eMusic Review 2
Easily the most famous and recognizable (and written about) jazz album of all time, 1959's Kind of Blue had a deep concept you didn't need to know about to love the music. Fifty years later it still sounds fresh, from the finger-snapping grooves of "So What" and "All Blues" to the subdued, come-here-baby moods of "Blue in Green" and "Flamenco Sketches." Miles had been looking for ways to simplify his music, and he and pianist Bill Evans had already experimented with extended improvisations over a couple of chords (like Evans's "Piece Peace"). Kind of Blue took the idea one step further, popularizing the new trend of "modal jazz" — improvising on scales or modes, one at a time, instead of running a steeplechase over fast-changing harmonies. The three horn soloists are studies in contrast: trumpeter Miles dark and introspective, alto saxist Cannonball Adderley bright-toned and singing, and tenor man John Coltrane — already obsessing over scales on his own — eagerly squeezing in as many good ideas as he can. But the strength of the concept binds them together. Bill Evans 'piano playing (except on "Freddie Freeloader" where he's replaced by the funkier Wynton Kelly) is a… read more »




