Artist

The Miles Davis Quintet

Genre: Jazz ,Jazz Instrument ,Trumpet Jazz
Origin: U.S.A
Listen on Coda
Although the Miles Davis Quintet of 1955-1957 existed only briefly, it earned lasting recognition as one of the decade’s most compelling and accomplished bebop ensembles. Within the band, contrasting musical temperaments did not merely coexist but actively enriched and stimulated one another. The front line paired Davis with the singular John Coltrane, whose intense and fiery tenor saxophone stood in sharp relief against Davis’ restrained, understated phrasing and cool timbre. Having already shaped Chet Baker’s approach and established cool jazz through the landmark Birth of the Cool recordings of 1949-1950, Davis favored concise expression and avoided superfluous notes, while Coltrane favored expansive, extended statements. These opposing sensibilities nevertheless produced a unified and coherent sound throughout the quintet’s existence.

Davis assembled the ensemble in 1955, bringing in Coltrane alongside bassist Paul Chambers, drummer Philly Joe Jones (distinct from the earlier swing-era drummer Jo Jones), and the lyrical pianist Red Garland. The 1955-1956 sessions yielded four Prestige albums—Cookin’, Relaxin’, Workin’, and Steamin’—plus the Columbia release Round About Midnight. The group formally disbanded in early 1957, yet its core reunited the following year as a sextet when alto saxophonist Cannonball Adderley joined for the Columbia album Milestones. Davis and Coltrane continued collaborating in 1959, most notably on the landmark modal recording Kind of Blue, before Coltrane departed permanently in 1960 to lead his own ensemble.