playing was actually prayer. 'I know there are bad
forces, forces that bring suffering to others and misery to the
world,' he once said, 'but I want to be the opposite force, I want
to be the force which is truly for good.' By all accounts a humble
and gentle man, Coltrane no doubt would have been uncomfortable
being called a saint. But he surely would have been happy to hear
his music moving people toward a deeper relationship with the
divine.
THE ESSENTIAL COLTRANE
John Coltrane recorded more than 75 albums as a bandleader and
played on numerous others. Here are a few of his key
recordings.
Kind of Blue (Columbia, 1959). This Miles Davis classic
is an excellent example of Trane's work as a sideman, along with
fellow saxophonist Julian 'Cannonball' Adderly.
Giant Steps (Atlantic, 1959). Coltrane's first album of
entirely original material had a huge impact in jazz circles.
A Love Supreme (Impulse! 1964). Recorded with his quartet
of 1961ñ65, Coltrane's spiritual masterpiece is both profound and
accessible.
Stellar Regions (Impulse! 1995). This recently discovered
1967 recording shows the more contemplative direction Coltrane's
'late period' music was headed at the time of his death. If you can
handle this, you might want to look into some of Coltrane's more
esoteric works: Meditations, Ascension, Om, and Interstellar
Space.
Aaron McCarroll Gallegos is a writer living
in Toronto. From The Other Side (March/April 1999).
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