The emotional centerpiece of the Coltrane tribute, this performance of the second movement from A Love Supreme features the session's most extended improvisations. The compact 8-bar form in E-flat generates tremendous momentum at 192 BPM, with the short cycle encouraging rapid harmonic turnover. Lefkowitz-Brown delivers nineteen choruses on tenor saxophone — the longest solo in the entire recording — followed by Feifke's astonishing twenty-four-chorus piano solo that pushes the tempo to 202 BPM. Together the two solos span nearly seven minutes of uninterrupted improvisation over the repeating form. Coltrane composed Resolution in 1964 as part of his landmark four-part suite, recorded at Van Gelder Studio and released on Impulse! Records. The movement represents the suite's declaration of spiritual commitment, and its simple, open harmonic structure has made it a favorite vehicle for extended blowing. Coming after the relaxed swing of Good Bait, the sudden escalation in intensity mirrors Coltrane's own sequencing on the original album. The set then pivots to a ballad with In a Sentimental Mood.