Metally.net Music Store - The Miles Davis and Gil Evans: Complete Columbia Studio Recordings

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List Price: $69.98
Our Price: $45.00
Your Save: $ 24.98 ( 36% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Sony
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0827969092323 Format: Box set Label: Sony Manufacturer: Sony Number Of Discs: 6 Publisher: Sony Release Date: 2004-05-11 Studio: Sony
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Great CD Comment: I purchased this based on my previous experience with some other assorted Miles Davis CD's. I'm on the third disc and honestly I have it on repeat and it is not tiring or fatiguing - both my wife and I (we are in our 20's) love it! There is so much music in this set that its a new experience everytime. If you like Miles Davis you will love this disc set!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Very good recordings Comment: I love this collection as well as the price I paid for it. Highly recommend it if you are a jazz lover.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Too Complete - Many Rehearsal Takes and Re-takes Comment: Somewhat difficult to get into the groove of listening, because the set is more of an academic study of the recording sessions with these two giants of the jazz world.
I will edit the set to separate the listenable from the historic; some charts stop in the middle in order to begin another take.
This set also includes several takes of the same chart, as well as different solo break overdubs.
If you're looking for a set to immediately have for an evening's playlist, you'll need to spend some time picking and choosing. You may prefer to purchase their studio CDs individually. However, it's well worth the journey.
At the end of the day, it's Miles Davis during a very introspective yet lyrical point of his journey, and for me, while I could still understand what he was trying to achieve.
Customer Rating:      Summary: 1st timer Comment: I took a chance and bought this as a gold box item. I have heard of Miles Davis but never listened to a complete song, just bits and pieces played in movies. This is great to sit back and close your eyes, except if driving, and let the music paint images in your mind. If you like Jazz then buy it, now!
Customer Rating:      Summary: The Miles Davis and Gil Evans Box Set - Great Remasters And Incredible Scope For The Completist Comment: The Miles Davis and Gil Evans: Complete Columbia Studio Recordings box set is a treasure trove for those who must have every recording. Less serious fans may want to start with less expensive issues of the individual albums.
Miles Davis has many box sets devoted to him, and this one is by far the most unique. After purchasing several of the Miles Davis box sets that have been re-released by Columbia, I have to say that I am very pleased. Eventually I will get them all, but my love of Gil Evans in addition to Miles is what made me pull the trigger on this set.
For starters, what comes through this set even with a casual listen is the incredible influence that Gil had on the arrangements and approach taken during their greatest collaborations. On many of the tracks, the horn arrangements and solos are pushed center stage, with Gil's play only providing a subtle backdrop. That's typical Gil, though I do wonder what the outcome might have been if he had allowed himself to step forward more in those early years.
Still, the tracks manage to be both incredibly traditional and daring at the same time, and this especially true of the alternate takes. Once you hear the alternate takes, rehearsal tracks, and overdubs it's clear that the sound has to be in large part to Gil's credit. In fact, the only way to describe the sound on some of these tracks is *large*. The encyclopedic inclusion of various alternate takes and rehearsal takes provides tremendous insight and could easily be used by students of this music and history who want to get inside the minds of these recording artists and compare against the final product.
That's another reason why this reissue is so worth getting. While I have no complaints about the original recordings, several of the tracks are so greatly improved by the remastering to almost make the listening experience completely new for me. I am slowly being converted to the remastering camp. If all the reissued box sets sound this good, I may start to purchase multiple copies of each of them. :)
I was somewhat confused by the *placement* of many of the tracks, especially the way certain retakes are split between different disks. At times they correspond to the original albums and at other times they don't. I don't know why Mr. Schaap chose to do it this way, but I am pretty certain there were very good reasons. It does make you wonder, but it doesn't change the fact that these are very listenable disks.
Now because this is a set of the complete studio recordings, there are some tracks here that I am not particularly crazy about. Among them are "Blue Xmas" and "Nothing Like You." Those tracks made me glad that not every song on here has alternate and rehearsal takes included.
The box is certainly attractive, though understated. It is certainly more durable and functional than other recent boxes I have purchased.
As with all Miles Davis sessions under Columbia, these recordings showcase fantastic musicians. Miles Ahead and Porgy and Bess are clearly the most highly regarded albums that resulted from Gil's work with Miles, but Sketches of Spain will probably always be my personal favorite of the group. I am also a fond of Quiet Nights, which has probably been over-criticized IMHO. Yet the extra takes means that even if you own those albums you still have a very good reason to purchase this set.
If you haven't yet purchased this set, take this opportunity to add it to your collection.
Enjoy!
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Editorial Reviews:
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From their first work together on the Birth of the Cool sessions in 1949, Miles Davis and Gil Evans forged a unique relationship as great soloist and brilliant arranger. The real opportunity to explore their shared vision didn't come until 1957, however, when Davis had forged a relationship with a major record label able to support it. Though a product of the big-band tradition, Evans was never limited by sectional voicings and riffs. He had an interest in unusual instrumentation and a talent for creating subtle mixes of distinct voices, adding French horns, oboe, bassoon, and harp to the conventional big band and thinning its saxophone, trumpet, and trombone sections. His arrangements for Davis are like settings for the finest jewels, whether he's creating rich, brass chords or adding only light percussion to the trumpeter's solitary lament. Together Davis and Evans produced three orchestral masterpieces: Miles Ahead (1957), Porgy and Bess (1958), and Sketches of Spain (1960). They're all here, along with less-inspired, later projects like the Quiet Nights bossa nova album. What most distinguishes the box set is the archival work of Phil Schaap, who has compiled a wealth of alternate takes. They reveal much about the processes that went into these works, including extensive editing and even some overdubbing. As early as 1957, Evans and Davis were already beginning to use the studio itself as an integral part of their music. --Stuart Broomer
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