When you combine the high-quality 20-bit remaster of Living Space with an EAC-FLAC rip, you unlock a listening experience akin to a modern archival standard.
The album serves as a definitive look at the Quartet's final months together: (10:25) Untitled Original 90314 (14:49) Dusk-Dawn (10:52) Untitled Original 90320 (10:48) Last Blues (4:22) — New discovery in 1998
It ensures the digital file on the hard drive is a 100% bit-perfect match to the physical disc. john coltrane living space 1998 eacflac new
(1978), the 1998 CD included the first-ever release of the track "Last Blues" Experimental Nature
The album received strong critical praise upon its release. Pitchfork awarded the album a 9.0/10, stating that "From the vaults comes a gem so shiny that it'll blind you if you look directly into it". The AllMusic review highlights how the album "has the spacious intensity of Trane's latter-day compositions that jar, probe, and bend the horizontal and vertical dimensions of his earlier music". When you combine the high-quality 20-bit remaster of
The days of the Classic Quartet were numbered. Living Space captures the exact threshold where structured modal frameworks began to shatter into raw, spiritual energy. 2. Track Analysis and Archival Discoveries
"LIVING SPACE" was recorded on February 15, 1960, at the Van Gelder Studio in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey. The session produced five tracks: "Solitude," "My Favorite Things," "The Nearness of You," "Impressions," and "Afro Blue." These compositions not only showcase Coltrane's mastery of melody and improvisation but also reflect his deep interest in spirituality and the exploration of new musical dimensions. Pitchfork awarded the album a 9
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