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      • In 1954, Milt appeared on trumpeter Miles Davis’s album Bag’s Groove, which took the vibist’s nickname, “Bags,” for its title.
      miltjackson.jazzgiants.net/biography/
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Bags'_GrooveBags' Groove - Wikipedia

    ("Bags" was vibraphonist Milt Jackson's nickname.) The other tracks recorded during this session may be found on Miles Davis and the Modern Jazz Giants (PRLP 7150), and all of them are also featured on the compilation album Thelonious Monk: The Complete Prestige Recordings. The rest of the album was recorded earlier in the year, on June 29, and ...

  3. Miles Davis and the Modern Jazz Giants (PRLP 7150) is an album by Miles Davis, released on Prestige Records in 1959. Most of the material comes from a session on December 24, 1954, featuring Thelonious Monk and Milt Jackson, and had been previously released in the discontinued ten inch LP format.

  4. First, for the modern fan, Prestige’s reissue of two of the most famous recording sessions in modern jazz: the December 24, 1954 date on which Milt Jackson recorded his famous Bags’ Groove – one of the all time great jazz standards – and the June 29, 1954 session on which the Airegin set was recorded.

  5. Bags’ Groove is of course Milt Jacksons blues theme, a very special one which manages to sound earthy, traditional and modern all at once. On “Take 1”, Davis and Jackson, with a bit of part juggling, state that theme beautifully.

  6. "Bags' Groove" is a jazz composition by Milt Jackson. It was first recorded by the Milt Jackson Quintet on April 7, 1952 for Blue Note Records, later released on Wizard of the Vibes. Lou Donaldson, John Lewis, Percy Heath and Kenny Clarke were on that date.

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  7. Nov 1, 1999 · Miles Davis And The Modern Jazz Giants is made up of two sessions, with four tracks from an all-star group with Jackson and Monk from 1954 (which also yielded the title track to Davis's Bags Groove) and one track from the first of the famous 1956 Davis quintet's marathon recordings that produced Workin', Steamin ', Cookin' and Relaxin'. The ...

  8. Milt collaborated with saxophonists Coleman Hawkins and Jimmy Heath and trumpeters Art Farmer and Harry “Sweets” Edison. In 1954, Milt appeared on trumpeter Miles Davis’s album Bag’s Groove, which took the vibist’s nickname, “Bags,” for its title.