Miles Davis Volume 1
Miles Davis Volume 1 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Compilation album by Miles Davis | ||||
Released | January 1956[1] | |||
Recorded |
May 9, 1952 (#1-9) WOR Studios, New York City March 6, 1954 (#10-15) Van Gelder Studio, Hackensack, NJ | |||
Genre | Jazz | |||
Length | 58:18 CD reissue | |||
Label |
Blue Note BLP 1501 | |||
Producer |
Alfred Lion Michael Cuscuna (2001) | |||
Miles Davis chronology | ||||
| ||||
12" LP cover | ||||
BLP 1501[3] |
Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [4] |
Miles Davis Volume 1 refers to two separate but related entities. The title was originally used for the first in a pair of compilation albums of recordings made by Miles Davis in 1952, 1953 and 1954, released in 1956 (and reissued many times) as BLP 1501 on the Blue Note Records label.
Miles Davis Volume 1 also refers to a CD compilation that contains the entirety of Young Man with a Horn (BLP 5013, 1951) plus three alternate takes, plus the entirety of Miles Davis, Vol. 3 (BLP 5040, 1954), both released on 10-inch LP.
The album was identified by Scott Yanow in his Allmusic essay "Hard Bop" in 2010 as one of the 17 Essential Hard Bop Recordings.[5]
Release history
The 12-inch LP (BLP 1501) was originally released in January 1956, followed by Volume 2 (BLP 1502), after Davis won the Down Beat readers poll as best trumpeter.[6][7] The two volumes of rereleased Miles Davis material were the first releases in Blue Note's new 1500 series of 12"LPs.[8] The music compiled on the two volumes was from three separate recording sessions made over 1952–54, some of which had been previously issued as singles, and as three now discontinued 10-inch LPs. Volume 1 contained takes of the May 9, 1952 and April 20, 1953 sessions for the label, including alternate takes of some songs. The master takes had originally been issued in 10"LP format under the titles Young Man with a Horn (BLP 5013), and Miles Davis Volume 2 (BLP 5022). The original BLP 1501 running order is available on some Japanese CD versions and from HDTracks.
The 1988 CD edition (Blue Note CDP 7 81501 2) reused the cover from BLP 1501, but had different content. The CD compiled the entire tracks recorded on May 9, 1952, and March 6, 1954, whereas the complete 1953 session is now on Miles Davis Volume 2. By appending the alternate takes directly after master takes, of the initial 10-inch release Young Man with a Horn, it did not maintain the original order of the historic record.
The 2001 CD edition (7243 5 32610 2 3) used new cover art based on 1954's Volume 3, and was remastered by Rudy Van Gelder. Like the 1988 version, it contained the entire 1952 and 1954 sessions, but with alternates following the original running order of BLP 5013.
12"LP Track listing
Track | Song Title | Composer | Time | Session |
---|---|---|---|---|
Side 1 | ||||
1. | "Tempus Fugit" | Bud Powell | 3:53 | April 20, 1953 |
2. | "Kelo" | Jay Jay Johnson | 3:20 | April 20, 1953 |
3. | "Enigma" | Jay Jay Johnson | 3:25 | April 20, 1953 |
4. | "Ray's Idea" | Gil Fuller, Ray Brown | 3:46 | April 20, 1953 |
5. | "How Deep Is the Ocean?" | Irving Berlin | 4:40 | May 9, 1952 |
6. | "C.T.A. (alt. take)" | Jimmy Heath | 3:18 | April 20, 1953 |
Side 2 | ||||
1. | "Dear Old Stockholm" | (traditional) | 4:13 | May 9, 1952 |
2. | "Chance It" | Oscar Pettiford | 3:04 | May 9, 1952 |
3. | "Yesterdays" | Jerome Kern, Otto Harbach | 3:46 | May 9, 1952 |
4. | "Donna (alt. take)" | Jackie McLean | 3:12 | May 9, 1952 |
5. | "C.T.A." | Jimmy Heath | 3:36 | April 20, 1953 |
6. | "Woody 'n' You (alt. take)" | Dizzy Gillespie | 3:23 | May 9, 1952 |
CD Track listing
Track | Song Title | Composer | Time | Session |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Dear Old Stockholm" | (traditional) | 4:13 | May 9, 1952 |
2. | "Chance It" | Oscar Pettiford | 3:04 | May 9, 1952 |
3. | "Donna (a.k.a. Dig)" | Jackie McLean | 3:14 | May 9, 1952 |
4. | "Woody 'n' You" | Dizzy Gillespie | 3:26 | May 9, 1952 |
5. | "Yesterdays" | Jerome Kern, Otto Harbach | 3:46 | May 9, 1952 |
6. | "How Deep Is the Ocean?" | Irving Berlin | 4:40 | May 9, 1952 |
7. | "Chance It (alternate take)" | Oscar Pettiford | 2:54 | May 9, 1952 |
8. | "Donna (alternate take)" | Jackie McLean | 3:12 | May 9, 1952 |
9. | "Woody 'n' You (alternate take)" | Dizzy Gillespie | 3:23 | May 9, 1952 |
10. | "Take Off" | Miles Davis | 3:41 | March 6, 1954 |
11. | "Lazy Susan" | Miles Davis | 4:03 | March 6, 1954 |
12. | "The Leap" | Miles Davis | 4:32 | March 6, 1954 |
13. | "Well, You Needn't" | Thelonious Monk | 5:24 | March 6, 1954 |
14. | "Weirdo" | Miles Davis | 4:45 | March 6, 1954 |
15. | "It Never Entered My Mind" | Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart | 4:01 | March 6, 1954 |
Musicians
- May 9, 1952 [9]
- Miles Davis - trumpet
- J. J. Johnson - trombone
- Jackie McLean - alto saxophone
- Gil Coggins - piano
- Oscar Pettiford - bass
- Kenny Clarke - drums
- April 20, 1953[10]
- Miles Davis - trumpet
- J. J. Johnson - trombone
- Jimmy Heath - tenor saxophone
- Gil Coggins - piano
- Percy Heath - bass
- Art Blakey - drums
- March 6, 1954[11]
- Miles Davis - trumpet
- Horace Silver - piano
- Percy Heath - bass
- Art Blakey - drums
References
- ↑ Billboard February 4, 1956.
- ↑ This is the original cover for the 1956 12" LP and earlier CD releases. The 2001 RVG edition of the album (above) is a slightly altered version of the cover for Miles Davis Volume 3, Blue Note 5040 (10" LP).
- ↑ This is the original cover for the 1956 12" LP and earlier CD releases. The 2001 RVG edition of the album (above) is a slightly altered version of the cover for Miles Davis Volume 3, Blue Note 5040 (10" LP).
- ↑ Allmusic review.
- ↑ Scott Yanow: "Hard Bop", November 2, 2010, accessed September 21, 2012.
- ↑ Leonard Feather in the original liner notes to Miles Davis Volume 1 (1956).
- ↑ Down Beat Readers Poll 1955 on Down Beat homepage. Retrieved on April 6, 2014.
- ↑ Miles Davis – Volume 1, Discogs.com, accessed July 4, 2014.
- ↑ May 9, 1952 Session Details, Miles Ahead: A Miles Davis Website, accessed July 13, 2014.
- ↑ April 20, 1953 Session Details, Miles Ahead: A Miles Davis Website, accessed July 13, 2014.
- ↑ March 6, 1954 Session Details, Miles Ahead: A Miles Davis Website, accessed July 13, 2014.