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"Birth pf the Cool" Tone Poet
By: Tracking Angle

March 30th, 2026

Category:

News

Miles' "Birth of the Cool" Tone Poet Reissue Announced

DIRECTLY FROM THE ORIGINAL ANALOG PHONO REEL MASTER TAPES

Miles Davis’ earliest masterpiece Birth Of The Cool gets the royal treatment with a new Tone Poet Vinyl Edition to be released by Blue Note Records on May 22 in celebration of the legendary trumpeter’s Centennial. Produced by Joe Harley, the album was mastered by Kevin Gray directly from the original analog phono reel master tapes, pressed on 180g vinyl at Record Technology Inc. (RTI), and packaged in a deluxe gatefold tip-on jacket featuring session photos by William “PoPsie” Randolph.

 “This is an audacious gathering of sonic architects reshaping the language of jazz in real time,” says Harley. “Birth Of The Cool is a mood and a palette, where space and arrangement become as vital as the notes themselves. You can hear Miles standing at the threshold. And you’ll hear this as never before, from session masters gathered from the original phono reels.”

 Following his trial-by-fire tenure in the Charlie Parker Quintet in the mid-1940s, Davis emerged with bolstered confidence and a creative hunger to explore new directions as a burgeoning band leader. A regular gathering of like-minded musicians at arranger Gil Evans’ Manhattan apartment provided the workshop at which the Miles Davis Nonet was born, and in 1949-50 Davis led three seminal sessions for Capitol Records that documented this exciting new music with a cast of collaborators including Gerry Mulligan, Lee Konitz, J.J. Johnson, Kai Winding, Gunther Schuller, John Lewis, Al Haig, Max Roach, Kenny Clarke, and others. The nonet featured a unique instrumentation with French horn and tuba to create new textures influenced by impressionist classical music that inspired lyrical improvisations by the band’s soloists on arrangements of pieces by Davis, Evans, Mulligan, Lewis, Denzil Best, Bud Powell, Johnny Mercer, and more. Originally released as select 10-inch 78-rpm singles, the 11 tracks were later compiled by Capitol on the 1957 12-inch release Birth Of The Cool.

 

Comments

  • 2026-03-31 01:11:19 PM

    WALTER OBRIEN wrote:

    This is fantastic thar Tone Poet is releasing gems from the Capitol catalog. Love to see a release of GERRY MULLIGAN and his TEN-TETTE. Also on my wishlist is Stan Kenton orchestra CUBAN FIRE, which includes Julius Watkins on french horn, solos by Lucky Thompson, Lennie Niehaus and arrangements by Johnny Richards.

  • 2026-03-31 01:35:35 PM

    Come on wrote:

    Looking forward to a review considering the Classic Records release I still have, which meanwhile got quite expensive.

    The recording itself, although sounding very good on the Classic Records, is not an explicit audiophile gem and the music collected quite a bit dust imo, so for me the Tone Poet would have to deliver little wonders in comparison to make me buy it. But I’m aware for most it’s the first real audiophile reissue since the CR, which will be welcomed. Eagerly awaiting the sound quality comparison to the Grundman cut from 13 years ago.

    • 2026-03-31 01:36:43 PM

      Come on wrote:

      wrong…from 23 years ago

  • 2026-03-31 05:56:35 PM

    Rashers wrote:

    Long awaited AAA reissue and you know it will be good. Nevertheless, important to remember that Blue Note is releasing new albums all the time by contemporary artists and they sound phenomenal (eg the current Bill Frisell LP).

  • 2026-03-31 08:40:16 PM

    WJ Wicks wrote:

    But, which one? Tone Poet vs Capitol's One Step?

  • 2026-04-01 07:04:42 AM

    WJ Wicks wrote:

    Sorry. I meant the Tone Poet release vs the Capitol release.

    • 2026-04-02 02:58:09 AM

      Malachi Lui wrote:

      the 2019 capitol 2LP reissue was notoriously terrible, as michael documented on the previous website. compressed, muffled crap. this tone poet reissue will automatically be a huge upgrade.

    • 2026-04-02 06:33:24 AM

      Come on wrote:

      https://www.analogplanet.com/content/umes-birth-cool-sonic-abortion-and-reissue-disgrace

  • 2026-04-02 12:16:51 PM

    cashgrab wrote:

    I just listened to a Capitol Jazz CD (92862) from 1989, and it sounds very good to my ears on my set-up. I'm not making any special claims for this version. I'll just say the original recording was very good for 1949.