The record has sold more than three million copies since its 1959 release and was named No. 12 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 Greatest Albums Of All Time in any genre, let alone jazz.
Davis' horn has been silent for 17 years now, but mention the album's five tracks, "So What," "Freddie Freeloader," "Blue in Green," "All Blues" and "Flamenco Sketches" and any jazz fan will hear that haunting, reedy sound again.
To mark the 50th anniversary of the groundbreaking work, Columbia/Legacy, a division of Sony, is putting out a luxury collector's edition, which went on sale on Tuesday (September 30).
It includes two compact discs of the original album, plus outtakes and alternative versions, a documentary DVD, a book of essays and photos, as well as the original 12-inch LP package pressed on blue vinyl.
"We wanted to commemorate one of the greatest, most influential albums," said Vince Wilburn Jr., Davis' nephew and a manager of the jazz great's estate, along with Davis' son Erin and daughter Cheryl.
Wilburn told Reuters that "Kind of Blue" has been reissued and remastered several times. Although it took three decades to sell one million copies, it has sold another two million since Davis died in 1991.
"PEOPLE LOVE MILES"
"I'm not surprised it's selling still, this is Miles Davis," said Wilburn. "It's music, groundbreaking and fresh. People love Miles."
Davis' son Erin said the phenomenon was astounding because Davis was never one to dwell on the past and always moved on to embrace new styles.
"Maybe he would be scratching his head wondering why this one? He liked people to like the music he was making at the time, but he was always looking ahead," Erin Davis said.
Wilburn said there was no end to Miles Davis' music that can be released in the future. "There is tons of material, bootleg sessions and endless hours of music. The trouble is deciding what to release.
"The quality is there, but it's a question of respecting the music," said Wilburn, who played drums with the band in his uncle's later years.
In addition to the 50th anniversary album release, there is a Miles Davis exhibition planned for the Cite de la Musique complex in Paris and a feature film starring Don Cheedle as the famously idiosyncratic and contrarian artist.
Erin Davis, who moved in with his father when he was 15, has more personal recollections of the man. "He taught me what class means in different ways. Like it was not wearing an ascot and walking with a cane, but how you carry yourself in public.
"He taught me how to eat soup with the spoon away from you rather than shovel it in your mouth," he recalled. "When he dressed, he told me 'Always start with the shoes - shoes make the man.'"
Davis' influence can be heard in today's music. "Everybody I run into, they were influenced by Miles -- Sting and Keith Richards, Q-Tip and Nazz, Joni Mitchell," said Wilburn. "Everybody was touched by Miles. His spirit lives on."
Asked if people would still be listening to "Kind of Blue" in 2026, the centenary of Davis' birth, his son replied:
"Why not? Definitely, there's such a lack of inspiring music now."
(Reporting by Steve James)
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