Detailed Information

  • Label: Concord
  • Order number: 9827643
  • Release date: 6.12.2011

Disk 1 von 4

  1. 1 Like Someone In Love Start
  2. 2 I Love You Start
  3. 3 Trane's Slo Blues Start
  4. 4 Lush Life Start
  5. 5 I Hear a Rhapsody Start

Disk 2 von 4

  1. 1 Good Bait
  2. 2 I Want To Talk About You
  3. 3 You Say You Care
  4. 4 Them For Ernie
  5. 5 Russian Lullaby

Disk 3 von 4

  1. 1 Stardust
  2. 2 Time After Time
  3. 3 Love Thy Neighbor
  4. 4 Then I'll Be Tired of You

Disk 4 von 4

  1. 1 Freight Trane
  2. 2 I Never Knew
  3. 3 Lyresto
  4. 4 Why Was I Born?
  5. 5 Big Paul

Product Information

Jazz-Klassiker eingeboxt! Ob es noch Jazz-Fans gibt, die diese acht unsterblichen Klassiker von Miles Davis und John Coltrane nicht in der Sammlung haben? Die sollten jetzt definitiv zuschlagen, denn die neue Boxen-Serie Essential Albums bringt ab sofort jeweils vier Alben in einer Box - mit deutlichem Preisvorteil.

Von John Coltrane wurden "Lush Life" (1958), "Soultrane" (1958), "Stardust" (1959) und "Kenny Burrell & John Coltrane" (1959) in einem Set zusammengefasst.

Product Information


Lush Life
Here is one of the musical giants of the 20th century, poised on the precipice of greatness. Between the spring of 1957 and the winter of 1958, during which time Lush Life was recorded, the music of tenor saxophonist John Coltrane (1926-1967) was developing in giant steps, thanks in great part to a six-month 1957 stint with Thelonious Monk that had much to do with sharpening Coltrane’s harmonic conception and torrential attack.
Lush Life contains Coltrane’s first recordings as sole leader, his initial date fronting a pianoless trio, and one of his first extended readings of a ballad, Billy Strayhorn’s resplendent title track. We also hear him at the helm of a quartet and quintet, featuring pianist Red Garland, with trumpeter Donald Byrd added to “Lush Life.”

Soultrane
Soultrane is one of the essential albums in John Coltrane’s career. Recorded during the first year of his Prestige contract, between his critical service in Thelonious Monk’s quartet and his return to the band of Miles Davis, it finds the tenor saxophonist displaying a new level of both technical and conceptual refinement, dispensing torrents of notes that annotator Ira Gitler famously dubbed “sheets of sound.” The Red Garland Trio, a key component on many Coltrane recordings of the period, is at its eloquent best; and the program, with two compositions from the early days of modern jazz, two lesser-known standards, and a recently penned requiem for the late Ernie Henry, is ideal for verifying that Coltrane’s swiftly evolving approach was both innovative and comprehensive. Coltrane’s status as the primary influence on both saxophonists and musicians generally became undeniable after the release of this immortal performance.

Stardust
It's hard to believe after hearing the eloquence of "Then I'll Be Tired of You" or the title track, but John Coltrane's ballad mastery was the last of his skills to receive wide appreciation. The notion that Coltrane the balladeer was as commanding as Coltrane the uptempo wizard or Coltrane the blues player finally gained acceptance in the early 60s, when this album first appeared and quickly became an important exhibit in the reconsideration. The extended performances boast additional delights, including Paul Chambers's arco bass on "Stardust," Red Garland's well-paced choruses on "Time After Time," some of Wilbur Harden's best trumpet work on "Love Thy Neighbor," and Freddie Hubbard's earliest on "Then I'll Be Tired of You"; they were recorded at Coltrane's final two sessions for Prestige.

Kenny Burrell & John Coltrane
From 1955, the year he came to prominence with Miles Davis’s first “great quintet,” the legendary tenor saxophonist John Coltrane (1926-1967) recorded with only one guitar player: the superbly versatile Kenny Burrell (b. 1931). In March 1958—the pair joined by the crack rhythm section of pianist (and Burrell’s fellow Detroiter) Tommy Flanagan, bassist Paul Chambers, and drummer Jimmy Cobb (the latter two Coltrane’s colleagues at the time with the Miles Davis sextet)—got together to cut the five tunes herein for New Jazz. The result is part hard-bop, part blowing session, and part tuneful bebop, with one very special intimate dialogue between tenor and guitar on “Why Was I Born?” the only duo recording Coltrane ever essayed with a chordal instrument. Throughout Kenny Burrell & John Coltrane, the parts add up to a thoroughly absorbing whole.

EUR 39.99*

42.16 USD

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