Thursday, January 19, 2006

Miles Davis, "Relaxin' with Miles Davis Quintet" 1956

Full title: Relaxin' With The Miles Davis Quintet. RELAXIN' WITH THE MILES DAVIS QUINTET includes dialogue snippets taken from the original master reel. Miles Davis Quintet: Miles Davis (trumpet); John Coltrane (tenor saxophone); Red Garland (piano); Paul Chambers (acoustic bass); Philly Joe Jones (drums). Recorded at the Van Gelder Studio, Hackensack, New Jersey on May 11 & October 26, 1956. Red Garland's evocation of Big Ben in the opening chords of "If I Were A Bell" is a witty reminder that you're listening to the premier jazz combo of the 1950s, as Miles Davis once again plumbs the ravine of popular culture to come up with another engaging jazz classic. In this case, it's a dandy from Frank Loesser's "Guys And Dolls," enlivened by Paul Chambers' perfect counter-melodies and Philly Joe Jones' supple brush work. Soon enough, Jones switches up with light stick work, as Chambers fires up his walk and Garland eggs things along with his light, sure, rhythmic strumming. A Harmon-muted Miles responds with delicate, bashful melodies, Coltrane digs in for a jitterbugging reveille and Garland mixes taut, pixieish single lines with velvety big-band chords; Jones defines the laid-back attitude with crisp side-stick accents on four. Laid-back is the order of the day on RELAXIN'. "You're My Everything" highlights the interaction between Miles and Chambers, but it's Coltrane's expressive clarity that's such a revelation. A year before he'd probably have laid out on such a fragile ditty. On "It Could Happen To You," the band gently dances in cut time, while "I Could Write A Book" is taken at a light gallop (with superb Garland). However, a pair from Rollins and Gillespie are equestrian events. With his boyish timbre and floating phrases, Miles updates his classic arrangement of "Oleo" from BAGS' GROOVE, as the drums and piano drop out to allow him to body surf with Chambers. Gillespie's anthem "Woody'n You" offers one briskly syncopated fanfare after another.

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Thelonius Monk, "Live at Five Spot" (with John Coltrane)

01. Trinkle Tinkle
02. In Walked Bud
03. I Mean You
04. Epistrophy
05. Crepuscule With Nellie
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Personnel:
Thelonious Monk (piano);
John Coltrane (tenor saxophone);
Ahmed Abdul-Malik (bass);
Roy Haynes (drums).
Recorded live at the Five Spot, New York in the summer of 1957.
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John Coltrane, "Giant Steps" 1960

Released in January 1960, John Coltrane's first album devoted entirely to his own compositions confirmed his towering command of tenor saxophone and his emerging power as a composer. Apprenticeships with Dizzy, Miles, and Monk had helped focus his furious, expansive solos, and his stamina and underlying sense of harmonic adventure brought Coltrane, at 33, to a new cusp--the polytonal "sheets of sound" that distinguished his marathon solos were offset by interludes of subtle, concise lyricism, embodied here in the tender "Naima." That classic ballad is a calm refuge from the ecstatic, high-speed runs that spark the set's up-tempo climaxes, which begin with the opening title song, itself a cornerstone of modern jazz composition. This exemplary reissue benefits from eight alternate takes of the original album's seven stellar tracks, excellent remastering of the original tapes, and an expanded annotation.
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01 Giant Steps
02 Cousin Mary
03 Countdown
04 Spiral
05 Syeeda's Song Flute
06 Naima
07 Mr. P.C
08 Giant Steps (Alternate Take)
09 Naima (Alternate Take)
10 Cousin Mary (Alternate Take)
11 Countdown (Alternate Take)
12 Syeeda's Song Flute (Alternate Take)
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Personnel :
John Coltrane - Sax (Tenor)
Paul Chambers - Bass
Tommy Flanagan - Piano
Art Taylor - Drums
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Password: exneos

John Coltrane, "Ascension"

01.Ascension (Edition I) (38:30)
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Personell:
Archie Shepp;
Marion Brown;
Freddie Hubbard;
McCoy Tyner;
Elvin Jones;
Pharoah Sanders
Pass: blackbird

