Soultrane

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 5   Total Length: 39:51

eMusic Review

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Harvey Pekar

eMusic Contributor

03.29.02
Coltrane stretches out on a solid early album.
2000 | Label: Fantasy / Prestige

Soultrane is one of legendary tenorman John Coltrane's early albums. Coltrane stretches out here on five tunes with the fine rhythm section of pianist Red Garland, bassist Paul Chambers and drummer Art Taylor. Even this early, all aspects of his personality can already be heard. He's ebullient on "Good Bait," double timing all the way. "I Want to Talk About You," "You Say You Care" and "Theme for Ernie" demonstrate how lyrical he could be. On the up-tempo "Russian Lullaby" he sounds shot out of a gun, tearing through the changes. Although he was to accomplish more, Coltrane was already a great tenorman in 1958.

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I'd love this album...

pianomanzach

...but it's not available. Thanks for getting my hopes up, eMusic.

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Russian Lullaby

dantelm

Russian Lullaby is the highlight of this album for me. It's an often over-looked Berlin tune. Check out Ella Fitzgerald's version sometime (on Ella Signs Berlin), unfortunately it's not on eMusic.

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There's a remastered copy...

jamieshanks

... of this album on emu, should people care. http://www.emusic.com/album/John-Coltrane-Soultrane-Remastered-MP3-Download/10929905.html However you'll need track 2 from this download, as its not available for download on the other. Go figure.

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I Want To Talk About...

monkeyworks

I have been listening to Coltrane for decades, but SoulTrane had eluded me all that time, until a few months ago...found right here on eMusic. I enjoy all 5 tracks, but "I Want To Talk About You" is a stand-out for me. Great melody, and long winding solos by Coltrane & Red Garland. Pull the trigger & download the whole thing...go ahead.

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No jazz musician inspires flattering imitators and devoted listeners like saxophonist John Coltrane. One reason is because there's a Coltrane for every taste: the yearning balladeer; the hard bop jackrabbit, scaling intricate improvised lines over the chords to standard tunes; the ambitious conceptualist, constructing ever-more elaborate steeplechases to challenge himself; the exponent of spiritual, roiling high-energy free jazz. Coming up in the 1950s, the tenor saxophonist apprenticed with Miles Davis and Thelonious Monk, leaders… more »

They Say All Media Guide

In addition to being bandmates within Miles Davis’ mid-’50s quintet, John Coltrane (tenor sax) and Red Garland (piano) head up a session featuring members from a concurrent version of the Red Garland Trio: Paul Chambers (bass) and Art Taylor (drums). This was the second date to feature the core of this band. A month earlier, several sides were cut that would end up on Coltrane’s Lush Life album. Soultrane offers a sampling of performance styles and settings from Coltrane and crew. As with a majority of his Prestige sessions, there is a breakneck-tempo bop cover (in this case an absolute reworking of Irving Berlin’s “Russian Lullaby”), a few smoldering ballads (such as “I Want to Talk About You” and “Theme for Ernie”), as well as a mid-tempo romp (“Good Bait”). Each of these sonic textures displays a different facet of not only the musical kinship between Coltrane and Garland but in the relationship that Coltrane has with the music. The bop-heavy solos that inform “Good Bait,” as well as the “sheets of sound” technique that was named for the fury in Coltrane’s solos on the rendition of “Russian Lullaby” found here, contain the same intensity as the more languid and considerate phrasings displayed particularly well on “I Want to Talk About You.” As time will reveal, this sort of manic contrast would become a significant attribute of Coltrane’s unpredictable performance style. Not indicative of the quality of this set is the observation that, because of the astounding Coltrane solo works that both precede and follow Soultrane — most notably Lush Life and Blue Train — the album has perhaps not been given the exclusive attention it so deserves. – Lindsay Planer

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