The Very Best of John Coltrane
The Very Best of John Coltrane
ASIN: B00005M1BK
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
John Coltrane is a much-anthologized artist. He recorded primarily for three labels in his decade-long stay at the forefront of jazz, whose vaults have yielded numerous best-of recordings in recent years and now two very-bests to commemorate the 75th year of his birth. This collection is drawn from Coltrane's Impulse years, the early '60s when he was the most powerful and influential voice in jazz. The material dates from 1961 to 1964, omitting the more challenging later recordings and emphasizing the classic quartet formation with pianist McCoy Tyner, drummer Elvin Jones, and bassist Jimmy Garrison. It's a generous collection, with a running time of nearly 75 minutes, and every track is a gem. The highlights of his collaborations with Duke Ellington and singer Johnny Hartman, "In a Sentimental Mood" and "Lush Life," respectively, are here, as is a marvelous rendering of his own beautiful "Naima," recorded at the Village Vanguard in 1961 with Eric Dolphy on bass clarinet. While the famous studio version of "My Favorite Things" belongs to Atlantic, the live version here from the 1963 Newport Festival may well be the greatest of his numerous recordings of the tune. There's an ineffable quality in Coltrane's greatest work that's never been matched, a combination of magisterial creative authority combined with extraordinary tension and expressive depth. It's apparent everywhere here, but perhaps most intensely felt in pieces like "Alabama" and "Crescent," performances that reinvented lyricism in jazz.
For newcomers to Coltrane's music, this is an excellent introduction, comparable, and in some ways superior, to Ken Burns Jazz Collection: John Coltrane or the complementary The Very Best of John Coltrane on Rhino/Atlantic, covering the years 1959-61. While Coltrane aficionados are likely to have most of the material here--some of it multiple times--there's also something for them: a 4 minute 33 second version of "Impressions" that was inadvertently omitted from the eight-CD set of The Classic Quartet: The Complete Impulse Studio Recordings. The only known studio version of a tune that Coltrane reworked repeatedly and at length in live performance, here it's a taut vignette. --Stuart Broomer
The Very Best of John Coltrane,John Coltrane,Universal,Avant-Garde Jazz,Jazz,Jazz Music,Modal Music,Pop
Average customer rating:
- "Giant Steps" "Equinox" and "My Favorite Things" are enough for 10 stars alone.
- The Very Best of John Coltrane -- Not To Be Missed!
- All The High Points of the Atlantic Years
- Outstanding Compilation
- A mellowed out masterpiece
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The Very Best of John Coltrane
John Coltrane
Manufacturer: Atlantic / Wea
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Avant Garde & Free Jazz
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Similar Items:
- The Essential Charlie Parker
- Kind of Blue
- A Love Supreme
- Blue Train
- Thelonious Monk with John Coltrane
ASIN: B000046PVI
Release Date: 2000-02-15 |
Tracks:
- Giant Steps
- Cousin Mary
- Naima
- Like Sonny
- My Shining Hour
- My Favorite Things
- Central Park West
- Summertime
- Mr. Syms
- Equinox
- Body And Soul
Amazon.com
With his inexhaustible technique, trademark sound, and limitless imagination, tenor and soprano saxophonist John Coltrane was one of jazz's most dominant musicians. This collection covers his important Atlantic Records sessions recorded from 1959 to 1960 (chronicled in their entirety on Heavyweight Champion). The tunes signal an important transitional phase from Trane's stints with Miles Davis and Thelonious Monk to his emergence as a leader in his own right. "Giant Steps" "Naima," and "Cousin Mary"--featuring pianist Tommy Flanagan and drummer Art Taylor--crystallized Trane's supersonic "sheets of sound" style. "Like Sonny," an Afro-Latin dedication to his friend and contemporary Sonny Rollins with Wynton Kelly on piano, reveals Trane's stylistic debts to Charlie Parker and Coleman Hawkins. His historic renditions of "My Shining Hour," "Body and Soul," "Summertime," and "My Favorite Things" highlight Coltrane's ability to remake a song into his own image, as well as introduce his influential sound on the soprano sax. These landmark recordings show the development of Coltrane's "great" quartet as well as forecast his iconoclastic excursions into the outer limits of rhythm and tonality, which grew during until his death in 1967. --Eugene Holley, Jr.
