My Favorite Things
My Favorite Things

My Favorite Things

John Coltrane
  • CD

  • 1

  • 170052

€7.43

 

20-PAGE BOOKLET EDITION

INCLUDES 6 BONUS TRACKS

INCLUDES NEW SPECIALLY PREPARED LINER NOTES BY PENGUIN GUIDE TO JAZZ'S WRITER BRIAN MORTON AND BY PARIS'S PRESTIGIOUS JAZZ MAGAZINE

“My Favorite Things is, above all, a beautiful record. We don’t need to argue for its historical ‘importance’ or its radicalism.” - Penguin Jazz to Jazz

“It is an understatement to say that only a few records ever impacted the career of a musician –and the history of jazz for that matter– as much as My Favorite Things (1961). The four pieces that form the original album constitute a flamboyant demonstration of the art of quartet playing”. - Jazz Magazine

PERSONNEL:

John Coltrane - tenor & soprano sax
McCoy Tyner - piano
Steve Davis - bass
Elvin Jones - drums

New York, October 21, 24 & 26, 1960

(*) BONUS TRACKS:
5-9: Same personnel. From the same sessions, but not included on the original LP.
10: John Coltrane (ts), Wynton Kelly (p), Paul Chambers (b), Jimmy Cobb (d).
New York, December 2, 1959

TRACKS:

01 MY FAVORITE THINGS
02 EVERYTIME WE SAY GOODBYE
03 SUMMERTIME
04 BUT NOT FOR ME
05 VILLAGE BLUES (*)
06 MR. SYMS (*)
07 BLUES TO ELVIN (*)
08 BLUES TO BECHET (*)
09 BLUES TO YOU (*)
10 NAIMA (*)

TOTAL TIME: 75:52 min.

Format
CD
Discs
1
Label code
170052
TCM 165824

John Coltrane

John Coltrane is an American musician and saxophonist dedicated to the world of jazz and considered one of the most notorious influences of the genre, especially the bebop style. 

He is originally from Hamlet, North Carolina, and in his career he stands out for his long and original improvised melodies. 

He is also known for his influence on the struggle for the civil rights of people of color, a marked social conflict of the time and to which he contributed through his music, with lyrics inspired by the theme and free melodies that he developed through several notes played at the same time. 

BIOGRAPHY

John William Coltrane was born in Hamlet, North Carolina, on September 23, 1926. He was the son of John R. Coltrane and Alice Coltrane, working people dedicated to the world of tailoring and sewing, but with great musical skills inherited by his son. 

Coltrane's family was linked to the religious and political world, which is why Coltrane grew up in the city of High Point, North Carolina, where they moved a few months after his birth for work reasons. 

In 1938, at the age of 12 and after the death of the most representative male figures of his lineage, John Coltrane joined the community orchestra, playing clarinet and tenor horn. In 1945 he served for a year in the U.S. Navy. 

Coltrane later devoted his life to professional alto and tenor saxophone playing and in 1949 joined Dizzy Gillespie's Big Band.  After several musical works as part of some bands of the genre, in 1955 he really began his musical career in an outstanding way; he joined the famous quintet of Miles Davis, American musician, composer and trumpeter, considered one of the most prominent figures of jazz, especially after World War II, and with whom he managed to record one of his most outstanding recordings Kind of Blue in 1959.

However, before this and after some problems with Miles, in 1957 he joined the renowned pianist Thelonious Monk, with whom he achieved excellent collaborations. That same year he recorded his first solo album: Blue Train.

From this moment on and after a hard recovery due to his well-known drug addiction, Coltrane took a much more marked free style influenced by his religious convictions, present since his childhood, but fully developed after his new "awakening to life" and which he made clear in an excellent recording called A Love Supreme, released in 1965 and whose live performance, that same year in the city of Seattle, gave rise to a posthumous album released in 2021: A Love Supreme: Live In Seattle. 

In 1969 he formed his own quartet and made his first recording with it, in an album called My Favorite Things, which also featured the renowned pianist McCoy Tyner. 

This masterful jazz musician died in New York City on July 17, 1967 of liver cancer. 

