Synopses & Reviews
Jazz musicians call it The Bible. Critics call it the one jazz album every fan must own. Forty-one years since its recording in 1959, it has sold millions worldwide and sits near the top of any list of most important records of the century. How did two impromptu sessions produce such a timeless acknowledged masterpiece?
Now, for the first time, Ashley Kahn takes us into the studio to witness the creation of an album that still thrills jazz musicians, enthusiasts, and newcomers alike with its deceptively simple tunes. Using eyewitness accounts and newly discovered documents, Kahn traces Miles's move from bop to modal jazz, re-creates the sessions using master tapes (weighing in on fragmentary takes and the dispute about composers), and follows the rise of the album from its contemporary reception to its transformation into a cultural landmark through conversations with those who were there. Extensively researched and copiously illustrated, Kind of Blue recovers an invaluable piece of musical history and heightens fans' appreciation of the album they know and love.
New and never-before-published material in Kind of Blue includes:
The complete, unedited master session tapes, with analysis of fragmentary takes that have never been released, and studio dialogue between Davis and the musicians.
Over forty new interviews with musicians, producers, and critics, including Herbie Hancock, Elvin Jones, Quincy Troupe, George Avakian, Nat Hentoff and the only people still living who witnessed the making of the album: Jimmy Cobb, engineer Bob Waller, and photographer Don Hunstein.
Previously unpublished photos of the recording session, featuring a rare shot of Miles's charts.
Studio logs and internal memos from Columbia about the making and marketing of the album.
The handwritten version of Bill Evans's famous liner notes.
Review
"[Kind of Blue] begins with a scene worthy of Citizen Kane. Kahn describes his trip into the [Sony Music] vaults to listen to the complete master tapes. What could have been a dry, academic treatise...kicks off like a good mystery....Kahn's oral (and aural history brings the 1950s jazz scene to life." USA Today
Review
"Kahn does an extraordinary job of taking us back to the 1959 sessions ...wonderfully illustrated... a wealth of vintage photos." Billboard
Review
"If ever a recording deserved book length praise, [this] is it... celebrates the famed album with a big, wet kiss." Phoenix New Times
Review
"Journalist Ashley Kahn's Kind of Blue is concise, compelling, elegant, evocative and handsomely packaged, rather like the LP it succinctly celebrates." San Francisco Chronicle
Review
"[A] fascinating look into the minds of master musicians and the creation of exceptional, timeless music..." Library Journal
Synopsis
A Da Capo Original: The complete inside story of the creation of the legendary jazz album.