The New Sounds | ||||
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Studio album by Miles Davis | ||||
Released | 1951 | |||
Recorded | October 5, 1951 Apex Studio, New York City |
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Genre | Jazz | |||
Length | 23:35 | |||
Label | Prestige | |||
Producer | ||||
Miles Davis chronology | ||||
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The New Sounds (PRLP 124) is the debut studio album of Miles Davis, released as a 1951 10-inch LP. It is his first album as leader, and his first complete album for Prestige Records. Davis had previously contributed three tracks to the various artists LP Modern Jazz Trumpets (PRLP 113), and performed as a sideman on Lee Konitz: The New Sounds (PRLP 116).
Prestige would be Davis' label for the next five years, with occasional recordings for Blue Note and Debut, until he signed with Columbia in 1955. His previous label, Capitol, had been disappointed with the sales of the nonet recordings released in 1949/50, and they had not offered Davis more work, when he was contacted by Prestige's . Weinstock had just started his new jazz specialty record label, and wanted Davis on his label so bad he tracked him across the country, to Chicago where he was performing with Billie Holiday, and offered him a one-year contract.
The four tracks on this album were recorded at New York's Apex Studio on October 5, 1951, along with two tracks ("Bluing" and "Out of the Blue") that would later be used on his next Prestige album, Blue Period, (PRLP 140), and a seventh track, "Denial", which would later appear on the 12"LP Dig (PRLP 7012). Davis' friends Charlie Parker and Charles Mingus both attended this recording session, with Mingus contributing an uncredited bass part to "Conception". Parker watched from the engineering booth, and his presence is said to have unnerved alto saxophonist Jackie McLean, for whom this was his first ever recording session. Sonny Rollins, Davis' favoured tenor saxophonist during this period, was again used for this recording session.