Tracklist
Take Off | |||
Weirdo | |||
Wouldn't You | |||
I Waited For You | |||
Ray's Idea (Alternate Master) | |||
Donna | |||
Well You Needn't | |||
The Leap | |||
Lazy Susan | |||
Tempus Fugit (Alternate Master) | |||
It Never Entered My Mind |
Credits (18)
- Jackie McLeanAlto Saxophone
- Oscar PettifordBass
- Percy HeathBass
-
Hermansader*Design [Cover]
- Miles*Design [Cover]
- Art BlakeyDrums
Notes
Release Date: 1956
Recording Period: May 1952 - Mar 1954
Label: Blue Note
Miles Davis, Trumpet
J.J. Johnson, Trombone
Jackie McLean, Alto Saxophone
Gil Coggins, Piano
Oscar Pettiford, Bass
Kenny Clarke, Drums
Jimmy Heath, Tenor Saxophone
Percy Heath, Bass
Art Blakey, Drums
Horace Silver, Piano
Some releases contain tracks from Miles Davis - Volume 1 and vice versa.
Some releases contain tracks from Miles Davis - Volume 2 and vice versa.
Miles Davis – Volume 1 & Volume 2
2 LPs, 23 tracks, an hour and a half of music, 3 sessions spread over 3 years. These recordings constitute the entire output of Miles Davis on Somethin' Else in 1958.
The material runs the gamut from straight bop (Irving Berlin) to a Swedish folk tune (“Dear Old Stockholm”).
Many of the tracks are familiar tunes masquerading under different names: Milestones.
Origins:
Alfred Lion’s Blue Note label launched their 5000 “Modern Jazz” 10-inch series in 1951, but by the end of 1954 the 10-inch format was dying. In 1955, Blue Note introduced what is arguably the most important series of American Jazz LPs, the 12-inch “1500” series.
Eleven titles in the new 1500 series consisted of reissued 10-inch material. Because of the introduction of the variable pitch lathe, it was now possible to cut the contents of two 10-inch LPs onto a single 12-inch LP. Often, to fill up the extra space on the new 12-inch collections, Alfred Lion added “alternate masters” of selected tracks.
The first two releases in the 1500 series were Volume 2 (BLP 1501 and 1502). These two LPs consisted of material from three sessions which had earlier been issued as three separate 10-inch LPs:
1952 – Miles Davis - Young Man With A Horn (BLP 5013)
1953 – Miles Davis - Vol. 2 (BLP 5022)
1954 – Miles Davis - Vol. 3 (BLP 5040)
Three Sessions:
The 1952 and 1953 sessions were recorded almost a year apart by WOR Studios, 1440 Broadway in Manhattan.
For his first Blue Note session, Miles brought along altoist Jackie McLean (just a few days shy of his 21st birthday) as well as pianist Kenny Clarke.
The 1953 session substitutes Art Blakey on the drums.
The bulk of these two sessions make up the material on “Miles Davis Volume 1”. Side 1 consists largely of tunes from the ‘53 session with all but one track on side 2 being drawn from the ‘52 session.
The ‘54 session is different in several ways:
By 1954, Alfred Lion was relying on the services of Dr. Prestige label) was also among Van Gelder’s earliest for Alfred Lion.
Van Gelder would record and personally cut the masters for almost the entirety of the Blue Note catalog up until Lion’s departure in 1967 (Van Gelder also remastered the ‘52 and ‘53 recordings and cut the masters for these LPs).
Perhaps more importantly, at the beginning of 1954, Miles had locked himself in a hotel room in Detroit for twelve days and finally emerged free of the heroin addiction which had been plaguing him throughout the early 1950s and slowly destroying his hitherto promising career. Like so many of his contemporaries in the bop scene, Miles had picked up a habit in 1949 and despite being arrested for “internal possession” in L.A. in 1950 and forcibly going cold turkey after being locked in a jail cell by the local sheriff at the behest of his father not long after the ‘52 Blue Note session, Miles had continued his downward spiral.
Miles’ mentor and idol, Charlie Parker, would succomb to his addictions just a year later in 1955 at the age of 34.
