Puneet Varma (Editor)

Someday My Prince Will Come (Miles Davis album)

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Released
  
December 11, 1961

Length
  
41:45

Release date
  
11 December 1961

Label
  
Columbia Records

Recorded
  
March 7, 20, 21, 1961

Artist
  
Miles Davis

Producer
  
Teo Macero

Genre
  
Jazz

Someday My Prince Will Come (Miles Davis album) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb9

Studio
  
Columbia 30th Street Studio, New York

Someday My Prince Will Come (1961)
  
Seven Steps to Heaven (1963)

Similar
  
Miles Davis albums, Jazz albums

Miles davis quintet with john coltrane someday my prince will come


Someday My Prince Will Come is the seventh studio album by Miles Davis for Columbia Records, catalogue CL 1656 and CS 8456 in stereo, released in 1961. Recorded at Columbia's 30th Street Studio in Manhattan, it marked the only Miles Davis Quintet studio recording session to feature saxophonist Hank Mobley.

Contents

Miles davis someday my prince will come


Background

Keeping to his standard procedure at Columbia to date of alternating small group records and big band studio projects with Gil Evans, Davis followed up Sketches of Spain with an album by his working quintet. In 1960, however, the jazz world had been in flux. Although Davis had garnered acclaim for Kind of Blue, the entrance of Ornette Coleman and free jazz via his fall 1959 residency at the Five Spot Café and his albums for Atlantic Records had created controversy, and turned attention away from Davis.

Similarly, Davis' touring band had been in flux. In 1959, Cannonball Adderley left to form his own group with his brother, reducing the sextet to a quintet. Drummer Jimmy Cobb and pianist Wynton Kelly had been hired in 1958, but most difficult for Davis was the departure of John Coltrane, who stayed on for a spring tour of Europe but left to form his own quartet in the summer of 1960. In 1960, Davis went through saxophonists Jimmy Heath and Sonny Stitt before settling on Hank Mobley in December, the band re-stabilizing for the next two years.

Composition

Unlike Kind of Blue, which featured nothing but group originals, this album paired equal numbers of Miles Davis tunes and pop standards, including the title song resurrected from the 1937 Disney film Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. The titles to all three Davis originals refer to specific individuals: "Pfrancing" to his wife Frances, featured on the album cover; "Teo" to his producer Teo Macero; and "Drad Dog" (Goddard reversed) to Columbia Records president Goddard Lieberson . While the cover credits the Miles Davis Sextet, only the title track featured six players, Coltrane making two cameo appearances on the album, taking solos on the title track and "Teo", playing instead of Mobley on the latter. On March 21, ex-Davis drummer Philly Joe Jones made his final contribution to a Davis session, replacing Cobb for the original "Blues No. 2", which was not used on the album.

On June 8, 1999, Legacy Records reissued the album for compact disc with two bonus tracks including the unused "Blues No. 2" and an alternative take of "Someday My Prince Will Come".

Critical reception

In a contemporary review for Down Beat, Ira Gitler praised Coltrane's solo on the title track while finding Kelly equally exceptional as both a soloist and comping musician. "His single-lines are simultaneously hard and soft. Cobb and Chambers groove perfectly together and with Kelly", Gitler wrote. "The rhythm section, individually and as a whole, is very well-recorded." The magazine's Howard Mandel later viewed Someday My Prince Will Come as "a commercial realization rather than an artistic exploration" but nonetheless "lovely", highlighted by each musicians' careful attention to notes and dynamics, and among Davis' most "romantic, bluesy and intentionally seductive programs".

Musicians

  • Miles Davis – trumpet
  • Hank Mobley – tenor saxophone on all tracks except "Teo"
  • John Coltrane – tenor saxophone on "Someday My Prince Will Come" (master) and "Teo"
  • Wynton Kelly – piano
  • Paul Chambers – bass
  • Jimmy Cobb – drums all tracks except "Blues No. 2"
  • Philly Joe Jones – drums on "Blues No. 2"
  • Production

  • Teo Macero – producer
  • Fred Plaut, Frank Laico – engineers
  • Bob Cato – album cover design
  • Frances Davis – cover model
  • Michael Cuscuna, Bob Belden – reissue producers
  • Mark Wilder – digital remastering engineer
  • Seth Rothstein – reissue project coordinator
  • Howard Fritzson – reissue art direction
  • Eddie Henderson – reissue liner notes
  • Songs

    1Someday My Prince Will Come9:08
    2Old Folks5:18
    3Pfrancing8:34

    References

    Someday My Prince Will Come (Miles Davis album) Wikipedia