A highly adept jazz drummer and NEA Jazz Master, Jimmy Cobb initially rose to fame in the hard bop era of the 1950s, balancing a powerful, swinging style and a deep sensitivity for group dynamics. It was a style Cobb first displayed as a sideman with Dinah Washington and Cannonball Adderley before gaining wide recognition as a member of Miles Davis' group, playing on the classic 1959 album Kind of Blue. After leaving Davis, Cobb co-led a trio in the '60s with pianist Wynton Kelly and bassist Paul Chambers, and over the years he worked with such luminaries as Sarah Vaughan, Han...