The ‘54 session is also distinct in that it’s a quartet date featuring Miles as the sole horn. While The Jazz Messengers.
Fittingly, the final track, “It Never Entered My Mind”- a The Miles Davis Quintet.
Recording Period: May 1952 - Mar 1954
Label: Blue Note
Miles Davis, Trumpet
J.J. Johnson, Trombone
Jackie McLean, Alto Saxophone
Gil Coggins, Piano
Oscar Pettiford, Bass
Kenny Clarke, Drums
Jimmy Heath, Tenor Saxophone
Percy Heath, Bass
Art Blakey, Drums
Horace Silver, Piano
Some releases contain tracks from Miles Davis - Volume 1 and vice versa.
Some releases contain tracks from Miles Davis - Volume 2 and vice versa.
Miles Davis – Volume 1 & Volume 2
2 LPs, 23 tracks, an hour and a half of music, 3 sessions spread over 3 years. These recordings constitute the entire output of Miles Davis on Somethin' Else in 1958.
The material runs the gamut from straight bop (Irving Berlin) to a Swedish folk tune (“Dear Old Stockholm”).
Many of the tracks are familiar tunes masquerading under different names: Milestones.
Origins:
Alfred Lion’s Blue Note label launched their 5000 “Modern Jazz” 10-inch series in 1951, but by the end of 1954 the 10-inch format was dying. In 1955, Blue Note introduced what is arguably the most important series of American Jazz LPs, the 12-inch “1500” series.
Eleven titles in the new 1500 series consisted of reissued 10-inch material. Because of the introduction of the variable pitch lathe, it was now possible to cut the contents of two 10-inch LPs onto a single 12-inch LP. Often, to fill up the extra space on the new 12-inch collections, Alfred Lion added “alternate masters” of selected tracks.
The first two releases in the 1500 series were Volume 2 (BLP 1501 and 1502). These two LPs consisted of material from three sessions which had earlier been issued as three separate 10-inch LPs:
1952 – Miles Davis - Young Man With A Horn (BLP 5013)
1953 – Miles Davis - Vol. 2 (BLP 5022)
1954 – Miles Davis - Vol. 3 (BLP 5040)
Three Sessions:
The 1952 and 1953 sessions were recorded almost a year apart by WOR Studios, 1440 Broadway in Manhattan.
For his first Blue Note session, Miles brought along altoist Jackie McLean (just a few days shy of his 21st birthday) as well as pianist Kenny Clarke.
The 1953 session substitutes Art Blakey on the drums.
The bulk of these two sessions make up the material on “Miles Davis Volume 1”. Side 1 consists largely of tunes from the ‘53 session with all but one track on side 2 being drawn from the ‘52 session.
The ‘54 session is different in several ways:
By 1954, Alfred Lion was relying on the services of Dr. Prestige label) was also among Van Gelder’s earliest for Alfred Lion.
Van Gelder would record and personally cut the masters for almost the entirety of the Blue Note catalog up until Lion’s departure in 1967 (Van Gelder also remastered the ‘52 and ‘53 recordings and cut the masters for these LPs).
Perhaps more importantly, at the beginning of 1954, Miles had locked himself in a hotel room in Detroit for twelve days and finally emerged free of the heroin addiction which had been plaguing him throughout the early 1950s and slowly destroying his hitherto promising career. Like so many of his contemporaries in the bop scene, Miles had picked up a habit in 1949 and despite being arrested for “internal possession” in L.A. in 1950 and forcibly going cold turkey after being locked in a jail cell by the local sheriff at the behest of his father not long after the ‘52 Blue Note session, Miles had continued his downward spiral.
Miles’ mentor and idol, Charlie Parker, would succomb to his addictions just a year later in 1955 at the age of 34.
The ‘54 session is also distinct in that it’s a quartet date featuring Miles as the sole horn. While The Jazz Messengers.
Fittingly, the final track, “It Never Entered My Mind”- a The Miles Davis Quintet.
