Saxophonist
Ravi Coltrane is the son of
John and
Alice Coltrane.
John Coltrane passed away when
Ravi was two. While he had a musical upbringing by his mother and began playing fairly early, he did not commence a jazz vocation until he was in his early twenties.
Coltrane was able to hone his chops playing with
Elvin Jones' group before meeting
Steve Coleman and
Graham Haynes.
Coltrane became a member of the M-Base consortium of artists and signed to RCA in 1997 (which lists
Coleman on its roster as well).
Coleman produced and guested on
Ravi's first recording,
Moving Pictures (1998), as did trumpeter
Ralph Alessi. The critical comparisons were inevitable, but
Coltrane seemed to see this coming before he ever recorded a note.
Coltrane's tone on tenor (he plays some soprano, too) is more reminiscent of
Joe Henderson's -- though his father's sound is slightly evident -- and in covering "Inner Urge" on his debut, he made it impossible to deny.
Coltrane recorded a second album in 2000,
From the Round Box, that was received even more warmly than his debut and featured contributions from
Alessi again and pianist
Geri Allen. He covered
Thelonious Monk,
Ornette Coleman, and
Wayne Shorter while adding a pair of his own tunes. His father's influence is a bit more evident here, but, nonetheless,
Coltrane proved he was working his sound out for himself. By the time he released 2002's Mad 6,
Coltrane had firmly established himself as an ego-free and forward-thinking jazz musician with a strong musical identity influenced by, but set apart from, his father's legacy. This impression was only reinforced on such releases as 2005's In Flux and 2009's Blending Times. In 2012,
Coltrane delivered the Joe Lovano-produced Spirit Fiction.
–
Thom Jurek, Rovi