Kind of magnificent!
Kind of Blue has been called the greatest jazz album ever made so often that you're reluctant to believe it. Believe it. Five songs -- "So What," "Freddie Freeloader," "Blue in Green," "All Blues," and "Flamenco Sketches" -- four of them hovering around 10 minutes (taking advantage of the still-recent LP format) , and every one a
masterpiece. Recorded in 1959 at a pivot point in jazz history --improvising over chords was giving way to the album's pioneering use of improvising over scales (or modes), and the abstractions of the '60s
were brewing -- it includes everything good about the past 40 years and presages everything good about the next 40. Cool, calm, and concise, with
some of jazz's most influential figures at their most potent (including
Bill Evans, who also wrote the excellent liner notes,
John Coltrane, and
Cannonball Adderley),
Kind of Blue is perfection. The latest reissue has better sound, extra liner notes, and an alternate take of "Flamenco Sketches." All unnecessary.