Versions
Filter by
89 versions
Image | , | – | In Your Collection, Wantlist, or Inventory |
|
Version Details | Data Quality | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Remastered, Mono
|
Blue Note – BLP 1502 | US | 1956 | US — 1956 |
Recently Edited
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Remastered, Mono
|
Blue Note – BLP 1502 | US | 1956 | US — 1956 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Repress, Mono
|
Blue Note – BLP 1502 | US | 1957 | US — 1957 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Remastered, Repress, Mono
|
Blue Note – BLP 1502 | US | 1957 | US — 1957 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Remastered, Mono, NY23/Lex
|
Blue Note – BLP 1502 | US | 1957 | US — 1957 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Remastered, Repress, Mono
|
Blue Note – BLP 1502 | US | 1959 | US — 1959 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Repress, Mono
|
Blue Note – 1502 | US | 1959 | US — 1959 |
Recently Edited
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Repress, Mono
|
Blue Note – 1502 | US | 1961 | US — 1961 | ||||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Remastered, Mono
|
Blue Note – BLP 1502 | US | 1965 | US — 1965 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Reissue, Stereo
|
Blue Note – BLP 1502 | US | 1966 | US — 1966 |
Recently Edited
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Reissue, Remastered, Mono
|
Blue Note – BLP 1502 | US | 1966 | US — 1966 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Reissue, Mono
|
Blue Note – BLP 1502 | US | 1967 | US — 1967 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Reissue, Mono
|
Blue Note – BLP 1502 | US | 1967 | US — 1967 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Unofficial Release, Mono, Red
|
中聲 – CSJ-665 | Taiwan | 1968 | Taiwan — 1968 |
Recently Edited
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Reissue, Remastered, Stereo, Liberty Blue/White label
|
Blue Note – BLP 1502 | US | 1968 | US — 1968 | ||||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Mispress, Misprint, Reissue, Liberty Blue/White label
|
Blue Note – BST 81502 | US | 1968 | US — 1968 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Unofficial Release, Mono
|
中聲 – CSJ-665 | Taiwan | 1969 | Taiwan — 1969 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Reissue, Mono
|
Blue Note – NR-8831 | Japan | 1970 | Japan — 1970 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Reissue, Stereo
|
Blue Note – BLP 1502 | US | 1970 | US — 1970 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Promo, Test Pressing
|
Blue Note – NR-8831 | Japan | 1970 | Japan — 1970 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Reissue, Stereo
|
Blue Note – BST-81502 | US | 1971 | US — 1971 |
Recently Edited
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Reissue, Remastered, Stereo, Black b
|
Blue Note – BLP-1052/BST-81502 | US | 1973 | US — 1973 |
Recently Edited
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Stereo, Reissue, Remastered
|
Blue Note – BLP 1502 | US | 1975 | US — 1975 |
Recently Edited
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Reissue, Remastered, Stereo, White b
|
Blue Note – BST-81502 | US | 1975 | US — 1975 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Mono, Reissue, Remastered
|
Blue Note – LNJ-70083 | Japan | 1976 | Japan — 1976 |
Recently Edited
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Reissue, Remastered
|
Blue Note – 5 C038 60092 | Netherlands | 1977 | Netherlands — 1977 |
Recently Edited
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Limited Edition, Reissue, Mono
|
Blue Note – BLP 1502 | Japan | 1977 | Japan — 1977 | ||||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Stereo, Reissue, Remastered
|
Blue Note – BLP 1502 | US | 1977 | US — 1977 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Misprint, Reissue, Remastered
|
Blue Note – 5 C038 60092 | Netherlands | 1977 | Netherlands — 1977 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Remastered, Stereo
|
Blue Note – BSTF 81.502 | 1978 | — 1978 |
New Submission
|
||||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Reissue, Remastered, Mono
|
Blue Note – BLP 1502 | Japan | 1978 | Japan — 1978 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Remastered, Stereo
|
Blue Note – BNST 36501 | Italy | 1978 | Italy — 1978 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Promo, Reissue, Remastered, Mono
