As a fan of rock, folk, reggae, even classic country, I have dabbled in jazz. I guess what would be called smooth jazz mostly. But a friend loaned me this book along with the CD. At first I balked, but hey, I'm older now and it is time to expand my horizons. I listened to the CD before I started reading the book. Interesting, but no wows. In truth, I wouldn't know modal jazz from a nodal biopsy.
The author is extremely knowledgable and starts with the state of jazz before Kind of Blue is made. The group Miles Davis assembles to record Kind of Blue turned out to be a jazz supergroup. John Coltrane, Cannonball Adderly, Bill Evans among others. Most went on to jazz superstardom, if they didn't let drugs ruin their life. When jazz musicians are mentioned, you think marijuana was the drug of choice. But for most in the book, it was herion. Even Miles Davis kicked the habit before getting serious and recording jazz masterpieces.
The recording of each track of Kind of Blue is discussed in length. And after each chapter, I would listen to the CD again. Hey, I'm beginning to hear different things. What is happening to me? There's a touch of blues, a bit of funk, a Latin influence to one. I can hear the brilliance of Miles Davis' trumpet, the experimentation of John Coltrane's tenor sax, the barely suppressed funk of Cannonball Adderley's alto sax, the complex way pianist Bill Evans holds it all together. I have listened to the CD about twenty times now. I may never be the same.