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The 1998 reissue of GIANT STEPS contains all the original tracks and liner notes plus additional tracks and rare photos.Personnel: John Coltrane (tenor saxophone); Tommy Flana...Read more
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Giant Steps/ John Coltrane
Giant Steps really was giant steps for Coltrane during this recording. An all star line up that included some of the best hard bop studio players around during that time in t...Read more
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Giant Steps - John Coltrane
Giant Steps by John Coltrane is absolutely one of the first truly innovative recordings in jazz history. A saxophone was never played in the way that Coltrane played it on Gia...Read more

Giant Steps by John Coltrane (CD, Jun-1987, Atlantic)

Product description

Album Features
UPC:075678133725
Artist:John Coltrane
Format:CD
Release Year:1987
Record Label:Atlantic
Genre:Jazz Instrument, Saxophone

Track Listing
1. Giant Steps
2. Cousin Mary
3. Countdown
4. Spiral
5. Syeeda's Song Flute
6. Naima
7. Mr. P.C.
8. Giant Steps - (alternate take, version 1)
9. Naima - (alternate take, version 1)
10. Cousin Mary - (alternate take)
11. Countdown - (alternate take)
12. Syeeda's Song Flute - (alternate take)

Details
Playing Time:63 min.
Contributing Artists:Cedar Walton, Art Taylor, Tommy Flanagan, Wynton Kelly, Paul Chambers, Jimmy Cobb
Producer:Nesuhi Ertegun
Distributor:WEA (Distributor)
Recording Type:Studio
Recording Mode:Stereo
SPAR Code:n/a

Album Notes
The 1998 reissue of GIANT STEPS contains all the original tracks and liner notes plus additional tracks and rare photos.Personnel: John Coltrane (tenor saxophone); Tommy Flanagan, Wynton Kelly, Cedar Walton (piano); Paul Chambers (bass); Art Taylor, Lex Humphries, Jimmy Cobb (drums).Producer: Nesuhi Ertegun.Reissue producer: Bob Carlton, Patrick Milligan.Recorded at Atlantic Studios, New York, New York on April 1, May 4 and December 2, 1959. Includes liner notes by Nat Hentoff.Digitally remastered by Bill Inglot & Dan Hersch (DigiPrep).Personnel: John Coltrane (tenor saxophone); Tommy Flanagan, Wynton Kelly, Cedar Walton (piano); Paul Chambers (bass); Art Taylor, Lex Humphries, Jimmy Cobb (drums).Recorded at Atlantic Studios, New York, New York on April 1, May 4 and December 2, 1959. Includes liner notes by Nat Hentoff.John Coltrane's maiden voyage for Atlantic Records was the fulfillment of all the potential he'd demonstrated with Miles, Monk and on his own Prestige recordings. Recorded in May 1959 (one month after completing Davis' KIND OF BLUE), GIANT STEPS is Coltrane's first recital to feature nothing but his own original compositions, and is the culmination of his obsessive foray into harmony. By taking all of the notes in a chord--and trying to find every possible inversion and relevant substitution--the saxophonist was forced to develop a complex new form of melodic phrasing that enabled him to rhythmically crowd every permutation into a single phrase.The effect is not only technically impressive, but an emotional marvel as well. On equestrian events such as the up-tempo title tune and "Countdown," Coltrane blazes through the changes with a torrential effusion of ideas, each phrase connected to the next with unerring logic and a sublime sense of symmetry. Every note in the lower, middle and upper register of his horn is articulated with power, precision and a variety of expressive timbres. His manipulation of overtones and multiphonics imparts a hair-raising vocal immediacy to his cry, and each solo culminates in a stirring emotional catharsis. This is bebop to the tenth power.But the joy of Coltrane's art is not predicated on its intellectual dexterity. The charming stop-time cadences of "Syeeda's Song Flute" depict an upbeat, child-like disposition, inspiring a particularly celebratory Coltrane solo. The vamping figures of "Cousin Mary" and "Mr. P.C." lead to solos permeated with blues fervor. And of course, there's "Naima" (written for John's first wife), one of the saxophonist's tenderest, most enduring themes, with a melody that floats above Tommy Flanagan's serene chordal colors like a solitary cloud at dusk.

Editorial Reviews
...essential for all serious jazz collections....The culmination of 'Trane's sheets-of-sound period...GIANT STEPS brought the chordal improvising of bebop to its breaking point...
JazzTimes (19941101)

5 Stars - Excellent - ...[Coltrane] has managed to combine all the swing of Pres with the virility of Hawkins and added to it a highly individual, personal sound as well as a complex and logical, and therefore fascinating, mind...tag this LP as one of the important ones...
Down Beat (19600101)

Ranked #102 in Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums Of All Time - [H]e played with a heated melodic enthusiasm - flying clusters of notes - that declared new possibilities for jazz improvisation...
Rolling Stone (20031211)

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Giant Steps by John Coltrane (CD, Jun-1987, Atlantic)
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Giant Steps/ John Coltrane

Created: 23/02/09
Giant Steps really was giant steps for Coltrane during this recording. An all star line up that included some of the best hard bop studio players around during that time in the early part of 1959. Coltrane had finished being a sideman and marked his debut as a leader. This recording put "Trane" on the map as being one of the top inovators of the avantgard/hard bop era. It was this recording that Coltrane like Monk would record his own compositions and with the help of Cedar Walton Wynton Kelly and Tommy Flanagan and a supportive cast that includes Paul Chambers, Art Taylor, Lex Humphries and Jimmy Cobb, would solidify his place as a major figure in the history of jazz. These musicians helped Coltrane in his search for the rhythm section he would eventually employ. Paul Chambers was his bassist of choice like many other hard bop practitioners but was unavailable to join Coltrane's permanent band due to his early death. Just after this landmark recording, Coltrane found the band that would lead him to even greater heights of expression. That of McCoy Tyner, Jimmy Garrison and Elvin Jones. Jazz is about unexplored territory and intensity, John Coltrane delivers on both fronts.
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Giant Steps - John Coltrane

Created: 09/09/08
Giant Steps by John Coltrane is absolutely one of the first truly innovative recordings in jazz history. A saxophone was never played in the way that Coltrane played it on Giant Steps. Bird (Charlie Parker) was really the only other sax player that was happening around the same time (actually, a bit earlier) but certainly did not play like Coltrane. Every song is excellent and epitomizes the style that would become known as "progressive jazz". I own the vinyl LP version of this and was "turned on" to it back in 1970. I bought the CD because of the alternate takes available. Unlike the canned, electronic "smooth jazz" of today, this is down home, straight ahead, REAL JAZZ.
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Pure Jazz

Created: 24/04/07
This man is the best Tenor sax player that you will ever hear. You'll have to buy it to find out why.
0 of 1 people found this review helpful.
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