Workin' (Remastered)

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Workin' (Remastered) album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 42:20

eMusic Review 0

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Kevin Whitehead

eMusic Contributor

09.11.06
Miles Davis, Workin’ (Remastered)
Label: Fantasy / Prestige

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" &#8212 the rhythm trio gets the following "Ahmad's Blues" to itself &#8212 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 &#8212 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 »

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My favorite of the action verb CD's from 56-57...

DArnold

From the two sets of sessions with Miles, Trane, Paul Chambers (b), Philly Joe Jones (dr) and Red Garland (p) (underrated to the maximum here), eventually came four albums, Cookin', Relaxin', this album, and Steamin'. This one happens to be my favorite, perhaps because of the songs like "The Theme," used for over fifteen years in Miles' continuingly evolving sets, "Half Nelson," and "Four." The biggest reason perhaps is because of the successful risk in starting the album with "It Never Entered My Mind," a beautiful piece that Miles takes over with his muted solos. It stays with you even after the rest of the album plays. Wonderful set, though you can't really go wrong with any of the four cd's from this time period.

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Finest of Four

rene.leemans

For me Workin' is the finest piece of the four records by the same settings in '55 and '56 with John Coltrane (ts), Red Garland (pi), Paul Chambers (cb) and Phil Joe Jones (dr). The other three are Relaxin', Steamin'and Cookin'. But everyone has his own taste and choose his (master)piece!

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Icon: Miles Davis

By Kevin Whitehead, eMusic Contributor

Before Bob Dylan or David Bowie or whoever else became famous for periodically reinventing themselves, Miles Davis was already at it. He first gained attention playing fast bebop trumpet with Charlie Parker, then fronted the nine-piece band that established softer cool jazz. (One of his collaborators was arranger Gil Evans, who'd go on to direct a series of orchestral LPs for Miles.) In the '50s Davis founded his first great quintet, a highly influential group… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Workin’ is the third in a series of four featuring the classic Miles Davis Quintet: Davis (trumpet), John Coltrane (tenor sax), Red Garland (piano), and Philly Joe Jones (drums). Like its predecessors Cookin’ and Relaxin’, Workin’ is the product of not one — as mythology would claim — but two massively productive recording sessions in May and October of 1956, respectively. Contradicting the standard methodology of preparing fresh material for upcoming albums, Davis and company used their far more intimate knowledge of the tunes the quintet was performing live to inform their studio recordings. As was often the case with Davis, the antithesis of the norm is the rule. Armed with some staggering original compositions, pop standards, show tunes, and the occasional jazz cover, Workin’ is the quintessence of group participation. Davis, as well as Coltrane, actually contributes compositions as well as mesmerizing performances to the album. The band’s interaction on “Four” extends the assertion that suggests this quintet plays with the consistency of a single, albeit ten-armed, musician. One needs listen no further than the stream of solos from Davis, Coltrane, Garland, and Jones, with Paul Chambers chasing along with his rhythmic metronome. Beneath the smouldering bop of “Trane’s Blues” are some challenging chord progressions that are tossed from musician to musician with deceptive ease. Chambers’ solo stands as one of his defining contributions to this band. In sly acknowledgement to the live shows from which these studio recording sessions were inspired, Davis concludes both sets (read: album sides) with “The Theme” — a brief and mostly improvised tune — indicating to patrons that the tab must be settled. In this case, settling the tab might include checking out Steamin’, the final Miles Davis Quintet recording to have been culled from these historic sessions. – Lindsay Planer

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