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(Cool Jazz) [LP][24/96] Miles Davis - Birth of the Cool - 1957, FLAC (tracks)

Miles Davis - Birth of the Cool (mono)
Жанр: Cool Jazz
Год выпуска: 1957 (английское переиздание 1963 года)
Лейбл: Capitol Records, T-1974 (mono)
Страна-производитель: Gt.Britain
Аудио кодек: FLAC
Тип рипа: tracks
Формат записи: 24/96
Формат раздачи: 24/96
Продолжительность: 32:55
Треклист:
Side One: [17:55]
1. Move (Denzil Best, arranged by John Lewis) – 2:32 *
2. Jeru (Gerry Mulligan) – 3:10 *
3. Moon Dreams (Chummy MacGregor, Johnny Mercer, arranged by Gil Evans) – 3:17 ***
4. Venus de Milo (Mulligan) – 3:10 **
5. Budo (Miles Davis, Bud Powell, arranged by Lewis) – 2:32 *
6. Deception (Davis, arranged by Mulligan) – 2:45 ***
Side One: [15:01]
1. Godchild (George Wallington, arranged by Mulligan) – 3:07 *
2. Boplicity (Cleo Henry, i.e. Davis and Gil Evans, arranged by Evans) – 2:59 **
3. Rocker (Mulligan) – 3:03 ***
4. Israel (Johnny Carisi) – 2:15 **
5. Rouge (John Lewis) – 3:13 **
Recorded: January 21 (*) and April 22, 1949 (**), March 9, 1950 (***) New York.
Arrangements by the composer unless otherwise noted.
Источник оцифровки: выполнена автором раздачи
Код класса состояния винила: Excellent
Устройство воспроизведения: Micro Seiki DD7 + картридж Audio-Technica AT150E/G
Предварительный усилитель: Audio-Technica ATPEQ20
АЦП: Tascam US-122mkII
Программа-оцифровщик: Audacity 1.3.12.
Обработка: отсутствует, удалил только вручную несколько щелчков
 
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АЧХ
 
Уровень записи
 
Доп. информация
Produced by Walter Rivers and Pete Rugolo.
The compilation for a single album in 1957 was produced by Bill Miller.
* recorded January 21, 1949 at WOR Studios, New York, New York, engineer: W.O.Summerlin
Miles Davis – leader and trumpet
Kai Winding - trombone
Junior Collins – French horn
John Barber - tuba
Lee Konitz – alto saxophone
Gerry Mulligan – baritone saxophone
Al Haig – piano
Joe Shulman – bass
Max Roach – drums
** recorded April 22, 1949 at WOR Studios, New York, New York, engineer: Clair Krepps
Miles Davis – leader and trumpet
J. J. Johnson – trombone
Sandy Siegelstein – French horn
John Barber - tuba
Lee Konitz – alto saxophone
Gerry Mulligan – baritone saxophone
John Lewis – piano
Nelson Boyd – bass
Kenny Clarke – drums
*** recorded March 9, 1950 at WOR Studios, New York, New York, engineer: Clair Krepps
Miles Davis – leader and trumpet
J. J. Johnson – trombone
Gunther Schuller – French horn
John Barber - tuba
Lee Konitz – alto saxophone
Gerry Mulligan – baritone saxophone
John Lewis – piano
Al McKibbon – bass
Max Roach – drums
Birth of the Cool is a compilation album by American jazz musician Miles Davis, released in 1957 on Capitol Records. It compiles twelve songs recorded by Davis's nonet for the label over the course of three sessions during 1949 and 1950. Featuring unusual instrumentation and several notable musicians, the music consisted of innovative arrangements strongly inspired by classical music, and marked a major development in post-bebop jazz. As the title implies, these recordings are considered seminal in the history of cool jazz. The majority of the recordings on the record are under three minutes.
Gil Evans contributed some charts to the sessions, acting as an advisor to a group of musicians who had met in his small New York apartment above a Chinese laundry. Evans had gained a reputation in the jazz world for his orchestration of bebop tunes for the Claude Thornhill orchestra, including Davis's "Donna Lee". Davis was seeking an alternative to the small groups typical of contemporary jazz (he was a member of Charlie Parker's quintet at the time), and in 1947 started to organize the loose circle of musicians into a working group. Rehearsals and experiments took place over the next year.
The nonet performed live only briefly—initially for a two week engagement in late August and early September 1948 at the Royal Roost Club in New York. Billed as the "Miles Davis Band", the group at this time consisted of Davis (trumpet), Mike Zwerin (trombone), Bill Barber (tuba), Junior Collins (French horn), Gerry Mulligan (baritone saxophone), Lee Konitz (alto saxophone), John Lewis (piano), Al McKibbon (bass), and Max Roach (drums). Former Dizzy Gillespie vocalist Kenny Hagood was featured on a few songs. Unusually, the arrangers (Mulligan, Evans and Lewis) were given credit. The group returned to the Royal Roost later in September, and recordings from 4 September and 18 September 1948, were included on the 1998 Complete Birth of the Cool CD, alongside the later studio sides. There was a further short residency the following year at the Clique Club, but the nonet was not a financial success, and disbanded. In 1949 Davis had a contract with Capitol to record twelve sides for 78 rpm singles. He thus reformed the nonet to record three sessions in January and April 1949 and March 1950. Davis, Konitz, Mulligan and Barber were the only musicians who played on all three sessions, though the instrumental lineup was constant (excepting the omission of piano on a few songs). Originally released as singles, eight of the tracks were compiled in 1953 on a 10" vinyl album in Capitol's Classics in Jazz series, and Birth of the Cool was released in 1957 as a 12" LP that added the remaining three unreleased instrumental pieces ("Move", "Budo" and "Boplicity"). The final track, "Darn That Dream" (the only song with vocals, by Hagood), was included with the other eleven on a 1971 LP. Subsequent releases have been based on this last arrangement.
Musically, the songs on Birth of the Cool stand as an important reaction to the prominent bebop form in contemporary jazz. Though the break can be exaggerated—Charlie Parker participated in the discussions Evans led, most of the musicians were drawn from the bebop scene, and many continued to play in that style for years afterward—it inspired a whole school of jazz musicians, particularly in California in what is usually referred to as "West Coast jazz" or the "cool school".
Cleo Henry
Cleo Henry was the pen name used by Davis as the composer credit on the track "Boplicity", which was in fact written by Davis and arranged by Gil Evans. Cleota Henry Davis was Davis's mother. No other composition was ever written under this pen name by Davis.
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