Product Details
Porgy and Bess

Porgy and Bess
Miles Davis

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Product Description

Of all Gil Evans' orchestral scores for soulmate Miles Davis, PORGY AND BESS is his richest and most ambitious--a watershed of modern jazz harmony which served to secure Davis' pop star stature and define his brooding mystique. Inevitably,even non-jazz listeners own a copy of PORGY AND BESS or SKETCHES OF SPAIN.
Like MILES AHEAD, Evans' band on PORGY AND BESS de-emphasised the traditional reed section in favour of a tuba, three French horns, two flutes and two saxophones. The resulting chords and overtones are dark, alluring and mysterious. Thus the opening brass-cymbal bluster of "The Buzzard Song" gives way to a mid-eastern carpet of flutes and deep brass as Davis' poignant trumpet speaks in split tones and yearning cadences, bursting with blues feeling; a tuba soon picks up the theme as muted trumpets are followed by tolling trombone/French horn chords.
Each of the thirteen sections contrast lush instrumental details with intimate trumpet arias (which suggest the profound influence of Billie Holiday, particularly over the eerie textures of "I Loves You Porgy"). Evans' ability to orchestrate hypnotic call and response patterns with Davis, and his ability to layer multipletextures at contrasting tempos makes for several memorable moments: Philly Joe's dancing breaks and exchanges with Miles on "Gone", the church-like amens of "Gone, Gone, Gone", the counter-melodies on a lightly swinging "Summertime", Miles' sustained lyricism (and Evans' tart blue chordal rejoinders) on "Prayer", the brash after-hours swagger of "It Ain't Necessarily So", and the contrasting folkish themes of "Here Come De Honey Man". Timeless music.

Track Listing

  1. Buzzard Song
  2. Bess You Is My Woman Now
  3. Gone Gone Gone
  4. Summertime
  5. Bess Oh Where's My Bed
  6. Prayer
  7. O Doctor Jesus
  8. Fisherman
  9. Strawberry And Devil Crab
  10. My Man's Gone Now
  11. It Ain't Necessarily So
  12. Here Comes De Honey Man
  13. I Loves You Porgy
  14. There's A Boat That's Leavin' Soon For New York
  15. I Loves You Porgy (2)
  16. Gone

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #5559 in Music
  • Released on: 1997-04-07
  • Number of discs: 1

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
Take George Gershwin's Porgy & Bess, add Miles Davis and arranger Gil Evans, and what do you get? A classic jazz album that--despite the fact that the material has been rendered almost overly familiar due to countless interpretations--still sounds remarkably fresh four decades after its initial release. Miles' soft yet piercing trumpet style is perfectly suited to Gershwin's melancholy melodies, Evans' musical direction of his 18-piece orchestra is impeccable, and their version of "Summertime" may well be the finest ever waxed. Davis and Evans teamed up for several recordings after this one (including the landmark Sketches of Spain ), but Porgy & Bess still stands as one of their most successful collaborations. --Dan Epstein


Customer Reviews

Lilting and haunting5
The great thing about Miles Davis was that his trumpet playing was so transcendent. He's probably the only jazz player whose albums frequently appear in top 100 rock lists. I fail to see how anyone could not take the lilting sentiments of 'Porgy & Bess' to heart no matter what your musical tastes.

The 'Buzzard Song' opens the album with a grooving bass line by Paul Chambers, cleverly imitated by a tuba that follows suit (how many albums have you heard with a grooving tuba?). Then the lyrical note changes of 'Bess, You Is My Woman', before one of the highlights of the album, 'Gone'. This is something of a departure from Gershwin's opera itself, but the backing players relish the opportunity for some pure jazz playing, topped off with Jones's ramshakle drum playing. The power of 'Summertime' has much to do with its basic composition, which is at once both strong and tender and lends itself to so many interpretations. On this version the musical backing acts as a counter to Davis's elegant soloing. 'Oh Bess, where's my Bess' proves to be the most uplifting of these tracks while 'Prayer (Oh Doctor Jesus)' contains character-filled contributions from all the players building to a monumental crescendo.

