3 PANNEL DIGIPACK EDITION
5 STARS PENGUIN GUIDE TO JAZZ (CORE COLLECTION)
INCLUDES 2 BONUS TRACKS
Kind of Blue
(Columbia CS8410) remains one of the most iconic and infl uential jazz
albums of all time. In his autobiography, Miles Davis discussed his
intentions for this unique body of compositions and the conditions in
which it was recorded: âI found a new piano player in February [1959];
his name was Wynton Kelly. Wynton was from the West Indies, from
Jamaica, and had played with Dizzy for a minute. I loved the way Wynton
played, because he was a combination of Red Garland and Bill Evans; he
could play almost anything. Wynton joined us just before I was going
into the studio to make Kind of Blue, but I had already planned
that album around the piano playing of Bill Evans, who had agreed to
play on it with us. We went into the studio to record Kind of Blue
on the first or second day of March 1959. We had the sextet of Trane,
Jimmy Cobb, Paul, Cannonball, myself, and Wynton Kelly, but he played on
only one tune: âFreddie Freeloader.â Bill Evans played on the rest of
the tunes.â
PERSONNEL:
MILES DAVIS, trumpet
JULIAN âCANNONBALLâ ADDERLEY, alto sax
JOHN COLTRANE, tenor sax
BILL EVANS, piano (on all tracks except 2)
WYNTON KELLY, piano (on 2 only)
PAUL CHAMBERS, bass
JIMMY COBB, drums
New York, Monday, March 2 & April 22, 1959.
(*) BONUS TRACKS
[6]: Bill Evans (p), Scott LaFaro (b), Paul Motian (d). New York, December 28, 1959.
[7]: Miles Davis (tp), John Coltrane (ts), Wynton Kelly (p), Paul Chambers (b),
Jimmy Cobb (d). The Robert Herridge Theatre TV Show, New York, April 2, 1959.
TRACKS:
01 SO WHAT
02 FREDDIE FREELOADER
03 BLUE IN GREEN
04 ALL BLUES
05 FLAMENCO SKETCHES
06 BLUE IN GREEN [Bill Evans trio version] (*)
07 SO WHAT [Live] (*)
TOTAL TIME: 60:38 Min