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My Favorite Things (John Coltrane album)


FieldValue
nameMy Favorite Things
typestudio
artistJohn Coltrane
coverMy_Favorite_Things.jpg
released
recordedOctober 21, 24, & 26, 1960
genreModal jazz
length40:25
labelAtlantic
producerNesuhi Ertegün
prev_titleLush Life
prev_year1961
next_titleBags & Trane
next_year1961

My Favorite Things is a studio album by the jazz musician John Coltrane. It was released in March 1961 on Atlantic Records. It was the first album to feature Coltrane playing soprano saxophone. An edited version of the title track became a hit single that gained popularity in 1961 on radio. The record became a major commercial success.

Background

In March 1960, while on tour in Europe, Miles Davis purchased a soprano saxophone for Coltrane. While the instrument had been used in the early days of jazz (notably by Sidney Bechet) it had become rare by the 1950s with the exception of Steve Lacy. Intrigued by its capabilities, Coltrane began playing it at his summer club dates.

After leaving the Davis band, Coltrane, for his first regular bookings at New York's Jazz Gallery in the summer of 1960, assembled the first version of the John Coltrane Quartet. The lineup settled by autumn with McCoy Tyner on piano, Steve Davis on bass, and Elvin Jones on drums. Sessions the week before Halloween at Atlantic Studios yielded the track "Village Blues" for Coltrane Jazz and the entirety of this album along with the tracks that Atlantic later assembled into Coltrane Plays the Blues (1962) and Coltrane's Sound (1964).

According to Lewis Porter's biography, Coltrane described "My Favorite Things" as "my favorite piece of all those I have recorded".

Music

The title track is a modal rendition of the Rodgers and Hammerstein song "My Favorite Things" from The Sound of Music. The melody is heard numerous times throughout, but instead of playing solos over the written chord changes, both Tyner and Coltrane take extended solos over vamps of the two tonic chords, E minor and E major (whereas the original resolves to G major), played in waltz time. In the documentary The World According to John Coltrane, narrator Ed Wheeler remarks on the impact that this song's popularity had on Coltrane's career:

The album is also notable for Coltrane's arrangement of the George Gershwin standard "But Not for Me" which showcases the Coltrane changes technique, as heard on "Giant Steps" and "Countdown".

On March 3, 1998, Rhino Records reissued My Favorite Things as part of its Atlantic 50th Anniversary Jazz Gallery series. Included as bonus tracks were both sides of the "My Favorite Things" single, released as Atlantic 5012 in 1961.

Reception

|editor-last=Swenson |editor-first=J. In 1998, the album received the Grammy Hall of Fame award. It attained gold record status in 2018, having sold 500,000 copies.

In 2000 it was voted number 392 in Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums.

Track listing

Personnel

  • John Coltrane – soprano saxophone on side one and bonus tracks; tenor saxophone on side two
  • McCoy Tyner – piano
  • Steve Davis – double bass
  • Elvin Jones – drums

Production personnel

  • Nesuhi Ertegün — production
  • Tom Dowd, Phil Iehle — engineering
  • Lee Friedlander — photography
  • Loring Eutemey — cover design
  • Bill Coss — liner notes
  • Bob Carlton, Patrick Milligan — reissue supervision
  • Bill Inglot, Dan Hersch — digital remastering
  • Rachel Gutek — reissue design
  • Hugh Brown — reissue art direction
  • Nat Hentoff — reissue liner notes
  • Steven Chean — reissue editorial supervision
  • Ted Myers, Elizabeth Pavone — reissue editorial coordination

Certifications

References

Sources

References

  1. Coltrane, John. ''My Favorite Things'', Rhino R2 75204, 1998.
  2. DeVito, Chris. (2013). "The John Coltrane Reference". [[Routledge]].
  3. (March 18, 1961). "Mar. Album Releases". The Cash Box Publishing Co..
  4. [[Ben Ratliff. Ratliff, Ben]], ''Coltrane: The Story of A Sound''. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2007. {{ISBN. 978-0-374-12606-3, p. 60.
  5. Davis, Miles, with [[Quincy Troupe]]. ''Miles: The Autobiography.'' New York: Simon and Schuster, 1989. {{ISBN. 0-671-63504-2, pp. 223–224.
  6. Barr, Terry. (July 13, 2021). "Transcending the Nazis".
  7. [https://www.amazon.com/My-Favorite-Things-John-Coltrane/dp/B00000348A "My Favorite Things"], Amazon.
  8. {{AllMusic
  9. Larkin, Colin. (2007). "The Encyclopedia of Popular Music". [[Oxford University Press]].
  10. Hull, Tom. (n.d.). "Jazz (1940s-50s)".
  11. (2008). "The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings". [[Penguin Books.
  12. [http://www.grammy.org/recording-academy/awards/hall-of-fame#m Grammy Hall of Fame website]. Retrieved August 7, 2011.
  13. (January 2019). "What's News".
  14. Larkin, Colin. (2000). "[[All Time Top 1000 Albums]]". [[Virgin Books]].
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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