Standard Coltrane
Standard Coltrane is an album credited to jazz musician John Coltrane, released in 1962 on Prestige Records, catalogue 7243. It is assembled from unissued results of a single recording session at the studio of Rudy Van Gelder in Hackensack, New Jersey, in 1958. As Coltrane's fame grew during the 1960s long after he had stopped recording for the label, Prestige used unissued recordings to create new marketable albums without Coltrane's input or approval. This album was rereleased in 1970 as The Master (PR 7825) with that version rereleased on CD to include the other four tunes recorded at the same 11th July session. Those other tunes had previously been released on two other albums assembled from spare recording (Stardust and Bahia).
Standard Coltrane | |
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Studio album by | |
Released | October 2, 1962 |
Recorded | July 11, 1958 |
Studio | Van Gelder Studio, Hackensack |
Genre | Jazz (hard bop) |
Label | Prestige PRLP 7243 |
Producer | Bob Weinstock |
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Down Beat |
Track listing
- "Don't Take Your Love From Me" (Henry Nemo) – 9:17
- "I'll Get By" (Fred Ahlert, Roy Turk) – 8:12
- "Spring Is Here" (Lorenz Hart, Richard Rodgers) – 6:55
- "Invitation" (Bronislau Kaper, Paul Francis Webster) – 10:22
Personnel
- John Coltrane – tenor saxophone
- Wilbur Harden – trumpet, flugelhorn
- Red Garland – piano
- Paul Chambers – bass
- Jimmy Cobb – drums
gollark: i.e. generic slices/maps/channels but not actual generics, == being ***maaaaagic*** (admittedly like in most languages, I think), and `make`/`new`.
gollark: Also, as well as that, how it just special-cases stuff instead of implementing reusable solutions.
gollark: e.g. no map function existing or even being possible means that you have *readable* code with a for loop, but it's harder to understand *why that's there* and *what it's for*.
gollark: The main problem I have with it is that it conflates readability (you can see what the code is doing at a low level) with comprehensibility (you know what and why it's doing at a higher one).
gollark: Are you being serious?
References
- Down Beat: March 14, 1963 Vol. 30, No.7
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