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    Miles Davis - Blue Moods

    Posted By: odoacer
    Miles Davis - Blue Moods

    Miles Davis - Blue Moods
    MILES DAVIS, trumpet; BRITT WOODMAN, trombone;CHARLES MINGUS, bass;
    TEDDY CHARLES, vibes; ELVIN JONES, drums
    Date - 07/09/1955

    EAC | APE+IMAGE+CUE+LOG+COVERS | 142Mb


    Miles Davis - Blue Moods

    blue moods - all music guide review
    In the '50s, the party line among New York jazz critics was that hard bop was the "true faith" and that cool jazz was lightweight and unemotional. But Miles Davis knew better. The trumpeter (whose Birth of the Cool sessions of 1949-1950 proved to be incredibly influential) was smart enough to realize that cool jazz and hard bop were equally valid parts of the house that Charlie Parker built, and he had no problem working with cool jazzmen one minute and hard boppers the next. Recorded for Charles Mingus' Debut label in 1955, Blue Moods is an excellent example of cool jazz. However, not all of the musicians who join Davis on this album were full-time members of jazz's cool school. Although vibist Teddy Charles was cool-oriented, Mingus (upright bass) and Elvin Jones (drums) were never considered cool players – and the lyrical trombonist Britt Woodman was, in the '50s, best known for his association with Duke Ellington. Nonetheless, the things that characterized cool jazz – subtlety, restraint, and understatement – characterize Blue Moods, which Fantasy reissued on CD in 1990 for its Original Jazz Classics (OJC) series. Mingus and Jones were certainly capable of being forceful and aggressive, but you won't hear them being intense on this disc; a very laid-back, gently introspective approach prevails on interpretations of "Easy Living," "Alone Together," "Nature Boy," and "There's No You." Clocking in at 27 minutes, Blue Moods is quite skimpy by CD standards – unfortunately, Fantasy didn't have any alternate takes to add. But even so, Blue Moods offers considerable rewards to those who have a taste for '50s cool jazz. ~ Alex Henderson, All Music Guide