Welcome to the weird and wonderful world of record covers from the golden age of LPs


Subscribe to feed Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Tumblr Follow us on Facebook
« A Shelly Manne date  •  Lederhosing »

Walkin’ Miles

February 9th, 2008 in Hall of Fame, Jazz, Types and Fonts by lpcoverlover | No Comments

img_1825.JPG

Miles Davis All-Stars “Walkin” with Jay Jay Johnson (Trombone), Lucky Thompson (Tenor), David Schildkraut (Alto) Horace Silver (Piano), Percy Heath (Bass) and Kenny “Klook” Clarke (Drums). Prestige Records. Cover design by Hannah. The Miles Davis Quintet digs into this Richard Carpenter classic on November 7, 1967 at the Stadthalle, Karlsruhe, Germany. (This clip features Tony Williams, Wayne Shorter, Ron Carter and Herbie Hancock.)

Session 9 (April 29, 1954)

This all-star session is among the key recordings in the history of modern jazz and the saga of Miles Davis.

Paradoxically (and the history of jazz is full of such paradoxes), the prognosis for history being made was anything but good. As Jules Colomby recalled, the musicians were to meet at Birdland in the afternoon for the ride to Van Gelder’s New Jersey studio. Lucky Thompson, coming in from Philadelphia, was so late that J.J. Johnson had just about talked the others into leaving without him when the tenorist arrived. At the studio, when all was ready, Miles told Bob Weinstock that he hadn’t brought his horn. Weinstock blanched. Colomby happened to have an old, leaky trumpet in the trunk of his car and Miles was able to coax from it the great playing heard here. (He also kept the horn, with the donor’s blessings.)

“Blue ‘n’ Boogie,” the Gillespie blues classic, is treated to an up-tempo ride. This date was one of the first real studio “jams,” with space for everyone to stretch out, and Miles, J.J., Lucky and Horace average nine choruses apiece. Dizzy’s original riff gives Thompson his send-off and there are nice background touches behind the soloists throughout. The rhythm section works flawlessly. Miles returns for two choruses, and Klook has his say with the ensemble.

“Walkin'” (also a blues, based on a piece known as “Gravy” when Gene Ammons first recorded it in 1950) is the masterpiece, however. At a more relaxed tempo the soloists preach brilliant sermons; Thompson may never have played better. As for Miles, he sums up why 1954 was a banner year for him. Not so incidentally, “Walkin'” became a cornerstone of the hard bop movement.

Session 8 (April 3, 1954)This marks the beginning of the Davis romance with the mute. He employs one throughout, although it is a cup mute rather than the Harmon that would soon become his trademark on ballads, especially on the melody statements. No trumpeter has put the mute-mike combination to better use. (It was Duke Ellington, whom Miles adored, who first discovered that the microphone could be an added tone color–on “Mood Indigo,” in a recording studio in 1930.) The cup mute has a rounder, less penetrating and less biting sound than the Harmon–a different color.

The new and potent rhythm trio of Horace Silver, Percy Heath and Kenny Clarke was unveiled here. Also on hand was little Davey Schildkraut, a fine altoist in a Parker mold. (He was once mistaken for Parker by no less an expert than Charles Mingus, in a Blindfold Test, on a record from this date–“I’ll Remember April.”) He had worked with Kenton, Buddy Rich, and George Handy among others, but was already holding day jobs to support his family, and dropped out of musical sight in the early Sixties. His presence here assures him a place in jazz history, but you can’t eat that . . .

“Solar,” a most attractive Davis line on “How High the Moon” changes, is sped by Clarke’s fine brush work. Miles solos first, crisply, then alto and piano, then Miles returns for the landing. “You Don’t Know What Love Is,” an Eckstine feature in the Earl Hines book, can become mighty doleful in the wrong hands, but Miles here reminds us of Gil Evans’ remark: “Underneath his lyricism, Miles swings.” This is a trumpet feature, after the effective bass-piano introduction.

“Love Me Or Leave Me” is taken at a brisk clip, Miles transforming the melody even as he states it. Silver’s piano turn is framed by ensemble touches, and then Miles launches a driving solo, urged on by Silver’s jabs and Clarke’s brushfire. Schildkraut is inventive and swings, with a rounder, softer tone than Bird but much fluency in the ornithological idiom. Silver returns, with that unique propulsion and some Bud Powell quotes; Miles trades fours with Klook for two swift rounds and takes two more of his own before the ensemble ending, bridge by Percy Heath. Joyful stuff.

This was no slapdash blowing date, but a session more cohesive than most organized groups could manage. And it is certainly worthy of notice that this was the first Miles Davis session (and quiet possibly the very first Prestige session) recorded by the remarkable, optometrist-turned-engineer, Rudy Van Gelder, who presided over the controls at virtually all Prestige, Savoy, and Blue Note dates for may years and must be considered the definitive bebop recording engineer.