After his death, his musical career continued to reap success with a series of posthumous albums, compiling his recordings during his lifetime, and even with an outstanding special mention for the Pulitzer Prizes.

MUSICAL INFLUENCES

His earliest musical influences were his own parents. His father inspired him to play the clarinet and his mother was an excellent piano player.

His initial stage of musical development was marked by musicians such as Lester Young and Johnny Hodge. He was also inspired by the likes of Ben Webster, Coleman Hawkins and Tab Smith. 

COLLABORATORS IN PERFORMANCE

His main collaborators throughout his career have been his band mates, among whom we can mention musicians such as Miles David, Charlie Parker, Thelonious Monk, McCoy Tyner, Dizzy Gillespie, Paul Chambers, Elmo Hope, Mal Waldron, Tommy Flanagan, Ray Draper, Wilbur Harden, Johnny Griffin, Kenny Burrell, among others.

DISCOGRAPHY

As a leader, John Coltrane has recorded over a hundred albums, more than 20 group albums with musicians Miles Davis and Thelonious Monk, and more than 50 albums recorded with other leaders, including compilations with other musicians. 

Among the highlights of his musical career are: 

Dakar - Original Jazz Classics (1957)

Coltrane - Original Jazz Classics (1957)

Blue Train - Blue Note (1957)

Wheelin And Dealin - Original Jazz Classics (1957)

The Last Trane - Original Jazz Classics (1957)

Soultrane - Original Jazz Classics (1958)

Coltrane Time - Blue Note (1958)

Blue Trane: John Coltrane Plays The Blues – Prestige (1958)

Giant Steps - Atlantic (1959)

Coltrane Jazz – Atlantic (1959)

My Favorite Things – Atlantic (1960)

The Best Of John Coltrane – Atlantic (1961)

Impressions - Impulse! (1961)

Coltranology, vols.I & II – Affinity (1961)

From The Original Master Tapes - Impulse! (1962)

The Complete Graz Concert vol 2 – Magnetic (1962)

The 1962 Graz Concert. Complete Edition - Jazz Lips (1962)

Promise – Moon (1962)

Bye Bye Blackbird - Original Jazz Classics(1962)

Ballads - Impulse! (1962)

Live At Birdland And The Half Note - Cool & Blue (1962)

Coltrane Live At Birdland - Impulse! (1963)

John Coltrane & Johnny Hartman - Impulse! (1963)

Live in Stockholm, 1963 – Charly (1963)

Afro Blue Impressions - Pablo Live (1963)

Coast to Coast – Moon (1964)

A Love Supreme - Impulse! (1965)

The John Coltrane Quartet Plays - Impulse IMPD (1965)

The John Coltrane Quartet Plays - Impulse MCAD (1965)

The Major Works Of John Coltrane - Impulse! (1965)

Ascension - Impulse! (1965)

New Thing At Newport - GRD 105(1965)

Love In Paris – LeJazz (1965)

A Love Supreme: Live In Concert - Black Label (1965)

Live In Paris - Black Label (1965)

A Live Supreme – Moon (1965)

Live In Seatle - Impulse! (1965)

Meditations - Impulse! (1965)

Live At The Village Vanguard Again - Impulse! (1966)

Live In Japan - Impulse! (1966)

Expression - Impulse! (1967)

A John Coltrane Retrospective - Impulse! (1967)

One down, one up: Live at the Half Note - Impulse! (1967)

The Olatunji Concert: The Last Live Recording - Impulse! (1967)

Transition - Impulse! (Póstumo - grabado en el año 1965) (1970)

Sun Ship - Impulse! (Póstumo - grabado en el año 1965) (1971)

Interstellar Space - Impulse! (Póstumo - grabado en el año 1966) (1974)

First Meditations - Impulse! (Póstumo - grabado en el año 1965) (1977)

Blue world - Impulse! (2019)

A Love Supreme: Live In Seattle - Impulse! (Póstumo - grabado en el año 1965) (2021)

MOST FAMOUS SONG

There are many well-known songs by John Coltrane, but without a doubt, among the most emblematic and representative of his career are: 

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