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CHI COLTRANE
“THUNDER AND LIGHTNING”
(CHI COLTRANE)
Columbia 45640
No. 17
November 18, 1972
.
.
.
Born in Racine, Wisconsin, on November 16, 1948, Chi began her classical piano studies at the age of
seven. She sang in her church choir, and at the age of 12 gave her first public keyboard performance.
By high school graduation, Chi was singing in the bars and hot spots of the Badger State. She attended
Salter School of Music in Los Angeles for two years, and led the first of her bands. Shortly after, she
moved to the Windy City and formed the Chicago Coltrane.
.
While working the dub scene, Chi caught the attention of talent scouts for Columbia Records. Contracts
were signed, arrangements were made, and songs were recorded. Upon hearing her debut/self-titled
album, a critic for the
San Francisco Chronicle
wrote: “Miss Coltrane has two things going for her
beyond talent an engrossing urgency in her voice and a distinctive presence and beauty… She is, all in ll, the most impressive new girl singer.”
.
The verdict given by most listeners, however, was a shade less intense. With the exception of her lone
tuffy, “Thunder and Lightning,” Chi’s LP featured only hum drum hoofers. The package did place
modestly on
Bill
board’s
top pop albums chart (#148, 1972), and “Thunder” rumbled the airwaves, but
lightning did not strike twice for Chi. A second album,
Let It Ride
and follow up 45s like “Go Like
Elijah,” “You Were My Friend,” and “Who Ever Told You” sank from sight as if with nary a spin.
.
Before her disappearance, Coltrane spoke through a publicist: “Listen to my lyrics–my songs tell more
about me than anything I could ever say.”
COPYRIGHT 1997 Wayne Jancik