John Coltrane, "Sweet Shapphire blues"

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John Coltrane, "A Love Supreme" (Live in Concert)

01. Acknowledgement - Part 1
02. Resolution - Part 2
03. Pursuance - Part 3
04. Psalm - Part 4
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john Coltrane, "The Believer" 1958

01.The Believer
02.Nakatini Serenade
03.Do I Love You Because Youre So Beautiful

Personnel :
John Coltrane (ts)
Donald Byrd (tp)
Freddie Hubbard (tp)
Red Garland (p)
Paul Chambers (b)
Art Taylor (dr)
Louis Hayes (dr)
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John Coltrane & Don Cherry, "The Avant Garde" 1960

Though Ornette Coleman and John Coltrane were two of the prime forces in what came to be known as free jazz, their approaches couldn't have been more different. While Coleman's music dispensed with chords and rejected instrumental virtuosity in favour of unbroken horizontal development of melodic line, Coltrane's music for the most part relied on stacking up chords in blocks and exploring the results with fearsomely complex, passionate harmonic interrogations.

However Coltrane was evidently sympathetic to Coleman's innovations, hence this album, recorded with Ornette's righthand man Don Cherry in 1960 and consisting for the most part of Coleman originals. This was a bit of a transitional period for Coltrane; after the tour de force that was Giant Steps and prior to the formation of the classic quartet, there's a sense that he was on the lookout for the next step, and maybe Coleman's approach suggested a new avenue to explore. That the album remained unreleased for four years suggests that Atlantic weren't entirely sure about the results, and maybe they were right. This is one of the few Coltrane sessions recorded entirely without piano (the only other I can think of is Interstellar Space), and the huge, majestic tenor tone sounds a little odd in these airy, nimble surroundings.

It would be an exaggeration to suggest that Coltrane sounds lost here, but he's not entirely at home with Coleman or Cherry's vision. The trumpeter is predictably mercurial, firing off staccato bursts of melody that change horses in midstream; his solos are kept short, while the saxophonist was (later at least) famed for his marathon improvisations. Still, Coltrane goes for brevity in keeping with the spirit of the music, and on soprano manages the kind of conversational playing that Cherry demonstrates so well. However, it's telling that Coltrane's best work is reserved for the closing "Bemsha Swing" (an album of Monk tunes may have been a better bet for this band).

Bass duties are handled by Charlie Haden on a couple of tunes and by Percy Heath on the rest. The MJQ bassist had worked with Ornette before, and his unshakeable swing seems to suit the tenorist more than Haden's twisty chordal implications. Ed Blackwell plays it straight for the most part, with only occasional flashes of the quicksilver rhythmic trickery he excelled at.

Tellingly, there are no alternate takes or lost treasures on this re-issue and, while it's an undoubted necessity for the Coltrane collector, it may not be essential for the rest of us
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John Coltrane, "Soultrane" 1958

This wonderful 1958 session features the tenor sax legend leading pianist Red Garland, bassist Paul Chambers and drummer Arthur Taylor on a well-chosen five-song set of jazz and pop standards. The album opens with a lively version of Count Basie's "Good Bait" that allows Coltrane, Chambers and Garland to indulge in some exquisite, highly inventive solos. While Coltrane's versions of Billy Eckstine's "I Want To Talk About You" and Fred Lacey's "Theme For Ernie" are pretty much straight ballad performances, his bold, powerful style brings out the soulful feel of these two beautiful, reflective melodies. The closing track--a wild rendition of Irving Berlin's "Russian Lullaby," ends the album on a high note, with Coltrane and Garland racing through this complicated tune with remarkable precision and focus. Superbly recorded by Rudy Van Gelder, SOULTRANE is a true jazz classic and quite simply one of Coltrane's finest albums.
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01. Good Bait
02. I Want To Talk About You
03. You Say You Care
04. Theme For Ernie
05. Russian Lullaby

Personnel:
John Coltrane (tenor saxophone);
Red Garland (piano);
Paul Chambers (bass);
Art Taylor (drums).
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John Coltrane, "Africa Brass Sessions Vol 2" 1961

