Jazz singer Laufey reimagines Miles Davis classic ‘Blue in Green’ for a new generation

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) — Icelandic-Chinese jazz singer-songwriter Laufey says her mission is simple: get young people to fall in love with jazz.

“It’s literally ​all I care about as an artist — having people my age or ‌even younger care about jazz music and classical music,” the 25-year-old told Reuters.

That passion led Laufey to reimagine “Blue in Green,” the iconic composition by jazz legend Miles Davis, as part of celebrations marking ​the centennial of the trumpeter and composer, who was born in May ​1926 and died in 1991. Laufey debuted her version live during a ⁠Twitch stream event in Manhattan Beach, California, last week.

Widely regarded as one of the ​most influential figures in jazz history, Black American musician Miles Davis spent nearly five ​decades at the forefront of the genre’s major stylistic transformations.

Debuting on Miles Davis’ 1959 album “Kind of Blue,” “Blue in Green” endures as a jazz staple.

“When I was a kid, I would listen to Miles ​Davis and felt like no one around me understood it or cared,” Laufey said ​ahead of the performance. “Then I realized they just hadn’t been exposed to it — or exposed to ‌it ⁠in a way that felt like it was theirs.”

For Laufey, reworking “Blue in Green” became a way to bridge that gap. She added lyrics to the instrumental track, a process she compared to solving a puzzle.

After wrestling with the idea for some time, inspiration ​struck quickly. “When it all ​clicked, it felt ⁠like the clouds clearing and the sun coming out,” she said, adding that the lyrics came together in about 20 minutes.

Already a ​classically trained cellist, Laufey — whose full name is Laufey Lín ​Bing Jónsdóttir —⁠began building an audience during the Covid-19 lockdown by posting TikTok videos that introduced jazz music to younger listeners. The approach helped propel her career beyond social media.

Since then, she ⁠has released ​three albums and won two Grammy Awards for ​best traditional pop vocal album, in 2024 and 2026. In 2025, she brought jazz to the Coachella stage, performing ​alongside the Los Angeles Philharmonic.

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