Miles Davis & Thelonious Monk - Live at Newport 1958 & 1963 (1994)

  • 19 Oct, 12:03
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Artist: Miles Davis & Thelonious Monk
Title Of Album: Live at Newport 1958 & 1963
Year Of Release: 1994
Label: Columbia / Legacy
Genre: Jazz, Bop, Hard Bop
Quality: Mp3 / FLAC (tracks +.cue,log,scans)
Bitrate: CBR 320 kbps / Lossless
Time: 1:31:33
Full Size: 221 mb / 563 mb


At the time of this album's original release (as Miles & Monk at Newport), Thelonious Monk was really hitting his stride as a jazz star and was then, like Miles Davis, signed to Columbia. Critics usually damn Monk's '60s groups with faint praise, but listen to the fiery interplay Davis and Monk bring to his splintery rhythmic displacements on "Criss-Cross," and their dancing joy on "Epistrophy." "Light Blue" is one of Monk's harmonically free-ranging little blues, taken at such an expressively slow tempo, his chords take on a symphonic breadth behind Charlie Rouse's endless lyric elisions. But the main attraction of this concert was the cross-generational accord between Monk and clarinetist Pee Wee Russell, who sits in on Monk's famous blues "Nutty" and "Blue Monk." Closer to the Dixieland school than bop, Russell nevertheless responds brilliantly to Monk's urgent abstract Charleston on "Nutty," and when the pianist drops out to let him stroll, he responds with a wink and some knowing dissonances. "Blue Monk" is even better, as Russell's wistful, teardrop timbre inspires insistent counterpoint from Monk, and his tonal abstractions lead perfectly into Monk's solo -- proving that styles don't clash, only people. Miles' 1958 set begins with a brisk, aggressive romp, as the sextet charge through Bird's contrapuntal line "Ah-Leu-Cha," then settle into a deep, deep groove on their famous arrangement of Monk's "Straight, No Chaser." Listen to the way Bill Evans, Paul Chambers, and Jimmy Cobb deconstruct the time and harmony behind Miles' spacious intervals, only to lock up and fly in the second chorus. John Coltrane really whips it up here (and on a blazing "Two Bass Hit"), his ideas crowded together like blood corpuscles lining up to pass through a single capillary. Inspired by Coltrane's complexity (and Cobb's power), Cannonball Adderley responds with a contrasting gospel blues feel, while Evans offers a coy, bluesy transition to Chambers' resounding dance.

TRACKLIST:

Disc 1 - Miles Davis:
1) Introduction
2) Ah-Leu-Cha
3) Straight, No Chaser
4) Fran-Dance
5) Two Bass Hit
6) Bye Bye Blackbird
7) The Theme

Disc 2 - Thelonious Monk
1) Introduction
2) Criss-Cross
3) Light Blue
4) Nutty*
5) Blue Monk*
6) Epistrophy

Personel:
The Miles Davis Sextet:
Miles Davis (Trumpet)
Julian "Cannonball" Adderley (Alto Saxophone)
John Coltrane (Tenor Saxaphone)
Bill Evans (Piano)
Paul Chambers (Bass)
Jimmy Cobb (Drums)

The Thelonious Monk Quartet:
Thelonious Monk (Piano)
Butch Warren (Bass)
Frankie Dunlop (Drums)
Charlie Rouse (Tenor Saxophone)

*Songs include Pee Wee Russell (Clarinet)

lossless
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cbr 320 kbps
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