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MILES DAVIS, trumpet
JOHN COLTRANE, tenor saxophone
RED GARLAND, piano
PAUL CHAMBERS, bass
"PHILLY" JOE JONES, drums
SIDE A
1. SURREY WITH THE FRINGE ON TOP
2. SALT PEANUTS
3. SOMETHING I DREAMED LAST NIGHT
SIDE B
1. DIANE
2. WELL YOU NEEDN'T
3. WHEN I FALL IN LOVE
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One of the highest points of modern jazz is the quintet that Miles Davis
led from late 1955 until spring of 1957. Its earliest manifestation appeared
on a record called The Musings of Miles (Prestige 7007), on which Davis was
backed by a rhythm section consisting of Red Garland, piano; Philly Joe
Jones, drums; and Oscar Pettiford, bass. By the time Davis' next record had
been released (Miles, Prestige 7014), he had a regular working group, in
which Pettiford had been replaced by Paul Chambers and the tenor saxophone
of John Coltrane had been added.
Except for the work he has done with Gil Evans, all of Davis' recording
since that time has been an extension and further exploration of the musical
ideas set down in those two records. Since the disbanding of that quintet,
it has been called by many the most important and influential jazz group of
its time. It is obviously the most influential, because the music it played
and the style it employed has filtered into most jazz organizations, and the
group restored to currency some of the best and most neglected popular songs
of the last several years. In ultimate importance, probably only the Modern
Jazz quartet is of comparable stature. (Unfortunately, the Thelonious Monk
Quartet with Coltrane, Jones, and Wilbur Ware was unrecorded, and of too
brief a duration to make the impact it might have; it is notable, though,
that half its personnel were Davis alumni.) The pervasive impact of the
Miles Davis Quintet (and its inspiration) is most closely analogous to the
Louis Armstrong Hot Fives of thirty years before.
The present record, Steamin' with the Miles Davis Quintet, is the final
selection from the legendary 1956 sessions which produced three previous
classics (Cookin', 7094; Relaxin', 7129; and Workin', 7166). Since the album
is, in many respects, representative of the total work of the quintet, it
affords an excellent opportunity to examine just what this remarkable music
was and how it was made.
To begin with, there is the matter of personnel. Among Miles Davis'
several capabilities is the possession of the most accurate ear for new
talent in jazz. Sonny Rollins, who has ample reason to know, calls him a
"starmaker". But, if the critics of the time are to be believed, it is
impossible to see how the quintet had any possible chance of success. The
group consisted, we are told, of a trumpet player who could play
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only in
the middle register and fluffed half his notes; an out-of-tune tenor player;
a cocktail pianist; a drummer who played so loud that no-one else could be
heard; and a teen-age bassist. This, of course, is exaggeration to prove a
point; today, the great majority of the quintet could lay serious claim to
being the most skilled and influential players on their instruments. But the
fact remains, talent aside, that the five men did not share a unity of
style: more than many, this group needed a leader.
Davis has the qualities of leadership in abundance. One of the most
notable examples of this is a record released on another company on which
Miles, for contractual reasons, was nominally a sideman. But it is more than
obvious, from the first note to the last, that it is a Miles record. It is,
again, an extention of the principles on the first two albums. An important
part of those principles lay in the area of material.
On The Musings of Miles he recorded A Night in Tunisia, and on the
present record he plays Salt Peanuts and Well You Needn't. The names that
association brings to mind here are Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, and
Thelonious Monk, the giants of the bop revolution. Davis does not play hard
bop by any means, but he has kept these and similar tunes as a standard part
of his basic repertoire, as a constant reminder of the era that gave him his
original inspiration.
The previous two records included There Is No Greater Love and I See Your
Face Before Me, and on the present release are Something I Dreamed Last
Night and When I Fall in Love. These are ballads, and Coltrane, most often,
did not play on the ballad tracks. It is probably his unique way with a
ballad that first enabled Miles to reach out to the vast audience he has; an
audience that, in several cases, has little affinity with any other jazz.
