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April 29, 1954 (2 items; TT = 21:40) |
Rudy van Gelder Studio, Hackensack NJ |
Commercial for Prestige |
Miles Davis (tpt); J.J. Johnson (tb); Eli "Lucky" Thompson (ts); Horace Silver (p); Percy Heath (b); Kenny Clarke (d) |
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1 |
Blue 'n' Boogie (D. Gillespie-F. Paparelli) |
8:16 |
2 |
Walkin' (R. Carpenter) |
13:24 |
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| 1 Blue 'n' Boogie
45 rpm: Prestige PREP 1358 [EP]
10" LP: Prestige PRLP 182
12" LP: Prestige 7076, Prestige P-012 (12 LP), Analogue Productions APJ 213, Analogue Productions AJAZ 7076 (45 rpm), Victor SMJ-6528, Victor VIJ-5090/5101 (12 LP)
CD: Fantasy OJC-213, Prestige PRCD 11004, Fantasy PRCD 7076, Prestige 8PCD-012, JVC XR 0047, Victor VICJ-23572, Victor VICJ-40225/32, Victor VICJ-60264, Victor VICJ-2033, Victor VICJ-61045, Victor VICJ-41028, Victor VICJ-41506, Universal UCCO-9018, Universal UCCO-5025
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2 Walkin'
45 rpm: Prestige 45-157; Prestige PREP 1357 [EP]
10" LP: Prestige PRLP 182
12" LP: Prestige 7076, Prestige P-012 (12 LP), Analogue Productions APJ 213, Analogue Productions AJAZ 7076 (45 rpm), Victor SMJ-6528, Victor VIJ-5090/5101 (12 LP)
CD: Fantasy OJC-213, Prestige PRCD 5701, Prestige FCD 60015, Fantasy PRCD 7076, Prestige 8PCD-012, Columbia Legacy C2K 85475, JVC XR 0047, Victor VICJ-23572, Victor VICJ-40225/32, Victor VICJ-60264, Victor VICJ-2033, Victor VICJ-61045, Victor VICJ-41028, Victor VICJ-41506, Universal UCCO-9018, Universal UCCO-5025, Universal UCCO-9165, Universal UCCO-9656, Sony SRCS 2493/4, Sony SICP 20162/3
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This is the third in a series of remarkable 1954 Prestige studio sessions. The rhythm
section was by now very comfortable together, and the addition of Johnson and Thompson
gave three strong solo voices. "Walkin'" immediately entered the live book, and
Davis continued to perform it into the late 1960s.
"Blue 'n' Boogie" features long solos by Davis (0:30-2:08), Johnson (2:08-3:48),
Thompson (3:48-5:55), and Silver (5:55-7:28), followed by a final two choruses by
Davis before the closing ensemble.
"Walkin'" is based on "Gravy," recorded by Gene Ammons in 1950. More long fluent
solos by all involved: Davis (0:58-3:38), Johnson (3:38-6:16), Thompson (6:16-10:02);
two short choruses by Silver and another two powerful ones by Davis, followed by
an extended ensemble and the closing theme.
This session -- "A Hi-Fi Modern Jazz Jam Session," as it was described in the notes
to PRLP 182 -- garnered a lot of praise from the beginning. In a 1957 review of
the original 12" LP, Whitney Balliett described these tunes as "some of the best
jazz improvisations set down in the past decade." In 1964, pianist Dick Katz wrote,
"Miles' solo [on "Walkin'"] is as good as any he has recorded, before or since.
His sound ideas and execution, and the feelings he projects, are prime examples
of his art. Every idea that Miles states here is clearly formed and will stay with
the listener afterward." The session was still resonating when Ralph J. Gleason
wrote the liner notes to Bitches Brew in 1970: "look. miles changed the
world. more than once. that's true you know. out of the cool was first. then when
it all went wrong miles called all the children home with walkin'. he just got
up there and blew it and put it on an lp and all over the world they stopped in
their tracks when they heard it. they stopped what they were doing and they listened
and it was never the same after that. just never the same."
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