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John Coltrane - Coltrane (abc/Impulse!) Vinyl rip in 24 Bit/96 Khz + CD-format, repost-->new post-processing

Posted By : Kel bazar | Date : 18 Aug 2011 13:10:37 | Comments : 9 |
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John Coltrane - Coltrane (1962)
Vinyl rip in 24-bit/96kHz --> 16-bit/44kHz | FLAC (Tracks) , artworks | Stereo | 880 Mb, 259 Mb | 5% RAR Recovery
Styles: Jazz, Hard Bop, Post-Bop | Filesonic + RapidShare Download
abc/Impulse! Records AS-21

A recording many consider his finest single album, and rightly so, John Coltrane displays all of the exciting elements that sparked brilliance and allowed his fully formed instrumental voice to shine through in the most illuminating manner. On tenor saxophone he's simply masterful, offering the burgeoning sheets of sound philosophy only he perfected into endless weavings of melodic and tuneful displays of inventive, thoughtful, driven phrases. Coltrane plays a bit of soprano saxophone as a primer for his more exploratory work to follow. Remember this is 1962, at a time when he was rethinking his style vis a vis the work he did influenced by Ornette Coleman, and only five years prior to his passing. Of course bassist Jimmy Garrison, drummer Elvin Jones, and especially the stellar McCoy Tyner have integrated their passionate dynamics into the inner whole of the quartet. The result is a most focused effort, a relatively popular session to both his fans or latecomers, and five selections where it is difficult to nit-pick because they are so brilliantly conceived and rendered. "Out of This World," at over 14 minutes in modal trim, is a powerful statement, stretched over Tyner's marvelous and deft chords, the churning rhythms conjured by Jones, and the vocal style Coltrane utilizes as he circles the wagons on this classic melody, including a nifty key change. "Tunji" is a mysterious, easily rendered piece in 4/4 which speaks to the spiritual path Coltrane tred, a bit riled up at times while Tyner remains serene. Hard bop is still in the back of their collective minds during "Miles' Mode," a sliver of a melody that jumps into jam mode in a free-for-all blowing session, while the converse is to be found in Mal Waldron's "Soul Eyes," the quintessential ballad and impressive here for the way Coltrane's holds notes, emotion, and expressive intellectuality. On soprano you can tell Coltrane is close to taking complete control of his newly found voicings, as a playful, jaunty "The Inch Worm" in 3/4 time is only slightly strained but in which he finds complete communion with the others. Even more than any platitudes one can heap on this extraordinary recording, it historically falls between the albums Olé Coltrane and Impressions -- completing a triad of studio efforts that are as definitive as anything Coltrane ever produced, and highly representative of him in his prime.--Almusic


Track listing:

1. "Out of This World" (Harold Arlen) — 14:01
2. "Soul Eyes" (Mal Waldron) — 5:23
3. "The Inch Worm" (Frank Loesser) — 6:15
4. "Tunji" (John Coltrane) — 6:32
5. "Miles' Mode" (Coltrane) — 7:30

Personnel:

Recorded August 11, June 19-20, June 29 and September 18, 1962.

* John Coltrane — tenor saxophone/soprano saxophone
* McCoy Tyner — piano
* Jimmy Garrison — bass
* Elvin Jones — drums

Ripping Equipment:
TT: Technics SP 15 with SME 3009 tonearm & customized plinth
Cartridge: Ortofon Concorde OM 30 MM
Phono amp: Pro-Ject Tube Box II with 2X JAN 12AX 7WA (General Electric)
Cables: Wire World Solstice 5.2
Computer: Sony Vaio Laptop
ADC: Tascam US-144 external USB 2.0 Audiointerface
Software: WaveLab 5.01, ClickRepair, Redbook Resampled And Dithered with iZotope RX




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Posted By: fredists Date: 18 Aug 2011 13:12:35
So this is the same rip with post processing improvement ? What has this one over the older???
Posted By: Kel bazar Date: 18 Aug 2011 13:16:06
Less surface noises and scratchs.

I was not happy with the last one and have to re-up.

Little improvement.
Posted By: aksman Date: 18 Aug 2011 13:39:18
Thx for the last 2 Coltrane's... Much appreciated!
Posted By: kantschu Date: 18 Aug 2011 13:49:19
Thanks again!
Posted By: fredists Date: 18 Aug 2011 13:50:47
How do you achieve to reduce surface noise via post processing ?? surface noise is not like clicks/pop it's longer sounds (or at least that's what i'm thinking of it!)
Posted By: the whistling goatswain Date: 18 Aug 2011 15:45:58
Thank you for the repost Kel.
Posted By: Kel bazar Date: 18 Aug 2011 17:27:08
@fredists

Manual declick.
Posted By: sbandoboy Date: 18 Aug 2011 19:49:35
Thank you, Kel. Out of This World truly defines JC music.
Posted By: beaker75 Date: 22 Aug 2011 20:07:35
thank you!
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