|
Blue Note – BLP 1502 | Japan | 1978 | Japan — 1978 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Vol 2
LP, Compilation, Club Edition, Mono
|
World Record Club – R 09402 | Australia | 1980 | Australia — 1980 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Reissue, Mono
|
Blue Note – BLP 1502 | 1982 | — 1982 | |||||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Reissue, Remastered, Mono
|
Blue Note – BLP 1502 | 1982 | — 1982 |
New Submission
|
||||
![]() |
Vol 2
LP, Compilation, Club Edition, Electronically rechanneled stereo
|
World Record Club – WC 4520 | New Zealand | 1982 | New Zealand — 1982 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Reissue, Mono
|
Blue Note – BLP 1502 | Japan | 1983 | Japan — 1983 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Reissue, Mono
|
Blue Note – BLP 1502 | Japan | 1983 | Japan — 1983 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Volume 2
LP, Compilation, Reissue, Stereo
|
Blue Note – 1600921 | Portugal | 1984 | Portugal — 1984 |
New Submission
|
Recommendations
Reviews
-
Perfectly pressed BNC! Not a given even in 2025 in spite of Optimals improved form. Easily beats the 1st session for me. Ive got no other vinyl copy to compare with but it seems decent. KPG has got the job done
-
Edited 9 months agoPerfect pressing; flat and clean. Mastering is probably very faithful to original tapes and sounds really good. However Bernie Grundman's 45 RPM mastering of these tracks for Classic Records is slightly more enjoyable listening experience. (IME)
https://www.discogs.sie.com/release/6653618-Miles-Davis-Young-Man-With-A-Horn -
-
-
I don’t have this yet but my brother is having difficulty with tracking it cleanly. Is it a hot pressing?
-
Edited one year agoI'm assuming this pressing is mono, even though it doesn't say anywhere on front or rear cover, spine, side labels or hype sticker whether it's mono or stereo. I played it using my stereo cartridge and it sounded great. I do have a mono cartridge, but I just wanted to play the thing and didn't think to check first so I didn't swap it in. If anyone can confirm it is a mono edition, perhaps we can update this listing in Discogs.
-
referencing Volume 2 (LP, Compilation, Mispress, Misprint, Reissue, Liberty Blue/White label) BST 81502
Very interesting. I have the same run out codes but without the incorrect label on side 2. -
referencing Volume 2 (LP, Compilation, Mono, Reissue, Remastered, DMM (Direct Metal Mastering) ) BST 81502
I was amazed how good this sounded, I compared to other recently bought Miles Davis albums that are AAA (Kevin Grey cuts) pressed at RTI and it holds up quite well in fact I would say I can not hear any quality differences in sound stage, imaging or fullness of sound. DMMs have a mixed reputation and I have a few (dol,waxtime) that I can say are not near the quality of this pressing, also I am surprised that early recording (1952-54) were comparable to albums done years later but they do. I did not compare this to other (Volume 2) Mono LP's and I was going to get the 75th blue note version but I have had a lot of issues with those pressings (very hit or miss). I was able to find this version under $20 NM and I am very happy with it, any other vintage Mono AAA in NM I could get was 4-5 times the price and not worth it to me at this time. I also wanted to get a good LP version in anticipation of Blue Notes (Volume 1) that will release this year under the Classic Vinyl Series (80) that is cut by Kevin Grey AAA it will be interesting to compare once I have that version to my DMM (Volume 2) -
Nice pressing, clear sound,
but side B starts with a surprise: Ca. first second of "Well you needn't" is missing. -
Edited one year ago
referencing Volume 2 (LP, Compilation, Reissue, Remastered, Stereo, Liberty Blue/White label) BST 81502
This says “Electronically Rechanneled “ Stereo but it sounds really good, like mono to me. Everything seems to be very centered. If they delayed one channel slightly, I can’t tell. It’s nothing like the fake stereo of the rock era in the 60’s like the Stones recordings which were horrid. This issue was from 1968 and it was sealed, and it was the oldest sealed record I've obtained up to now. it was truly a rush when I opened this for the first time, after being sealed for 53 years.
Master Release
Edit Master Release
Recently Edited
Recently Edited
For sale on Discogs
Sell a copy
756 copies from $1.25