NEW YORK, NY.- Christie’s
announces a trumpet designed and played by Miles Davis, one of the most
significant jazz musicians of all time, will be offered in The
Exceptional Sale on October 29 in New York. The ‘Martin Committee’
Trumpet in B Flat, model T3460, by the Martin Co., was commissioned
circa 1980 and features a deep blue lacquer and gilt crescent moon and
stars, designed according to Davis’s specifications (estimate:
$70,000-100,000). The ‘Moon and Stars’ trumpet is both a fine piece of
craftsmanship and marks a crucial moment in Davis’s career, as he made
his long-awaited return to music.
In a performing and recording career of almost fifty years Miles
Davis produced many critically acclaimed albums and Kind of Blue,
recorded in just two sessions in 1959, remains the best-selling jazz
album of all time. Davis was called by some ‘the Picasso of Jazz’, for
cultivating a distinctive sound while also remaining continuously hungry
for new musical expression, picking up new audiences along the way.
Becky MacGuire, Sale Director, The Exceptional Sale, comments, “We
are over the moon to be offering this beautiful instrument made for jazz
legend Miles Davis. Miles Davis’s music has that same magical,
transformative power to move us that a great masterpiece of painting or
sculpture does. His iconic trumpet couldn’t be more perfect for this
‘best of the best’ auction.”
The ‘Moon and Stars’ trumpet was made by the Martin Company, which
was founded in Chicago in 1865 by the German instrument-maker, Johann
Heinrich Martin. Davis was particularly fond of a model called the
Committee. When the Martin Company was sold to a rival manufacturer in
the 1960s — and the production of Committee trumpets officially stopped —
they continued to be custom-made for Davis.
Davis had a famously restless creative mind and was a visual artist
as well as a musician. The Committee horn being auctioned was one of a
set of three conceived at his request, one was colored red, one blue and
one black — each of them decorated with a gilt moon and stars, and with
the word ‘Miles’ inscribed inside the bell. The red trumpet has
remained in the star’s family since his death in 1991, while the black
one is buried at Davis’s side in Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx near the
gravesite of Duke Ellington, one of his idols. The blue ‘Moon and
Stars’ trumpet offered was acquired by the present owner from the
collection of musician George Benson.
MILES DAVIS (1926-1991)
Born in St. Louis, Missouri, Davis convinced his parents to send him
to the famous Juilliard School of Music in 1944. Once in New York he
quickly connected with the jazz scene, joining the bebop band of Charlie
‘Bird’ Parker, one of his idols. He was a sideman for such artists as
Sarah Vaughn, Billy Eckstine and Charles Mingus, while his own first
album came out in 1951. In 1957 Miles had his first of many
collaborations with John Coltrane (‘Trane’ to Miles), and in 1959 he
recorded Kind of Blue – still the best-selling jazz album ever.
Kind of Blue and Davis’s other late 50s albums for Columbia Records
helped to develop a more mainstream audience for his cool jazz sound.
Far from a strict jazz traditionalist, in the 1960s Miles Davis listened
to and absorbed rock and soul like the Byrds, James Brown and Aretha
Franklin. He loved Jimi Hendrix and even planned to record with him
before Hendrix’s tragic 1970 death. Davis’s landmark Bitches’ Brew
album of 1970 grew his youth audience enormously, reaching double
platinum in the U.S.
Davis continued to record, perform and innovate in the 1960s and
early 1970s, absorbing influences from Stockhausen to soul. By 1975,
however, a combination of exhaustion, personal demons and drug addiction
forced him to take time out. He wouldn’t pick up a musical instrument
again in earnest until the early 1980s, which was when the blue-lacquer
‘Moon and Stars’ trumpet was created for him.