-DAN MORGENSTERN, liner notes, Miles Davis Chronicle: The Complete Prestige Recordings 1951-56.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (28 votes, average: 4.11 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

No Comments

Comments feed for this article
Trackback link:
http://lpcoverlover.com/2008/02/09/walkin-miles/trackback/

  • Wheel of Fortune

  • Recent Comments

    • sRw '66 on Hey Miki
    • Rev. bIGhIG on Masks are mandatory
    • Curt Lundgren on A great barn band
    • Curt Lundgren on “Please with sugar on top!”
    • Curt Lundgren on Happy Mother’s Day
  • Pages

    • Add a Cover
    • Archives
    • Chicks dig records
    • Contact us
    • FOR SALE
    • Gallery
    • Get the T-shirt
    • How to take decent photos of record albums
    • Joyful Sounds: Contest Finalists
    • Make the picture bigger
    • Records Wanted Still
    • Restoration Tips
    • The Smiths: Contest Finalists
    • Utne Reader Profile
    • Who we are
  • Categories

    • 10"
    • 45 Picture Sleeves
    • 78 RPM
    • A glass of…
    • Advertising
    • Alternative Cover
    • Animals
    • Art and Artists
    • Asian Pop
    • Bachelor Pad and Lounge
    • Beatniks
    • Big Heads
    • Black Comedy
    • Blaxploitation
    • Blue Note
    • Blues
    • Bollywood
    • Bongos and Bagels
    • Bootlegs
    • Brazilian
    • Calypso
    • Cartoons
    • Cha-Cha-Cha and Mambo
    • Cheesecake
    • Chicks dig records
    • Chicks with Guitars
    • Christmas
    • Classical
    • Clowns and the Circus
    • Comedy
    • Contest
    • Cops and Convicts
    • Country
    • Cowboys and Indians
    • Dance
    • David Stone Martin
    • Die-cut
    • Disney Land
    • DIY
    • Doctors and Nurses
    • Documentary
    • Drugs
    • Educational
    • Exotica
    • Families
    • Fashion
    • Fitness
    • Flaming
    • Folk Music
    • Food
    • For Heaven's Sake
    • For Sale
    • Fruit Cake
    • Funny Faces
    • Gay
    • Girl Groups
    • Go-Go
    • Golden Throats
    • Good Vibes
    • Gospel
    • Guitars
    • Guns
    • Hall of Fame
    • Hands
    • Happy Hour
    • Hawaiian
    • Heaven and Hell
    • Help Wanted
    • High In-Fidelity
    • Hot Rods
    • How to
    • Illustration
    • In Tribute
    • Incredibly Strange
    • Industrials
    • Jack Davis
    • Jazz
    • Jennifer
    • Jews
    • Jim Flora
    • Just Happy
    • Karate Kung-fu
    • Kiddies
    • Latin
    • Latin Loco
    • Legs
    • Little People
    • Monsters
    • Moog
    • Music for…
    • Nudes
    • Old New York
    • Organs
    • Oud-a-sight
    • Outer Space and Rockets
    • Party!!!
    • Paul Huf
    • Personalities
    • Photography
    • Picture discs and Flexi's
    • Playboy
    • Poetry
    • Politicians
    • Polka
    • Preachin'
    • Psychedelia
    • Puppets, Dolls, Stuffed Animals
    • Puzzled
    • Radio radio
    • Real People with Real Problems
    • Records and Players
    • Red Scare
    • Robots
    • Rock
    • Roots Rock Reggae
    • S+E+X
    • School Daze
    • SFX
    • Singers
    • Sitars and Stripes
    • Smoking Section
    • Soul
    • Soundtracks
    • Spies and Private Eyes
    • Spoken Wrod
    • Sports and Games
    • Starlets and Pin-ups
    • Strange Instruments
    • Super Stereo
    • Superheroes
    • Surf
    • Teens
    • The Big Hurt
    • The Office
    • Theremin
    • Tony Schwartz
    • Trains, Planes and Automobiles
    • Truckin'
    • TV
    • Types and Fonts
    • Uncategorized
    • Voodoo and Magic
    • Wanted Records
    • Where's the Phone
    • XXX
  • Album of the Week

    • Masks are mandatory
      This week's highest viewer-rated cover with 4.06 spins!
  • The Store

    • Are you a Lover? Order your t-shirt now!

  • Spin through Chicks Dig Records

    • Love LP Cover Lover? Place a badge on your website or blog.
      Embed:

      Link back to LP Cover Lover!
  • Dust & Grooves

    Groove Vinyl

    Just walking with my boombox

  • Blogroll

    • 365 Day Project
    • Album restoration
    • Bags Unlimited
    • Boogie Woogie Flu
    • Cha Cha Charming
    • Coisas Do Arco Da Velha
    • Collecting Vinyl Records
    • Courtney Cosmetics
    • Flea Market Funk
    • Frank Olinsky
    • Frederator
    • Funky 16 Corners
    • Golden Age Cartoons
    • Groove Vinyl
    • In Your Ear Records
    • Incredibly Strange & Exotica Vinyl Marketplace
    • Jim Flora
    • JR WIlliams Art
    • Kiddie Records
    • Laff Records
    • Martin Klasch
    • Mingering Mike
    • Mini Groove
    • Mosaic Records
    • Otis Records
    • Richard Mantel Graphic Design
    • Stupefaction
    • Vintage Sleaze
    • Vintage Vanguard


Subscribe to feed Powered by WordPress and Anubis.