Craft Recordings continues its year-long centennial celebration of one of the 20th centuryās most important cultural iconsātrumpeter, bandleader, and composer Miles Davisāwith a brand-new box set, Miles ā56: The Prestige Recordings. Building upon Craftās GRAMMYĀ® Award-winning Miles ā55 release, this latest collection focuses on Davisā 1956 sessions for Prestige Records, which resulted in such landmark albums as Cookinā, Relaxinā, Workinā, and Steaminā,and features an all-star line-up of talent, including John Coltrane, Sonny Rollins, Red Garland, Art Taylor, Paul Chambers, Tommy Flanagan, and Philly Joe Jones. Click here to pre-order the album and stream the newly remastered āMy Funny Valentineā
Arriving on June 19, Miles ā56 will be available as a limited-edition 4-LP box set, a 3-CD set, and in Hi-Res digital. All audio was transferred from the original analog tapes and meticulously restored by Plangent Processes. The collection was remastered by GRAMMY Award-winning engineer Paul Blakemore and lacquers were cut for the 180-gram vinyl LP edition by Kevin Gray at Cohearent Audio. Produced by Nick Phillips, both physical editions include a new essay by GRAMMY Award-winning music historian Ashley Kahn. Track notes by the late Dan Morgenstern, a GRAMMY Award-winning jazz historian and archivist, add additional insight into the 70-year-old recordings. Additionally, a limited run of merchandise featuring the iconic artwork from Workin’, Cookin’, Relaxin’, and Steamin’ with the Miles Davis Quintet will be available exclusively through the Craft store.
For trailblazing trumpeter, bandleader, and composer Miles Davis (1926 ā 1991), 1956 was a pivotal year, centered around his first consistent group, The Miles Davis Quintet. Formed just a few months earlier, the bandāknown as the āFirst Great Quintetāāfeatured a whoās who of rising stars, including tenor saxophonist John Coltrane, pianist Red Garland, bassist Paul Chambers, and drummer Philly Joe Jones. Together, they would become a defining force of the hard bop era.
āThe group simply had so much to offer,ā writes Ashley Kahn. āDepending on what tune they were engaging, and who was soloing, the groupās sound could change energy and effect, such was the flexibility and contrasting styles of its membersā¦. Collectively, the band was able to breathe as one, in a natural, imprecise way. The group could deliver fire and, just as effectively, stillnessāwhich Miles was famously responsible for.ā
After recording their debut album in November 1955 (Miles: The New Miles Davis Quintet), the quintet further honed their sound through non-stop touring, playing packed residencies across North America, while, at home in New York, they maintained a regular presence at the West Village hotspot, CafĆ© Bohemia. Their setlists, Kahn shares, āreflected a āballads, burners and bluesā mix of material,ā including standards like āMy Funny Valentineā and āSurrey With the Fringe on Top;ā bebop mainstays, such as āWoodyāN Youā and āSalt Peanuts;ā and tunes by contemporaries, including Sonny Rollinsā āOleo,ā Thelonious Monkās āWell You Neednātā and Ahmad Jamalās āAhmadās Blues.ā Davisā originals were also regularly sprinkled into the mix, including āHalf Nelsonā and āFour.ā
By now, Davisā profile had grown significantly, attracting attention from the press, his peers, and record labels. While still under contract with Prestige, Davis signed to Columbia Records, with the full blessing of the independent labelās founder, Bob Weinstock. To fulfill his contractual obligations with Prestige, he scheduled two marathon sessions at Rudy Van Gelderās storied Hackensack studio, where he would record enough material for several yearsā worth of albums. The sessions, which took place on May 11 and October 26, were treated by the quintet as live gigs, as they performed the set lists that they had perfected over the preceding months, including the aforementioned selections. The subsequent recordings captured the quintetās on-stage magic with a palpable sense of immediacy.