01.Song Of The Underground Railroad, Traditional (6:37)
02.Greensleeves, Traditional (10:49)
03.Africa, John Coltrane (16:01)

Personnel:
John Coltrane tenor and soprano sax
Eric Dolphy alto sax ,bass clarinet, and flute
McCoy Tyner piano
Paul Chambers bass
Reggie Workman bass
Art Davis bass
Elvin Jones drums
Booker Little trumpet
Freddie Hubbard trumpet
Julian Priester trombone
Charles Greenlee trombone
Britt Woodman trombone
Carl Bowman euphonium
Julius Watkins french horn
Bob Northern french horn
Robert Swissel french horn
Bill Barber tuba
Pat Patrick reeds
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John Coltrane & Wilbur Harden, "Tanganyika Strut" 1958

01.Tanganyika strut
02.B.J
03.Anedac
04.Once in a while
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Personnel:
Wilbur Harden ( Trumpet / Fleugelhorn )
John Coltrane ( Tenor Sax )
Curtis Fuller ( Trombone )
Tommy Flanagan ( Piano )
Howard Williams ( Piano )
Ali Jackson ( Bass )
Art Taylor ( Drums )
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John Coltrane", Live in Antibes" 1965

Vital, transitional John Coltrane [+] with the quartet near its end; this '65 Antibes concert may have featured familiar material ("Naima," "My Favorite Things," "Afro Blue" and "Impressions" among the five selections), but that was the only thing that linked it with the ensemble's past offerings. Coltrane's tenor was frenetic, as he turned song structure inside out, honked, soared and explored, seeking fresh directions and alternative statements within each blistering solo. Likewise, this version of "My Favorite Things" had an edgy, unfulfilled quality, while even "Naima" was more inquisitive than satisfying. While it's still incredible, pivotal music, there was also the realization that change was near and inevitable.
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01. Presentation(0:49)
02. Naima (7:04)
03. Blue Waltz (14:59)
04. My Favorite Things (17:58)
05. Impressions (15:56)
06. Afro Blue (10:22)

Personnel:
John Coltrane (ss, ts)
McCoy Tyner (p)
Jimmy Garrison (b)
Elvin Jones (d)
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John Coltrane, "Live at Village Vanguard Again"

01. Naima
02. Introduction to My Favorite Things
03. My Favorite Things
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Personnel:
John Coltrane - Soprano Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone, Bass Clarinet
Pharoah Sanders - Tenor Saxophone, Flute
Alice Coltrane - Piano
Jimmy Garrison - Bass
Rashied Ali - Drums
Emanuel Rahim - Percussion
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Password : avaxjazz

John Coltrane, "Like Sonny" 1958/1960

01.One And Four (aka Mr. Day), John Coltrane
02.Exotica (alternate take), John Coltrane
03.Exotica, John Coltrane
04.Like Sonny (aka Simple Like), John Coltrane
05.Essii's Dance, Ray Draper
06.Doxy, Sonny Rollins
07.Oleo, Sonny Rollins
08.I Talk To The Trees, Lerner-Lowe
09.Yesterdays, Harbach-Kern
10.Angel Eyes, Dennis-Brent
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Recorded Sep 8, 1960
John Coltrane tenor sax
McCoy Tyner piano, Steve Davis bass
Billy Higgins drums
Tracks 1-4
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Recorded Nov, 1958
John Coltrane tenor sax
Ray Draper tuba, John Maher piano
Spanky DeBrest bass, Larry Ritchie drums
Tracks 5-10
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John Coltrane, "Live in Stockholm" 1961

01.My favorite things(20:48)
02.Blue train, John Coltrane (8:57)
03.Naima, John Coltrane (4:00)
04.Impressions, John Coltrane (7:11)
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Personnel:
John Coltrane tenor and soprano sax
McCoy Tyner piano
Regie Workman bass
Elvin Jones drums
Eric Dolphy alto sax, flute
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John Coltrane, "Coltrane Time" 1958

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John Coltrane, "Blue Train" (1957)