Customer Reviews:
"Giant Steps" "Equinox" and "My Favorite Things" are enough for 10 stars alone........2007-05-18
This is a good intro to Coltrane, he has too much amazing stuff to put into a single CD but this is a great place to start off. You'll get a little sample of all his sounds from this CD. And for those of us who own more than 10 Coltrane Albums, it's still nice to have all these excellent songs on one high quality CD.
The Very Best of John Coltrane -- Not To Be Missed!.......2007-01-03
In this recording of John Coltrane, there are several songs that stand out in my mind as I write this: The incredibly complex "Giant Steps", the child-like version of "My Favorite Things", the on-again/off-again sad to happy blues song "Equinox", and the business day blues of "Mr. Syms".
Each of these standout songs is different and unique among the other songs on the recording, but it is to these I want to draw your attention as those that captured mine when I listened to the CD.
I am a guitarist who wants to learn Coltrane's interval and melodic technique, but I am always perplexed by his ever changing exploration of the note, in and around the note, wrenching it of its juice like a squeezed lemon, until there is no more; and then Coltrane changes his melodic structure and has another entire lemon to work with.
Please don't misunderstand this illustration as to make it sound like his music is sour like the lemon, although that's what you may be thinking!
Coltrane's unique use of intervals has always what has been his hallmark, some slow and bluesy, others as in the changes of "Giant Steps" blindingly fast and complex.
There are other songs I would have liked to have seen appear on this recording, but as advertised as "The Very Best of John Coltrane", this CD doesn't fall that short.
If you are new to Coltrane's work, this is an excellent place to start. I gave it 4 out of 5 stars because of the fact there should be other more recognizable songs of his on this recording, and I would have gladly paid for a 2-CD set if "The Very Best of John Coltrane" delved more into his vast repertiore of work.
All that being said, the songs on "The Very Best of John Coltrane" will not disappoint or denegrate the recording in its entirety. Again, the CD should be taken for its whole, not just the standout songs I mentioned above.
Classic Jazz enthusiasts already know Coltrane, and this is a welcome addition to my collection, almost always in rotation on my CD carousel if not uploaded to my iTunes.
All The High Points of the Atlantic Years.......2006-12-24
This is an excellent introduction to John Coltrane. The music is very accessible for even a casual listener. If you listen to this and Coltrane's vibe gets to you then you're going to be picking up the actual releases that this best of was drawn from. Personally, I actually favor Coltrane's work on the Impulse label, but this Atlantic collection is great. I purchased it because, though I'm an avid jazz collector and listener, I am embarrassed to admit that I do not own a copy of Giant Steps or My Favorite Things, two of Trane's landmark releases. The Very Best of John Coltrane has all the high points of those Atlantic years including the incredible Giant Steps that sent Sonny Rollins back out to the Brooklyn Bridge for more late night practicing and My Favorite Things which brought Trane legions of ,albeit temporary, fans and great commercial success. Naima has always been a favorite and it's included here along with all the other wonderful stuff from those Atlantic releases. Actually there just are not any dull tracks on this CD, it's all great though more laid-back than the Impulse stuff. My actually wife lets me play this one in the house (ha ha). Nice packaging too, the booklet includes a discography of Coltrane's Atlantic releases and an essay by the famous jazz critic and writer Nat Hentoff. There's really nothing else that can be said about this CD. This release perfectly captures Coltrane in his groundbreaking, transitional years, perfecting his "sheets of sound" approach to playing.
You know, listening to Coltrane is actually very much like riding on a real train. The stuff on this CD could be compared to having left the station a few miles back but not yet up to full speed. Things start picking up around the time that "Live at the Village Vanguard" was released, and full speed is achieved right at and immediately after "A Love Supreme". Some people don't care for the train ride at full speed. I love it. It's really quite amazing to compare the music on this CD to a release such as Sun Ship (December 1966) and realize there is only about 7 years time that passed between these sessions. So this is really a great place to start if you've been hearing Coltrane's name (from your musician friends perhaps) and don't know where to start.
