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Relaxin' With The Miles Davis Quintet

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Relaxin' With The Miles Davis Quintet album cover
01
If I Were A Bell
8:15
02
You're My Everything
5:17
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03
I Could Write A Book
5:08
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04
Oleo
6:18
$0.99
05
It Could Happen To You
6:37
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06
Woody'N You
5:03
$0.99
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 6   Total Length: 36:38

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sound issues

nilspjohnson

In the third track there's something funny going on with the horn mics. It sounds like the higher frequencies of the horns are coming in and out of the left channel, occasionally sounding entirely on the right...but it doesn't sound intentional. Does anyone know if this is a well known problem, or am I just imagining things?

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It deserves all the stars in the night sky

leonardosam

Would jazz be what we know today if Miles Davis and John Coltrane had decided to do something else?

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Ah, the Fantasy Life

perryder

I'm gonna keep mining this site for the best of hard to find jazz. This is Miles before the long hair. Enjoy! I just nabbed "If I were a Bell". Guys and Dolls rocks and swings!

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Straight up Cool

Renford

You can feel the dark smokey bar, and the late night swing in this "56 Mile's classic. Smooth, effortless, and pure 50s cool jazz

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They Say All Music Guide

Relaxin’ features the Miles Davis Quintet in a pair of legendary recording dates — from May and October of 1956 — which would generate enough music to produce four separate long-players: Cookin’, Relaxin’, Workin’, and Steamin’. Each of these is considered not only to be among the pinnacle of Davis’ work, but of the entire bop subgenre as well. As with the other titles, Relaxin’ contains a variety of material which the band had concurrently been performing in their concert appearances. In a brilliant stroke of time conservation, the scheme was hatched for the quintet — who includes: Davis (trumpet), John Coltrane (tenor sax), Philly Joe Jones (drums), and Red Garland (piano) — to perform the equivalent of their live repertoire in the studio for eventual release. The results are consistently superior both in terms of song selection as well as performance. The solid nature of the unit as a singular musical force is immediately apparent. “If I Were a Bell” — from the play Guys and Dolls — includes some remarkable soloing via Coltrane and Garland. Davis’ solos are additionally impressive, as they’re derived from the same four-note motive as the melody. Hearing the many variations that he comes up with throughout the song conveys how intrigued Davis must have been by the tune, as it stayed in his performance repertoire for decades. Tracks such as “You’re My Everything” and “Oleo” highlight the synchronic nature of Davis and Coltrane as they carry each other’s melodies while trading off solos. The steady syncopation of Philly Joe Jones keeps the rhythms tight and the delicate interplay all the more conspicuous. Relaxin’ offers something for every degree of jazz enthusiast. Likewise, the quintet’s recordings provide a tremendous introduction for the curious jazz consumer. – Lindsay Planer

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