McCoy Tyner - Extensions (Full Album)

Review by Chris May at All About Jazz: “Languishing off-catalogue for many years, McCoy Tyner’s Extensions may be the pianist’s most unjustly neglected album. Strange days, for not only is the music ineffably vibrant, but Extensions is the only recording ever to feature Tyner alongside pianist and harpist Alice Coltrane, who replaced him in saxophonist John Coltrane’s group in 1966. The album has one foot in the echoes of John Coltrane’s “classic quartet,“ of which Tyner was a member from 1960-65, and the other in the astral jazz style which Alice Coltrane and saxophonist Pharoah Sanders fashioned in the late 1960s and early 1970s. After quitting John Coltrane, Tyner moved to Blue Note Records, before signing with Milestone in 1972, where he became a major draw through the decade and into the early 1980s. Extensions was the sixth of seven LPs he made for Blue Note between 1967 and 1970. These include the acclaimed The Real McCoy (1967), one the last albums to be produced by the label’s founder, Alfred Lion,
Back to Top