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[Return to 1950s sessions]
March 6, 1954 (6 items; TT = 26:06) |
Rudy van Gelder Studio, Hackensack NJ |
Commercial for Blue Note |
Miles Davis (tpt); Horace Silver (p); Percy Heath (b); Art Blakey (d) |
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1 |
Take Off (take 3) [Conception] (M. Davis) |
3:37 |
2 |
Lazy Susan (take ?) (M. Davis) |
4:00 |
3 |
The Leap (take ?) (M. Davis) |
4:28 |
4 |
Well, You Needn't (take ?) (T. Monk) |
5:20 |
5 |
Weirdo (take ?) [Sid's Ahead] (M. Davis) |
4:41 |
6 |
It Never Entered My Mind (take 1) (R. Rodgers-L. Hart) |
4:00 |
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| 1 Take Off (take 3)
10" LP: Blue Note BLP 5040, Classic Records ABNC 5040C (33/45 rpm), Toshiba TOJJ-5040
12" LP: Blue Note BLP 1502 (BST 81502), Toshiba NR 8831 (LP)
CD: Blue Note CDP 81502, Blue Note 32610, Toshiba CJ28 5111, Toshiba TOCJ-5659/60, Toshiba TOCJ-9023, Toshiba TOCJ-66111/2, Toshiba TOCJ-6429, Universal UCCQ-9452
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2 Lazy Susan (take ?)
45 rpm: Blue Note BN 1649
10" LP: Blue Note BLP 5040, Classic Records ABNC 5040C (33/45 rpm), Toshiba TOJJ-5040
12" LP: Blue Note BLP 1502 (BST 81502), Toshiba NR 8831 (LP)
CD: Blue Note CDP 81502, Blue Note 32610, Toshiba CJ28 5111, Toshiba TOCJ-5659/60, Toshiba TOCJ-9023, Toshiba TOCJ-66111/2, Toshiba TOCJ-6429, Universal UCCQ-9452
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3 The Leap (take ?)
45 rpm: Blue Note BN 1650
10" LP: Blue Note BLP 5040, Classic Records ABNC 5040C (33/45 rpm), Toshiba TOJJ-5040
12" LP: Blue Note BLP 1502 (BST 81502), Toshiba NR 8831 (LP)
CD: Blue Note CDP 81502, Blue Note 32610, Toshiba CJ28 5111, Toshiba TOCJ-5659/60, Toshiba TOCJ-9023, Toshiba TOCJ-66111/2, Toshiba TOCJ-6429, Universal UCCQ-9452
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4 Well, You Needn't (take ?)
45 rpm: Blue Note BN 1633
10" LP: Blue Note BLP 5040, Classic Records ABNC 5040C (33/45 rpm), Toshiba TOJJ-5040
12" LP: Blue Note BLP 1502 (BST 81502), Toshiba NR 8831 (LP)
CD: Blue Note CDP 81502, Blue Note 32610, Toshiba CJ28 5111, Toshiba TOCJ-5659/60, Toshiba TOCJ-9023, Toshiba TOCJ-66111/2, Toshiba TOCJ-6429, Toshiba TOCJ-6325, Universal UCCQ-9452
|
5 Weirdo (take ?)
45 rpm: Blue Note BN 1650
10" LP: Blue Note BLP 5040, Classic Records ABNC 5040C (33/45 rpm), Toshiba TOJJ-5040
12" LP: Blue Note BLP 1502 (BST 81502), Toshiba NR 8831 (LP)
CD: Blue Note CDP 81502, Blue Note 32610, Blue Note CDP 36633, Toshiba CJ28 5111, Toshiba TOCJ-5659/60, Toshiba TOCJ-9023, Toshiba TOCJ-66111/2, Toshiba TOCJ-6429, Toshiba TOCJ-6325, Universal UCCQ-9452
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6 It Never Entered My Mind (take 1)
10" LP: Blue Note BLP 5040, Classic Records ABNC 5040C (33/45 rpm), Toshiba TOJJ-5040
12" LP: Blue Note BLP 1502 (BST 81502), Toshiba NR 8831 (LP)
CD: Blue Note CDP 81502, Blue Note 32610, Blue Note CDP 36633, Toshiba CJ28 5111, Toshiba TOCJ-5659/60, Toshiba TOCJ-9023, Toshiba TOCJ-66111/2, Toshiba TOCJ-6429, Toshiba TOCJ-6325, Universal UCCQ-9452
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This is Davis' first recording session since returning from a several-month stay
in the Midwest during which he finally overcame his heroin addiction. In the remaining
months of the year he made some of the most memorable recordings of his career.
And while the tunes performed here do not compare to the likes of "Solar," "Walkin',"
or "Bags' Groove," they reveal a Davis well on the way toward his mature style
and command of his instrument. This is also Davis' first collaboration with Horace
Silver, who was to participate in several of the landmark Prestige sessions later
this year. This same quartet recorded for Prestige on March 15.
"Take Off" uses the same chord changes as "Deception" and "Conception" from 1950-1951.
There's no real melody here, but the repeated suspended-rhythm passages during
the changes are effective and memorable. Davis takes two choruses, followed by Heath
and Silver (Silver enters after the first eight); Davis returns for two more at
the end.
"Lazy Susan" is based on the changes of Tadd Dameron's "Lady Bird," which Davis
had used as the basis of "Half Nelson" for his first session as a leader in August
1947, and which he performed with Dameron several times in 1949. Davis takes two
choruses, Silver one, followed by one of eight-measure trumpet/drums exchanges,
and Davis takes it out.
"The Leap" is based on the changes of "Get Happy," but this tune adds a sixteen-measure
suspension that overlaps the first eight bars of the next chorus. The structure
is unusual but Davis and Silver both navigate it without difficulty. The solos are
by Davis (0:41-1:36), followed by the eight-bar suspension; Silver (1:50-2:44),
followed by the suspension; and Davis returns for the closing chorus. There is a
splice at 1:16 during Davis' solo. Early on he quotes Monk's "Rhythm-a-ning"
(0:21-0:25); Silver returns to that theme twice during his solo (listen at 1:52
and 2:05).
Davis performed Monk's "Well, You Needn't" many times in the 1950s -- perhaps
the canonical version is the one recorded by the Quintet for Prestige in October
1956. Here it is taken at an usually slow tempo. Davis takes two choruses, Silver
one (sounding very Monkish); Davis and Blakey play a half-chorus of eight-measure
trumpet/drums exchanges, and Davis plays the remainder of the closing chorus.
Davis would return to the theme of "Weirdo" later under the title "Sid's Ahead."
Both versions -- and also "Walkin'," credited to Richard Carpenter, which Davis
would record for Prestige in 1954 -- are based on "Gravy," recorded by Gene Ammons
in 1950. This an abstracted blues in F, with altered changes and masterful solos
by Davis (2x), Silver (1x), and Davis again (1x) before the closing theme is re-stated.
This is Davis' earliest recording of "It Never Entered My Mind," a ballad he would
perform many times throughout the 1950s, including the definitive version recorded
for Prestige in May 1956. Here he plays with a cup mute, and the sound is less intimate
than what he achieved with the Harmon mute he discovered soon afterward and introduced
on "Oleo" recorded for Prestige in June. His solo is pretty, and Silver takes a
short turn before Davis returns to re-state the melody.
Later in March, Davis participated in a Charles Mingus-led Jazz Workshop at Tony's
Club Grandean in Brooklyn; he was joined by Gigi Gryce, Thelonious Monk, and Max
Roach. Davis and Monk got into several altercations, and from then on the two were
often at odds.
Thanks to Bruno Leicht for helpful comments on this session.
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