eMusic Review 0
Miles Davis was a master of subdued ballads, and there are some beauties here, like "It Never Entered My Mind," one of the loveliest tunes in the jazz canon. Miles uses Harmon mute to intensify his yearning, pleading tone, abetted by pianist Red Garland's lacy arpeggios, Paul Chambers 'tolling bass and Philly Joe Jones's subdued swish of brushes on snare drum. This quintet set the style for a zillion jazz ballads to come, but that was just one side of what it could do. Here they also play a medium-tempo "Trane's Blues" — the rhythm trio gets the following "Ahmad's Blues" to itself — and a couple of brisk bebop/hard bop numbers that bring out Philly Joe's best. His sharp accents propel "Four" and "Half Nelson" with Miles on confident open horn — not that whippet-fast tenor saxophonist John Coltrane needs much prompting on the latter. Miles and Coltrane show the attraction of opposites. The trumpeter excelled at conveying coiled tension, while Coltrane was the jack-in-the-box sprung, playing busy, soaring lines with a brawny tone. Workin' was drawn from two marathon 1956 sessions (which also supplied material for Steamin,' Relaxin' and Cookin') and the band… read more »