My Favorite Things
My Favorite Things – John Coltrane Cultural & Sonic Analysis There’s something quietly radical about transformation—taking the familiar and reshaping it so completely that it becomes something else entirely. That’s exactly what My Favorite Things represents. Released in 1961, John Coltrane’s interpretation of a Rodgers and Hammerstein show tune isn’t just a cover—it’s a reinvention, a spiritual and sonic reimagining that altered the trajectory of jazz. This is not comfort music. It’s exploration disguised as familiarity. Historical Context: A New Direction Coming off his work with Miles Davis and the modal breakthroughs of Kind of Blue , John Coltrane was searching—restlessly, intensely—for new forms of expression. Bebop’s complexity had already been mastered. Hard bop had been expanded. Now, Coltrane was reaching for something more open, more meditative, more transcendent. Modal jazz offered that pathway. Instead of navigating dense chord changes, Coltrane...