Buy
Outstanding Compilation.......2006-11-08
After many years of listening to Ken Burns and Smithsonian collections, I have started buying individual artist compilations (with a view to buy more of the artists I enjoy). Some have been erratic and disappointing; this one is amazing. This "best of" CD contains nothing but jewels that show exactly where Coletrain fell on the jazz evolutionary scale. In other words, this CD gives a great sense of what came before Coletrain, how he built on it, and how others then built on his work. He had a combination of virtuosity and artistry that earned him an uncontested place at the top. If you want to get to know the giants of jazz, this is a perfect introduction to one of them.
A mellowed out masterpiece.......2005-02-22
I am a music listener. I can listen to a large range of different styles. Even though majority of my reviews are in reference to Hip Hop and slamming Hip Not music. There are times where I don't want to hear MOP, Cormega or maybe UGK or Alice In Chains.
It's time to shine and recline thats when I listen to Mr Coltrane. If you allow this music to take you, you can almost reach each notes heights and ride off into every songs melody until you are reminded of something familiar or maybe not to familiar.
As I listen I can almost imagine being in a place I have never been knowing that this music would be played in this fictional reality.
As I listen it becomes more inspiring to express my written testimonal to an awesome musician. Don't get me wrong MF Doom is the man but for a certain time and place. For that time you want to really zone out let this music acompany you and your deep thoughts on the autobahn of thinking and contemplation and utter mind work.
Its an Excellent CD for any occasion
Average customer rating:
- Acceptable Introduction
- Essential Jazz. Simply a Fabulous Collection
- The best of the many Coltrane "Best Of" collections
- a Strong 5
- Very good
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The Very Best of John Coltrane
John Coltrane
Manufacturer: Umvd Labels
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Avant Garde & Free Jazz
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
General
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
Similar Items:
- The Very Best of John Coltrane
- Kind of Blue
- The Essential Miles Davis
- Best of Miles Davis & John Coltrane
- Coltrane for Lovers
ASIN: B00005M1BK
Release Date: 2001-07-24 |
Tracks:
- A Love Supreme (Part 1 - Acknowledgement)
- In A Sentimental Mood
- Bessie's Blues
- Naima
- Afro Blue
- Lush Life
- Crescent
- Impressions
- Alabama
- My Favorite Things
Amazon.com
John Coltrane is a much-anthologized artist. He recorded primarily for three labels in his decade-long stay at the forefront of jazz, whose vaults have yielded numerous best-of recordings in recent years and now two very-bests to commemorate the 75th year of his birth. This collection is drawn from Coltrane's Impulse years, the early '60s when he was the most powerful and influential voice in jazz. The material dates from 1961 to 1964, omitting the more challenging later recordings and emphasizing the classic quartet formation with pianist McCoy Tyner, drummer Elvin Jones, and bassist Jimmy Garrison. It's a generous collection, with a running time of nearly 75 minutes, and every track is a gem. The highlights of his collaborations with Duke Ellington and singer Johnny Hartman, "In a Sentimental Mood" and "Lush Life," respectively, are here, as is a marvelous rendering of his own beautiful "Naima," recorded at the Village Vanguard in 1961 with Eric Dolphy on bass clarinet. While the famous studio version of "My Favorite Things" belongs to Atlantic, the live version here from the 1963 Newport Festival may well be the greatest of his numerous recordings of the tune. There's an ineffable quality in Coltrane's greatest work that's never been matched, a combination of magisterial creative authority combined with extraordinary tension and expressive depth. It's apparent everywhere here, but perhaps most intensely felt in pieces like "Alabama" and "Crescent," performances that reinvented lyricism in jazz.
