Album
Kind Of Blue
2010 · Jazz
4 collectors on Gatefold own this

Kind Of Blue is a Jazz album by Miles Davis, originally released in 2010. On Gatefold: 4 pressings tracked, owned by 4 collectors.
About
<b>100 Best Albums</b> In the years between the dissolution of Miles Davis’ first great quintet and the formation of his second, the trumpet master ventured into something new in 1959—not knowing it would become one of jazz's biggest albums ever. Bassist Paul Chambers from the first quintet remained on board, as did John Coltrane, whom Davis had fired, then rehired after the tenor giant kicked his drug addiction and experienced a spiritual and creative rebirth. But Davis also added a third horn, alto saxophonist Julian “Cannonball” Adderley, making for richer group voicings and a bluesy, bebop-oriented soloing style that balanced Davis’ spare melodic approach and Coltrane’s restle, exploratory “sheets of sound” (coined by critic Ira Gitler). Pianist Bill Evans played close-voiced chords derived from mode, or specific types of scales—an approach that gave rise to the term “modal jazz.” The fast-moving progressions of bebop and much post-bop required improvisers to jump hurdles—something Davis knew all about as Dizzy Gillespie’s successor in the Charlie Parker Quintet. On <i>Kind of Blue</i>, there were longer durations between chord, opening up space in the music. The soloist had the option of taking a breath. But even as Miles brought the temperature down, he introduced new textures and tonal color, drawing on the harmonic thinking of Gil Evans and George Russell, or even Debussy and Satie. In that sense the album was a continuation of <i>Birth of the Cool</i>, recorded 10 years earlier, and perhaps a harbinger of the ethereal <i>In a Silent Way</i> 10 years later. Pianist Wynton Kelly subbed in for Evans on “Freddie Freeloader,” and drummer Jimmy Cobb kept the music at a low-simmering boil throughout. Two years later, on Davis’ <i>In Person at the Blackhawk</i> recording, however, one can hear Cobb, Chamber, and Kelly taking “So What” at a much brighter tempo, heightening the impact of that hypnotic two-chord song. On <i>“Four” & More</i> from 1964, with Tony Williams on drum, “So What” is faster still. What started out slow and meditative helped form the basis of the more aggressive and abstract playing of the second quintet. .
via Apple Music
The Clerk says
The Clerk knows this whole record — the pressing quirks, the credits, the take.
Tracklist
- 1So What9:07
- 2Freddie Freeloader9:48
- 3Blue In Green5:35
- 4All Blues11:32
- 5Flamenco Sketches9:21
Sound DNA
- Jazz
- Cool Jazz
- velvety
- serene
- meditative
Credits
The people behind it.
Performers
- Cannonball AdderleyALTO SAXOPHONE
- Paul ChambersBASS
- Pierre MichelotBASS
- Sam JonesBASS
- Art BlakeyDRUMS
- Jimmy CobbDRUMS
- Kenny ClarkeDRUMS
- Bill EvansPIANO
- Hank JonesPIANO
- René UrtregerPIANO
- Wynton KellyPIANO
- Barney WilenTENOR SAXOPHONE
- John ColtraneTENOR SAXOPHONE
- Miles DavisTRUMPET
4 collectors on Gatefold own this · 4 pressings tracked on Gatefold
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