Baker's Dozen

Artists discuss the 13 records that shaped their lives

4. John ColtraneSelflessness

I originally just dipped my toe in the water with John Coltrane. The first one I got was one of his 50s albums. My friend worked in Virgin Records in Manchester when they were a small independent mail order-type shop – it wasn’t the Mega Store at that point – and they had a bit of a jazz section and occasionally they lost the covers to records, and he gave me one of his records. It was quite straight jazz, but I wasn’t ready for straight jazz and so it lurked around in my record collection.

Then I went for A Love Supreme, but that was too over my head at that point; it took me a while to get into that. But then I got Selflessness second-hand, and it has ‘My Favourite Things’ on it; it’s a real out-there version of it, not the version that was the radio hit. It was recorded live and it’s a record that squeezes emotion out of you and leaves you rinsed. It makes you breathe differently! It’s the most engaging journey as a piece of music; it’s really profound to me.

It’s still a record that I return to whenever I need a good head clean. It really will wash my brain out.

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