A Month Before "Kind of Blue" Miles' Guys Snuck Away While In Chicago To Record This
hardly modal
In Chicago, February of 1959 while playing at The Sutherland Hotel as members of Miles Davis's now classic "Kind of Blue" sextet, the group, minus Miles assembled at Bill Putnam's Universal Recording Studio at 46 E. Walton Street and laid down this album led by Cannonball Adderley.
It was only a month before "Kind of Blue" but there's nothing modal about this almost corny by comparison set of "chipper" tunes taken post-bop style. I mean, why listen to these guys play "Limehouse Blues" when you can get the better sounding rendition on "Jazz at the Pornshop"? Just kidding.
Actually I just wrote that to incite you. Yes, it begins with "Limehouse Blues" and then segues to "Stars Fell on Alabama" (I almost wrote "on Tommy Tuberville" but my partners requested I avoid politics, so I didn't go there) but there are a pair of Coltrane originals and of course the well-oiled (but not sounding well-lubricated) group featuring Cobb, Chambers, Coltrane and Wynton Kelly lay the tracks down with energy and precision.
Best way to approach this one is to start on side two with Coltrane's "Grand Central". It sure beats "Limehouse Blues". That's followed by a standard, "You're a Weaver of Dreams", and ends with "The Sleeper", another Coltrane composition. On "Grand Central" Cannonball and Coltrane trade licks and the going is good. These guys were a precision corp at this time and the playing is exciting.
The sound is somewhat problematic hard "left/right", as if it was intended to be blended to mono but don't try if you've got a mono switch. Things kind of disappear. The hard left/right can be distracting, but the recording quality is high. I had to dock it one to 7 because of the hard/left right.
The presentation is first rate Verve/Acoustics Sounds series laminated "Tip-on" jacket and the classic cover is beautifully reproduced. This new mastering sounds considerably better than the Japanese pressing I will be selling and the pressing was perfect.
If you want to hear a month before "Kind of Blue" changed the jazz landscape, here it is. I didn't have time to research what Miles was playing with these cats over at the Sutherland Hotel but I doubt it was "Limehouse Blues"!