For newcomers to Coltrane's music, this is an excellent introduction, comparable, and in some ways superior, to Ken Burns Jazz Collection: John Coltrane or the complementary The Very Best of John Coltrane on Rhino/Atlantic, covering the years 1959-61. While Coltrane aficionados are likely to have most of the material here--some of it multiple times--there's also something for them: a 4 minute 33 second version of "Impressions" that was inadvertently omitted from the eight-CD set of The Classic Quartet: The Complete Impulse Studio Recordings. The only known studio version of a tune that Coltrane reworked repeatedly and at length in live performance, here it's a taut vignette. --Stuart Broomer
Customer Reviews:
Acceptable Introduction.......2005-10-30
Acknowledgement: The disc begins with Coltrane's most famous tune, the first movement of A Love Supreme. A repetitious bass motif is played around with by the saxophone until it is revealed to be a musical recitation of the title of the album. Who am I to criticise the most worshipped eight minutes in all of 1960s jazz? Yet I never loved "A Love Supreme". Oh well.
In A Sentimental Mood: In 1963 Coltrane recorded a moderately acclaimed album with his great predecessor Duke Ellington. This reading of one of Duke's most beloved melodies is considered by many a classic - (too?) romantic, slow and accessible; one for those who are not well-up with Coltrane's fiercer stuff
Bessie's Blues: This odd little number, short enough to fit on a 78, appeared in the album Crescent. By the time this was recorded, Coltrane's sound was increasingly harsh and uncompromising, yet this is a joyous romp through a simple and catchy blues dedicated to the famous blues singer.
Naima: A bizarre, obscure recording of one of Coltrane's most beloved themes. Unable to get their hands on the classic Atlantic version, Impulse has released this version recorded live at the Village Vanguard in 1961. At the time COltrane could not legally record this tune, due to conflict with his Atlantic contract. So the melody is inverted (actually the tune was notated in the log as "Amain", which is supposed to be "Naima" backwards). So sue me, I don't like the inverted version of the melody at all - try the Antibes performance of 1965 for a truly freaky experience.
Afro-Blue: This is one of Coltrane's famous soprano-waltz standards. Afro-Blue is an inspired choice of tune - it exactly suits Coltrane's far out whacked out soloing, which reaches a frenzy during his second solo. A classic performance.
Lush Life: Bah! Humbug!
Crescent: One of Coltrane's most famous albums began with this eponymous track. A theme that is sweeping and beautiful, backed up by ferocious soloing.
Impressions: In 1962 Coltrane recorded his one and only studio version of a tune that he played almost every night. The "classic" version of Impressions is the one on the eponymous album (recorded live); this version is one third the length, but still has ferocity and inspiration to spare. I wouldn't have thought it was possible to do a four minute version of "Impressions," but here it is. Coltrane never released it, so it is here for the first time in all its unapproved-by-the-artist glory...
Alabama: A beautiful theme accidentally butchered in the studio (see my review of the "Live at Birdland" disc). Yes, it's one of Trane's most famous compositions, but it's terrible that some idiot released a breakdown take (and presumably burnt the complete takes!)
My Favorite Things: Not the classic studio version, but a version that has received acclaim and near-literal worship. The 17-minute version of My Favorite Things, from the Newport Jazz Festival of 1963, contains enough energy to launch a space ship; or to ascend to heaven in a chariot of fire. The best legal version of Coltrane's most requested tune.
Essential Jazz. Simply a Fabulous Collection.......2004-02-22
Many "best of" CD's are lousy, but this CD is truly outstanding. You can make a case that this is the best jazz CD ever simply because of the superb selection of John Coltrane's best jazz during the prime mid-to-late years of his career. This CD is highly recommended by the "Penguin Guide to Jazz," which is very unusual for a "best of" CD.
Coltrane's albums are consistently rated among the greatest albums ever made, such as "Giant Steps" and "A Love Supreme." The song "My Favorite Things" gets my vote for "best jazz song ever." Coltrane should be heard by anyone even casually interested in jazz. This CD gives you a great collection of some of his best music.
Outstanding!