Kahn writes, āMost tunes feature the quintet, but as they would onstage, they stretched to include the bands-within-the-band idea; for example, Coltrane laying out as Miles led the rhythm section on āMy Funny Valentine,ā and Garland taking over with a piano trio version of āAhmadās Blues.āāHe adds, āOther than a second try at āThe Theme,ā these were all first takes. Like the final set on a Tuesday night, they hit it, quit it, and went home.ā
The tracks they recorded in May and October would be released as four iconic albums: Cookinā (1957), Relaxinā(1958), Workinā (1960), and Steaminā (1961)āeach with a full title that includes āwith the Miles Davis Quintet.ā One outlier, the Thelonious Monk-penned āāRound Midnightāāwhich would become a signature tune for Davisāappeared on 1959ās Miles Davis and the Modern Jazz Giants.
Additionally, Miles ā56 includes the trumpeterās other Prestige session that year, captured on March 16th and featuring Sonny Rollins (tenor saxophone), Tommy Flanagan (piano), Paul Chambers (bass), and Art Taylor (drums). The sessionāwhich marked the bandleaderās final studio date with Rollins and his sole recorded collaboration with Flanaganāincludes two Davis originals (āVierd Blues,ā āNo Lineā) plus the Dave Brubeck-penned āIn Your Own Sweet Way,ā all of which appeared on the 1956 LP, Collectorsā Items.
The impact of the 1956 quintet recordings could be felt immediately upon release, as critics welcomed them with open arms and young jazz musicians sought to emulate Davisā approach to improvisation. Their lasting influence, however, still reverberates. āMany of the tunes and arrangements from the quintetās 1956 sessions can be heard in the repertoire of contemporary jazz ensembles,ā notes Kahn. āIn approach and attitude, this musicā¦continues to inspire and build student improvisers, providing them a solid foundation to take a leap and find their own way to push the music forward.ā
While this iteration of the quintet would only spend a brief time together, they played a crucial role in shaping Davis as an artist, helping him come into his own as a bandleader and find his voice as a musician. As 1956 closed, Davis was primed to embark on a new chapterāone that would find his star ascending to unbelievable heights. He would continue to innovate for decades, shaping the sounds of post-bop and fusion, while experimenting with electronic elements, funk, rock, pop, and African rhythms well into the late 1980s. Today, his vast catalog continues to resonate far beyond the world of jazz.
Tracklist (4-LP Vinyl):
Side A
1. In Your Own Sweet Way (March 16, 1956 version)
2. No Line
3. Vierd Blues
4. In Your Own Sweet Way (May 11, 1956 version)
Side B
1. Diane
2. Traneās Blues
3. Something I Dreamed Last Night
Side C
1. It Could Happen to You
2. WoodyāN You
3. Ahmadās Blues
Side D
1. Surrey With the Fringe on Top
2. It Never Entered My Mind
3. When I Fall in Love
4. Salt Peanuts
Side E
1. Four
2. The Theme (Take 1)
3. The Theme (Take 2)
4. If I Were a Bell
5. Well, You Neednāt
Side F
1. āRound Midnight
2. Half Nelson
3. Youāre My Everything
4. I Could Write a Book
Side G
1. Oleo
2. Airegin
3. Tune Up
4. When Lights Are Low
Side H
1. Blues by Five
2. My Funny Valentine
Tracklist (3-CD/Digital):
Disc 1
1. In Your Own Sweet Way (March 16, 1956 version)
2. No Line
3. Vierd Blues
4. In Your Own Sweet Way (May 11, 1956 version)
5. Diane
6. Traneās Blues
7. Something I Dreamed Last Night
8. It Could Happen to You
9. WoodyāN You
10. Ahmadās Blues
Disc 2
1. Surrey With the Fringe on Top
2. It Never Entered My Mind
3. When I Fall in Love
4. Salt Peanuts
5. Four
6. The Theme (Take 1)
7. The Theme (Take 2)
8. If I Were a Bell
9. Well, You Neednāt
Disc 3
1. āRound Midnight
2. Half Nelson
3. Youāre My Everything
4. I Could Write a Book
5. Oleo
6. Airegin
7. Tune Up
8. When Lights Are Low
9. Blues by Five 10. My Funny Valentine