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Jimmy Cobb, The Pulse Of 'Kind Of Blue,' Dies At 91

The drummer's subtle and steady hand guided some of jazz's most beloved recordings, including Miles Davis's iconic Kind Of Blue.
Jimmy Cobb was the last surviving member of what's often called Miles Davis' First Great Sextet.

Jimmy Cobb, whose subtle and steady drumming formed the pulse of some of jazz's most beloved recordings, died at his home in Manhattan on Sunday. He was 91.

The cause was lung cancer, says his wife, Eleana Tee Cobb.

Cobb was the last surviving member of what's often called Miles Davis' First Great Sextet. He held that title for almost three decades, serving as a conduit for many generations of jazz fans into the band that recorded the music's most iconic and enduring album, Kind of Blue.

It's impossible to overstate how much his playing, which propelled that all-star group forward with delicate washes of's undeniable bounce and feel. "Jimmy, you know what to do," Davis told Cobb . "Just make it sound like it's floating." And it does: The perfect tension between Cobb's signature driving cymbal beat and Paul Chambers' relaxed walking bassline makes most people's first jazz album one that you can — or can't help but — move to.

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