The Atlantic

Why Did This Band Re-create Jazz’s Most Famous Record Note for Note?

Mostly Other People Do the Killing’s remake of <em>Kind of Blue</em> is a hilarious, peculiar provocation.
Source: Bryan Murray

If you’re unfamiliar with the band Mostly Other People Do the Killing, the first sign that they might have an offbeat sense of humor ought to be the name. That hasn’t stopped plenty of people from being outraged at the group’s new album.

It’s called Blue, and it’s a reproduction of Miles Davis’s Kind of Blue, perhaps the most famous jazz album of all time. Not a tribute; not “inspired by”; not even a simple covers album. It’s a painstaking, note-for-note reproduction. The musicians have transcribed and reproduced each walking bass line, each cymbal tap, each Bill Evans piano flourish, each note of John Coltrane’s and Cannonball Adderley’s and Miles Davis’s solos.

What can be said about such a peculiar act? First, it’s not jazz. Second, it’s hilarious and important.

The first point is no condemnation, and it’sis not jazz,” the bassist and bandleader . But it might seem strange to the nonfan: tap-ti-tap

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