Milestones Posted 22 hours ago Report Posted 22 hours ago I've been thinking about just who is Lonnie from Trane's "Lonnie's Lament." Of course, these days one tries AI. The answer there is that it is Dr. Lonnie Smith, which strikes me as extremely unlikely. Smith would have been only 22 when the song was recorded, and the piece has a feel that is like nothing you would find in Lonnie Smith's work (or just about any organist). Yes, Smith later recorded a Trane tribute record. But I don't think Coltrane wrote a tribute to him. So who is Lonnie? Quote
Dub Modal Posted 21 hours ago Report Posted 21 hours ago Per this article, it was one of the songs from Crescent inspired by poetry Coltrane was reading at the time. https://www.everythingjazz.com/story/john-coltranes-criminally-underrated-record/ Quote
Guy Berger Posted 21 hours ago Report Posted 21 hours ago (edited) 40 minutes ago, Milestones said: I've been thinking about just who is Lonnie from Trane's "Lonnie's Lament." Of course, these days one tries AI. The answer there is that it is Dr. Lonnie Smith, which strikes me as extremely unlikely. Smith would have been only 22 when the song was recorded, and the piece has a feel that is like nothing you would find in Lonnie Smith's work (or just about any organist). Yes, Smith later recorded a Trane tribute record. But I don't think Coltrane wrote a tribute to him. So who is Lonnie? Definitely not Lonnie Smith, but I always assumed it was guitarist Lonnie Johnson. Coltrane would have surely been familiar with him… Edited 21 hours ago by Guy Berger Quote
Milestones Posted 21 hours ago Author Report Posted 21 hours ago Dub, I just read that same article earlier today. But no mention of who Lonnie might be. Guy, I'm not sure if Lonnie Johnson seems at all likely. Or maybe Lonnie is a fictional/poetic creation of Coltrane's. Quote
felser Posted 19 hours ago Report Posted 19 hours ago (edited) 1 hour ago, Milestones said: Or maybe Lonnie is a fictional/poetic creation of Coltrane's. Or a personal friend/relative as opposed to a known musician, though I can see the poetry angle. Edited 19 hours ago by felser Quote
sidewinder Posted 15 hours ago Report Posted 15 hours ago (edited) I was always under the impression that the 'Lonnie' was Alonzo 'Lonnie' Levister, whose tune 'Slow Dance' Coltrane had recorded for Prestige. Edited 15 hours ago by sidewinder Quote
jazzbo Posted 10 hours ago Report Posted 10 hours ago I agree that is a possibility. As someone named Lonson and most often called Lon but as a kid sometimes Lonnie, I have always been intrigued by derivations of this name, and Lonnie or Lonny is most often a nickname for Alozono. My guess is whoever is lamenting is properly named "Alonzo." Quote
Niko Posted 9 hours ago Report Posted 9 hours ago 11 hours ago, Dub Modal said: Per this article, it was one of the songs from Crescent inspired by poetry Coltrane was reading at the time. https://www.everythingjazz.com/story/john-coltranes-criminally-underrated-record/ Poems that Coltrane was writing, not reading (p. 247 in the Porter book). Regarding the Lonnie Johnson theory, the fact that the song is preceded by "Bessie's blues" on Crescent sure is some relevant context... Quote
Dan Gould Posted 9 hours ago Report Posted 9 hours ago I guess we're lucky his other tune with a person's name made it clear - he went with the dude's nickname. Just now, Niko said: Regarding the Lonnie Johnson theory, the fact that the song is preceded by "Bessie's blues" on Crescent sure is some relevant context... That's a good point though it might have been a Thiel tracking decision - but the fact they were both recorded at the same date ... Quote
Milestones Posted 1 hour ago Author Report Posted 1 hour ago It strikes me as odd that it's such a mystery, given the deep research on Coltrane's life and work. Quote
JSngry Posted 37 minutes ago Report Posted 37 minutes ago Lonnie Hilyer: https://coltranecode.substack.com/p/crescent-the-bridge-to-transcendence Sure, why not? Quote
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