Review of Miles Davis So What at Herridge Theater
Rare Classic Footage Resurfaces of Miles Davis from the Fifties
The Sound of Miles Davis
Unrated
Running time: twenty minutes
Presented nationally by WLIW21 in association with WNET.ORG
TV Review by Kam Williams
Excellent (4 stars)
50th Anniversary Kind of Blue
Click to order via Amazon
Incredible super palatial packaging comes with a gatefold media carrier that contains a 180 gram single-LP pressing on blue vinyl, 2 discs complete with previously unreleased tracks along with a bonus DVD (NTSC/Region 0). Also included is a 60-page 12x12 book, memorabilia envelope, and big fold out poster.
The Sound of Miles Davis airs nationwide and debuts in New York on Wed, March 11 at 10:30 PM (check local listings)
50 years ago, on April 2, 1959, the Miles Davis Quintet teamed with the Gil Evans Orchestra to perform in New York City on a TV series called The Robert Herridge Theater. Music aficionados might be amused to learn why the legendary trumpeter's combo that day wasn't the usual sextet, namely, considering alto saxophonist Cannonball Adderley had cancelled due to illness. Miles' sidemen in attendance were giants of jazz in their own right, including tenor saxophonist John Coltrane, bassist Paul Chambers, pianist Wynton Kelly and drummer Jimmy Cobb.
Filmed in blackness & white, the show starts with a casual introduction by Herridge standing in front of the camera with a lit cigarette in his manus. Between numbers, the chain-smoking host, a man of few words, simply shrugs that 'this is music that should be 'listened to and non talked about.'
Sans audience, the fix opens on a dimly-lit, shadowy stage with the grouping playing 'So What' from its upcoming Kind of Blue album. What makes this rendition of the jazz standard unique is that in Cannonball's absence, Miles took a couple of extra solos, 1 but before and another after that of Coltrane.
Another factual footnote for trivia buffs is that in March and Apr of '59 Miles was recording Kind of Bluish for Columbia in the label'southward studios located nearby on 30th St. in Manhattan. Although the lp wouldn't exist released until Baronial 17th, it would become the acknowledged jazz album of all time.
The Gil Evans Orchestra is featured as accompanists here in a medley of tunes from Miles Alee- 'The Duke,' 'Dejection for Pablo' and 'New Rhumba.' The musicians include trumpeters Ernie Royal, Clyde Reasinger, Louis Mucci, Johnny Coles, and Emmett Berry; trombonists Frank Rehak, Jimmy Cleveland, Bill Elton, and Rod Levitt; woodwinds Romeo Penque and Eddie Caine; bass clarinetist Danny Bank; French horn players Robert Northern and Julius Watkins; and tubaist Bill Barber.
In a personal aside, I must mention that I was pleasantly surprised to see an old friend, Bob Northern (aka Blood brother Ahh) in the moving-picture show, since he had served equally my mentor, given me my African proper noun (Kamau) and even allowed me to play on one of his albums during my short-lived career as a jazz musician. In whatever case, the rare footage comprising The Sound of Miles Davis, despite its brevity, is an historical treasure unearthed and a must see for any avid fan of black classical music.
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Miles Davis Quintet - So What (Apr 2, 1959) 1 of 4
(Source: kenjames64)
Personnel: Miles Davis: Trumpet; John Coltrane: Tenor Sax; Wynton Kelly: Pianoforte; Paul Chambers: Double Bass; Jimmy Cobb: Drums;
On April 2, 1959, producer Robert Herridge recorded the Miles Davis Quintet playing the archetype "So What" in CBS studio 61, New York Metropolis. The piece was taped for an episode of the Robert Herridge Theater, titled "The Audio of Miles Davis." CBS broadcast the show on July 21, 1960.
Historical Context:
The first great Quintet/Sextet had disbanded later on recording "Milestones" in the Spring of '58, when Davis replaced Cerise Garland with Beak Evans, and Philly Joe Jones with Jimmy Cobb.
Evans left the ring in late '58 and was in the process of forming his own acclaimed trio with Scott LaFaro and Paul Motian -- probably the greatest piano trio of all time. Davis replaced Evans with Wynton Kelly, and Kelly would stay with Davis until 1963, when he quit to form his own trio -- taking Chambers and Cobb with him.
(Evans had temporarily rejoined the Davis group for the "Kind of Blue" sessions in March and April of '59, a month before the CBS television set recording. Even though Kelly was Davis' pianist at the time of the "Kind of Blue" recording sessions, he only played on one tune, "Freddie Freeloader," with Evans playing on the rest of the songs, incl. "And then What".)
'Trane stayed with Miles until April 1960, when he quit to course his classic quartet.
Cannonball Adderley, who played on the "Kind of Blue" recording, was absent here because of a migraine headache. He'd never again record with Davis.
This CBS session was recorded exactly a month after the first "Kind of Blue" session (March two, 1959), which yielded "And then What," "Freddie Freeloader" and "Bluish in Dark-green."
Three weeks after, on April 22, Davis went back into the studio to record the remainder of the tracks on "Kind of Bluish": "Flamenco Sketches" and "All Blues."
This videotape is a rare glimpse of Miles Davis in the midst of recording arguably the most important jazz album of all time.
Miles Davis and the Gil Evans Orchestra - Blues for Pablo (two of 4)
Miles Davis with the Gil Evans Orchestra - New Rhumba (3 of 4)
Miles Davis with the Gill Evans Orchestra - The Knuckles (four of 4)
Source: https://aalbc.com/reviews/the_sound_of_miles_davis.htm
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