'Fisherman....' begins with the evocative alto flute of Danny Banks, floating above a slight air of menance in the backing arrangement. The straining lament of 'My Man's Gone Now' is followed by the great toe-tapping swing arrangement of 'It Ain't Necessarily So'. Gil Evans arrangements do much to colour Davis's trumpet playing as in 'Here Comes de Honey Man'.

The final highlight 'There's A Boat Leaving Soon For New York' sounds unstoppable and effusive, a clear joy for all involved. Each individual player becomes Miles Davis's equal in this explosive finale. Again I have to mention the universal appeal of Miles Davis's work, whether indulging in a simple, lazy melody or bringing subtle nuances to the fore, his playing is wonderfully haunting.

The ultimate Porgy & Bess5
Despite the numerous versions of Gershwin's "Porgy & Bess" recorded by countless jazz legends, there is still only one recording that really matters and that is this fantastic CD by trumpeter Miles Davis' backed by an orchestra playing the sumptious arrangements of the great Gil Evans. It would be impossible for me to describe the many orchestral colours Evan's conjures up behind Davis's plaintive horn, suffice to say that Evans was to jazz what Ravel, one of his great influences, was to classical music. Of their three "official" records, "Porgy & Bess" is the finest, yet this collaboration raised the standard of jazz to levels that had previously been unknown outside of Duke Ellington's orchestra and all the offerings must merit highest accolades. (Especially the fantastic "Sketches of Spain.")
This disc features all the familiar songs as well as the lesser known numbers. Even hoary old songs such as "summertime" are re-cast in a totally original manner. The Miles Davis / Gil Evans version of "Porgy & Bess" is one record that I could not consider living without and I envy those music fans who have yet to discover this marvellous interpretation.

In a Class of its Own5
Of the handful of albums Miles made with the composer/arranger Gil Evans, 'Porgy and Bess' may or may not be the best, but it's in a class of its own. The music of Gershwin's groundbreaking folk-jazz opera inspired Evans to some of his most imaginative scoring, drawing a rich palette of sounds and effects from a jazz orchestra which, along with the more traditional big band instrumentation, blends the additional colouring of tuba, French horns and flutes. On some of the tracks the orchestrations seem to take precedence over Miles's solos, and some of the material (like "Bess, Oh Where's My Bess") lends itself more to "interpretation" than to jazz improvisation as such. So it's an album that will appeal most to those listeners who are as interested in Evans's work as in that of Miles the soloist.
At its best, the collaboration between Miles and the orchestrations produces some wonderful music. The masterpiece is "Summertime", which reconstructs the famous operatic lullaby using a gospel-style 'call and response' structure. Over a perfectly judged slow walking pace set by bass and drums, the orchestra plays a repeated six-note 'response' phrase which Evans subtly varies with changes of voicing and instrumentation. Above this, on muted trumpet, Miles floats a series of inspired, though essentially simple, variations on the melody. The opening statement of Gershwin's theme uses fragments of the well-known melody in a hint of a declamatory style, as if Miles is giving the 'call' to which the orchestra 'responds'. If that sounds at all complicated, the effect is actually very simple, and as direct in its appeal as a piece of music can be. But for me part of that appeal lies in the emotional ambiguity of the performance - the way in which it seems to hover between plaintive lament and optimistic joy. My other favourites are the more obviously plaintive "Gone, Gone, Gone", the up-tempo variation on it - "Gone" - which has a superb solo from Miles accompanied only by Paul Chambers' driving bass and Philly Jo Jones's excitable, intense drumming, "The Buzzard Song" with Miles's rich-toned flugelhorn floating above some equally rich brass scoring, the beautifully arranged fragment "Here Come de Honey Man", a wistful "I Loves You Porgy" and a joyous, spontaneous sounding "There's a Boat That's Leaving Soon for New York".
The late 1950s/early 60s saw something of a vogue for jazz versions of "Broadway shows". But (leaving aside the fact that "Porgy and Bess" is something more than a "show"), there are none which approach the quality of this album as a piece of re-creative interpretation by its orchestrator and its soloist.
A classic album. But is it really not possible in the 21st century for remastering technology to eliminate that ghostly pre-echo?