As astute and detached an observer as British theatre critic Kenneth Tynan
has referred to Miles as a musical lonely hearts club. In his sad, wistful,
muted interpretations of ballads (in which he plays microphone as much as
trumpet) he reveals an area of tenderness and sensitivity which is rarely
visible in his public aspect. These performances, in the emotion they evoke
and the man from which they come, are not comparable to anyone else in jazz,
but do bear a striking similarity to Frank Sinatra.
The two early albums included a Gal in Calico and Just Squeeze Me, and
the present one has performances of Surrey With the Fringe On Top and Diane.
One of these is, of course, an Ellington composition and Miles probably
understands Ellington more than any contemporary musician except Mingus and
Monk, but that is a subject for another time. These performances have
several things in common, and it is through them and others like them that
the Davis concept has become most prevalent. They are all in the medium
tempo peculiar to the quintet, which no-one has ever successfully imitated.
A large number of the pieces in this style were first played in this general
manner by the Chicago pianist Ahmad Jamal, and make extensive use of Jamal's
concepts of rhythm and space. Davis has said, "All my inspiration today
comes from the Chicago pianist, Ahmad Jamal." This and similar statements
have led many to credit Jamal with a stature which I do not feel he
deserves. That Davis is able to
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derive valuable ideas from Jamal's music
does not make Jamal Davis' musical equal. Most artists borrow, and the
proof of their artistry lies partially in the fact that what they borrow
they invariably enrich. At least part of the unique quality of these
performances lies in a particular principle which Davis has grasped, a
principle which is so simple that it has apparently eluded everyone else.
To put it in terms of Miles' particular group, a quintet is not always a
quintet. It can also be a quartet featuring Miles, and, at different times
on the same tune, it can be a quartet featuring Coltrane, or a trio
featuring either Garland or Chambers. The Davis rhythm section, Philly Joe
Jones particularly, is extremely well aware of this, and gives each of the
three principal soloists his own best backing. Behind Miles, the rhythm is
full of space, with few chords; behind Coltrane, it is compulsive; and with
Garland, it lapses into an easy, Jamal-like feeling.
As with anything of great importance, though, the whole is greater than
the sum of the parts; a point of view that can be proven, I think, by the
great majority of what these men have produced separately since 1957. A
beginning attempt at analysis such as this leaves out many factors, most
notably the indefinable personal chemistry that resulted when these men
played together.
Such chemistry is inexplicable, and so, apparently, is the personality of
the man who generated it. Miles Davis has become a legend, and in that way,
too, he is comparable only to Sinatra. Both men came back from what seemed
the ruin of a career at about the same time, and now occupy a position that
makes it next door to heresy to imply that there might be any thing less
than superb in the results of whatever they attempt. They are both setters
of styles in dress and music, and both delight in indulging a passion for
speed. Whatever either man does is automatically news, and yet both have a
fierce insistence on personal privacy.
The company Miles finds himself in today can best be judged, I feel, by a
publicity brochure recently issued by a forthcoming magazine, Show Business
Illustrated, a new Playboy enterprise. The brochure promises, and I quote,
that "you'll visit and get to know intimately Liz Taylor, Jack Paar, Maria
Callas, Miles Davis, Peter Sellers, Brigette Bardot, Yves Montand, Frank
Sinatra, Alfred Hitchcock, Marlon Brando, Walt Disney, Jack Lemmon, Harry
Belafonte, Bobby Darin, Mort Sahl, Ingmar Bergman, Tennessee Williams."
I somehow doubt that you'll get to know Miles Davis intimately after
reading the magazine, but that list is an accurate index of the position in
which he finds himself today. The most intimate glimpse he has allowed is
what he has recorded with the quintet which did so much to place him in that
company. And when the legend passes, if it does, the music will remain. He
may be one of the greatest public relations men of our time; he is
undoubtedly one of the greatest musicians. And everything else after all,
is his business.
Notes: Joe Goldberg
Supervision: Bob Weinstock
Recording: Rudy Van Gelder
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