The best of the many Coltrane "Best Of" collections.......2003-05-26
It is an exercise in futility to attempt to bottle the career of John Coltrane into a 10-track "Best Of" collection (even at 75 minutes), but as exercises in futility go, this is as good as it gets. Actually it is a "best of" 1961-1964, his years on the Impulse label, and the quality and variety of this collection are incomparable. Coltrane was a master of both soprano and alto sax, and both are featured here. Most selections feature his famed quartet including McCoy Tyner on piano, Jimmy Garrison on bass and Elvin Jones on drums. Also included are Duke Ellington playing piano on his own "In a Sentimental Mood", and Eric Dolphy on bass clarinet on "Naima", from the live Village Vanguard recordings. Every conceivable Coltrane mood is captured, from bluesy exuberance ("Bessie's Blues"), to tearless mourning ("Alabama"), mystical contemplation ("A Love Supreme - Acknowledgement"), and the late-night world-weariness of "Lush Life" (written by Ellington collaborator Billy Strayhorn and beautifully sung by Johnny Hartman in the quintessential performance of his career). There is also Coltrane's magnum opus, "Afro-Blue", ten minutes of some of the most inspired jazz ever recorded, both richly melodic and full of on-target improvisation. "My Favorite Things", Coltrane's most enduringly popular song, is also included here, but it is the Newport Jazz Festival version, which is longer (17 minutes), less focused and less effective than the definitive studio version (which was on Atlantic, and therefore could not be included in the Impulse collection). One senses that the quartet had already played this song too many times in the intervening three years to give it their best anymore. There is also "Impressions", a never-released treasure. John Coltrane's essential contribution to jazz, (make that "to music") was his ability to bring himself and his band into a place of transcendent being - of joy or of sorrow, without ever being overtly emotional. This is a state that cannot be attained through melody, arrangement or improvisation alone, but only through artistry, and that is why imitators of the Coltrane style can leave me cold. Coltrane wasn't style, he was genius.
a Strong 5.......2001-09-26
for all the New John Coltrane Fans this is a Helluva Introduction it has all His Classics&it's a strong treat.compared to the first Coltrane Greatest Hits package I got this is like a Box-Set.His Tone&Vibe is Mind-Blowing from start to finish.He left a Mark that hasn't been filled yet.you can tell a Coltrane Run from anybody else's.One of a Kind Artist.
Very good.......2001-09-24
Read NY Times review of 9/23/01.
Average customer rating:
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The Very Best of John Coltrane
John Coltrane
Manufacturer: Umvd Import
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Avant Garde & Free Jazz
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
Bebop General
| Bebop
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
Hard Bop
| Bebop
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
General
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
Modern Postbebop
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
Bebop & Post-Bop
| Compilations
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
Jazz
| Imports
| Stores
| Music
ASIN: B00008VA1Q
Release Date: 2003-03-17 |
Tracks:
- My One and Only Love - John Coltrane, Johnny Hartman
- Too Young to Go Steady
- In a Sentimental Mood
- It's Easy to Remember
- Dedicated to You
- You Don't Know What Love Is
- After the Rain
- My Little Brown Book
- Soul Eyes
- They Say It's Wonderful
- Nancy (With the Laughing Face)
- What's New?
- All or Nothing at All
- Greensleeves
- Tunji
Tracks:
- My Favorite Things
- Love Supreme, Pt. 1: Acknowledgement
- Crescent
- Afro Blue
- Dear Lord
- Mile's Mode
- Angelica
- Say It (Over and Over Again)
- Lush Life
Album Description
Asian exclusive 2 CD compilation packed in a gatefold digipak. 24 tracks. Universal/Impulse.
Album Details
Asian exclusive 2 CD collection.
Average customer rating:
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Very Best of John Coltrane
John Coltrane
Manufacturer: Music Brokers Arg
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Bebop General
| Bebop
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
Hard Bop
| Bebop
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
General
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
Modern Postbebop
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
Jazz
| Imports
| Stores
| Music
ASIN: B000FIGHHC
Release Date: 2006-08-21 |
Tracks:
- Blue Train
- Traneing In
- Naima
- Spiritual
- Impressions
- My Favourite Things
Average customer rating:
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The Very Best of Jazz - 4 CD SET
Louis Armstrong , Quincy Jones , Edmundo Ros , Chick Webb & His Orchestra , Josephine Baker , John Coltrane , Fats Waller , Astrud Gilberto , and Edith Piaf
