Miles Davis at Newport 1958
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Artist:
Miles Davis
Label: Sony
Category: Music
Average customer rating:
Format: Live
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1
UPC: 696998520226
EAN: 0696998520226
ASIN: B00005B58X
Release Date: 2001-04-17 |
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Listmania:
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The Ultimate Miles Davis
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JOHN COLTRANE, PART 2
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Essential Miles Davis CDs (chronological order)
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Miles and Miles
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The best live CD's
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"Miles Ahead" of Other Lists
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Great Live Jazz
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The Best of Miles Davis
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The Most Requested Jazz On Public Radio
Tracks:
- Introduction By Willis Connover
- Ah-Leu-Cha
- Straight, No Chaser
- Fran-Dance
- Two Bass Hit
- Bye Bye Blackbird
- The Theme
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Customer Reviews:
Another glimpse into the Evans/Coltrane/Cannonball Miles Quintet.......2007-02-07
Nothing to say but PURE RAW ENERGY! Again, not the greatest sound recording, but the music makes that a null point.
Completely Flawed.......2004-10-08
There is no bass on this recording. An eerie absense of bass. You can imagine why, on this new edition, because you hear an engineer before the band starts up saying "Tell Chambers to stop fooling with his microphone".
The band is worth hearing and can be heard on other recordings from this year, including radio broadcasts, when bass was present.
Miles in stride.......2002-04-04
There's certainly nothing inferior, nothing missed or bungled on this set, which Columbia inexplicably held for 6 years before its initial release, then waited another 20 for a subsequent release, finally producing this bright and bracing remastered version.
Miles is definitely out to prove that the loss of two key members of his previous sextet--pianist Red Garland and percussionist Philly Joe Jones--was in no way injurious to its level of creativity or intensity. The tempos are way up (as Miles was inclined to call them when not in the studio), and Coltrane tears through changes like a man possessed--a harbinger of what was to come, but at an earlier stage than many listeners might have previously assumed.
Anyone who has read Peter Pettinger's biography of Bill Evans is aware of the tensions--racial as well as musical--that Bill felt during his relatively brief stint with Miles. Caught between the onslaught of Coltrane and Cannonball, it's a wonder that he gets heard at all. But he chooses his moments carefully, and makes the most of each, making the album an especially valuable record of the band during Bill's occupation of the piano chair. And Paul Chambers is a bedrock through the entire session.
Miles was the "enabler," placing Coltrane and Evans together on the same stage from which each would depart to become, arguably, the two most influential voices in jazz post-1960. Coltrane was the "winner" on this date, but the Evans' influence would prevail when Miles summoned Bill to rejoin the band for its recording a year later on what would become the most successful, popular, seminal jazz album of all time, "Kind of Blue."
"Miles at Newport 1958" represents a key chapter in the story of jazz after bebop, and this reissued, expertly remastered recording helps make up for the exclusion of Miles' group in "Jazz on a Summer's Day," the highly regarded filming of the 1958 festival.
The Miles Davis Sextet, in person.......2001-09-27
At the 1958 Newport Festival, Miles Davis was leading one of his most celebrated groups: a sextet consisting of John Coltrane (tenor sax), Cannonball Adderley (alto sax), Bill Evans (piano), Paul Chambers (bass), and Jimmy Cobb (drums). This same lineup would record Kind of Blue within a year. The results here aren't quite as magical. Coltrane, at the peak of his sheets-of-sound period, is incredible -- he tears through the songs with ferocity. Just listen to "Two Bass Hit". Bill Evans, on the other hand, sounds a little out of place on the bop tunes that compose the bulk of this set; his reflective, abstract playing doesn't fit in as well in this context. Adderley and Davis play well though I wouldn't call this performance a milestone for either one. The sextet also tackle a few of the tunes a bit faster than they can handle, and they bungle the theme to "Ah Leu Cha". But this is still a very good recording of a great group, and worth buying for the hardcore Davis aficionado.
It's not Kind of Blue 2, but it's still Miles........2001-07-16
Someone who buys this might expect another "Kind of Blue," being that this was recorded with the same group, only eight months beforehand. However, this is MUCH different. "Kind of Blue" is laid back, cool. This is very agressive. "Ah-leu-cha" gets your feet tapping, in particular, and the whole set is enjoyable. I liked "The Theme" and "Fran-Dance." There are a few problems: Chambers' bass is not quite loud enough, so some of the songs have a weird, unaccompanied feel. Miles sometimes goes out of his range, and I didn't always get what Coltrane was going for. And Evans seems to get lost a few times. But still, good music and worth a listen. But I wouldn't necessarily call it essential Miles. More for the Miles fan.
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