Saturday, 16 March 2013
Miles Davis - Kind Of Blue
This is the one jazz record owned by people who don't listen to jazz, and with
good reason. The band itself is extraordinary (proof of Miles Davis's masterful
casting skills, if not of God's existence), listing John Coltrane and Julian "Cannonball" Adderley
on saxophones, Bill
Evans (or, on "Freddie Freeloader," Wynton Kelly) on piano, and the crack
rhythm unit of Paul Chambers on bass and Jimmy Cobb on drums. Coltrane's
astringency on tenor is counterpoised to Adderley's funky self on alto, with
Davis moderating between them as Bill Evans conjures up a still lake of sound on
which they walk. Meanwhile, the rhythm partnership of Cobb and Chambers is
prepared to click off time until eternity. It was the key recording of what
became modal jazz, a music free of the fixed harmonies and forms of pop songs.
In Davis's men's hands it was a weightless music, but one that refused to fade
into the background. In retrospect every note seems perfect, and each piece
moves inexorably towards its destiny
Labels:
jazz
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