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
ASIN: B000LLUGG6 |
Product Description
4 CD set!
Café Continental
1. Love For Sale - Astrud Gilberto
2. Cast Your Fate To The Wind - Quincy Jones
3. Cubanacan - Edmundo Ros
4. Straighten Up And Fly Right - Nat King Cole Trio
5. What A Shame - Chick Webb & His Orchestra
6. Moonglow - Art Tatum
7. Youre Driving Me Crazy - Josephine Baker
8. Birds Nest - Charlie Parker
9. Baby Let Me Hold Your Hand - Ray Charles
10. Walkin - Miles Davis
11. Five Guys Named Moe - Louis Jordan
12. My Favourite Things - John Coltrane
13. Blackstick - Sidney Bechet
14. Je Nen Connais Pas La Fin (My Lost Memory) - Edith Piaf
15. Delta Mood - Duke Ellington
16. Wise Woman Blues - Dinah Washington
17. TAint What You Do (Its The Way That You Do It) - Fats Waller
18. Jumpin At The Woodside - Count Basie
Late Night Jazz
1. Blue Train - John Coltrane
2. Moon River - Judy Garland
3. Broadway - Count Basie
4. September In The Rain - Peggy Lee
5. So What - Miles Davis
6. Jeepers Creepers - Tony Bennett
7. When Sunny Gets Blue - Sarah Vaughan
8. In A Mellow Tone - Duke Ellington
9. Time On My Hands - Billie Holiday
10. Its Only A Paper Moon - Nat King Cole Trio and more!
Jazz Piano Greats
1. Honeysuckle Rose - Nat King Cole
2. The World Is Waiting For The Sunrise - Jess Stacey
3. Dupree Blues - Count Basie
4. Morning Air - Willie The Lion Smith
5. Between Sets - Billy Kyle
6. Hot And Bothered - Clarence Profit
7. Smashing Thirds - Fats Waller
8. When Or Where - Teddy Wilson
9. Daybreak Special - Jess Stacey
10. Solitude - Duke Ellington and more!
The Best Of Jazz Club
1. My Favourite Things - John Coltrane
2. You Cant Be Mine (And Someone Elses Too) - Ella Fitzgerald
3. Round Midnight - Miles Davis and more!
Average customer rating:
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Very Best of John Coltrane
John Coltrane
Manufacturer: Wea International
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Bebop General
| Bebop
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
Hard Bop
| Bebop
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
General
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
Jazz
| Imports
| Stores
| Music
ASIN: B00005Y9D6
Release Date: 2000-06-13 |
Tracks:
- Giant Steps
- Cousin Mary
- Naima
- Like Sonny
- My Shining Hour
- My Favorite Things
- Central Park West
- Summertime
- Mr. Syms
- Equinox
- Body and Soul
Average customer rating:
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The Very Best of John Coltrane
John Coltrane
Manufacturer: Universal/Polygram
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Avant Garde & Free Jazz
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
Bebop General
| Bebop
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
Hard Bop
| Bebop
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
General
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
Modern Postbebop
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
ASIN: B00005NRX0
Release Date: 2001-09-21 |
Tracks:
- My One and Only Love - John Coltrane, Johnny Hartman
- Too Young to Go Steady
- In a Sentimental Mood
- It's Easy to Remember
- Dedicated to You
- You Don't Know What Love Is
- After the Rain
- My Little Brown Book
- Soul Eyes
- They Say It's Wonderful
- Nancy (With the Laughing Face)
- What's New?
- All or Nothing at All
- Greensleeves
- Tunji
Tracks:
- My Favorite Things
- Love Supreme, Pt. 1: Acknowledgement
- Crescent
- Afro Blue
- Dear Lord
- Mile's Mode
- Angelica
- Say It (Over and Over Again)
- Lush Life
Jazz Music:
- The Young Lions
- Tijuana Moods [Original recording remastered]
- Tomorrow: Barretto Live [Live]
- Tuxedo Junction: Big Band Swing Classics
- Two's Company
- Waltz for Debby [Hybrid SACD] [Live]
- Where Home Is: Ray Anderson's Pocket Brass Band
- Whistle Stop [Original recording remastered]
- World Tour [Live]
- Young Django
Jazz Music
Jazz Music