After the war, Coltrane began playing tenor saxophone with the Eddie "CleanHead" Vinson Band, and was later quoted as saying, "A wider area of listening opened up for me. There were many things that people like Hawk, and Ben and Tab Smith were doing in the ‘40’s that I didn’t understand, but that I felt emotionally." Prior to joining the Dizzy Gillespie band, Coltrane performed with Jimmy Heath where his passion for experimentation began to take shape. However, it was his work with the Miles Davis Quintet in 1958 that would lead to his own musical evolution. "Miles music gave me plenty of freedom," he once said. During that period, he became known for using the three-on-one chord approach, and what has been called the ‘sheets of sound,’ a method of playing multiple notes at one time.
By 1960 Coltrane had formed his own quartet which included pianist McCoy Tyner, drummer Elvin Jones, and bassist Jimmy Garrison, eventually adding players like Eric Dolphy, and Pharoah Sanders. The John Coltrane Quartet created some of the most innovative and expressive music in Jazz history including the hit albums: My Favorite Things, Africa Brass, Impressions, Giant Steps, and his monumental work A Love Supreme which attests to the power, glory, love, and greatness of God. Coltrane felt we must all make a conscious effort to effect positive change in the world, and that his music was an instrument to create positive thought patterns in the minds of people.
In 1967, liver disease took Coltrane’s life leaving many to wonder what might have been. Yet thirty-seven years after his departure his music can be heard in motion pictures, on television and radio. In 1972, A Love Supreme was certified gold by the RIAA for exceeding 500,000 units in Japan. This jazz classic and the classic album My Favorite Things were certified gold in the United States in 2001. In 1982, the RIAA posthumously awarded John Coltrane a Grammy Award of "Best Jazz Solo Performance" for the work on his album, Bye Bye Blackbird. In 1997 he received the organization's highest honor, the Lifetime Achievement Award. Other honors have followed, including a commemorative U.S. postage stamp. In 2001, The NEA and the RIAA released 360 Songs of the Century. Among them was John Coltrane’s "My Favorite Things."
More information is available at the official John Coltrane Web site