With
his lost 1985 album Rubberband out in September, and the 50th
anniversary of In a Silent Way – released this week – we count down the
jazz icon’s finest moments
by https://www.theguardian.com/profile/johnfordham" rel="nofollow -
20. Bags’ Groove (1957)
In the end, Miles Davis would fascinate jazz, rock and classical fans
alike. But in the 1940s he had been a teenage trumpet hopeful
partnering https://www.theguardian.com/music/2012/nov/06/miles-davis-interview-rocks-backpages" rel="nofollow - Charlie Parker
and by 1954, when this session was recorded, he had an understatedly
personal version of the revolutionary bebop sound. Alongside Sonny
Rollins and Thelonious Monk, he reveals it here.
19. Miles In the Sky (1968)
A patchily intriguing set from the next decade, flagging the
ever-changing Miles’ migration from free-swinging jazz to rock. The
saxophonist https://www.theguardian.com/music/wayne-shorter" rel="nofollow - Wayne Shorter
broods, the embryonic soul-star George Benson plays terse guitar,
Herbie Hancock debuts the formerly unjazzy Fender Rhodes and Tony
Williams drums up a perfect storm.
18. The Man with the Horn (1981)
Miles comprehensively burned out in 1975, but while his comeback six
years later was uncertain, his 1970s edginess was now softened by the
rediscovery of his early lyricism. Good originals such as Back Seat
Betty, with its wistful trumpet and hard-thumbed Marcus Miller bass
hooks, entered the repertoire.
17. Amandla (1989)
Marcus
Miller, Miles’s 1980s svengali, scored and glossily produced this
late-career set dedicated to South Africa’s liberation from apartheid.
It’s a bit lightweight for its subject, but the Jaco Pastorius tribute
is both swinging and soulful, and the title ballad is bittersweet
acoustic Miles at his most poignant.
16. Panthalassa: The Music of Miles Davis 1969-1974 (1998)
Audacious but sympathetic remixes by imaginative producer/player Bill
Laswell, of music from Miles’s heavily experimental 1970s period,
including In a Silent Way. While Laswell’s echoey, bass-pumping,
beat-swelling treatments sometimes twist the originals way out of shape,
their creator’s spirit runs through it all.
15. L’Ascenseur Pour L’Echafaud (1958)
The director Louis Malle hired a Paris-loving, 31-year-old Miles and a
French/US band including the bebop drummer Kenny Clarke to improvise a
soundtrack for his noirish 1958 thriller https://www.theguardian.com/film/2014/feb/06/lift-to-the-scaffold-review" rel="nofollow - L’Ascenseur Pour L’Echafaud (Lift to the Scaffold). Going only by the visuals, the trumpeter reflected the movie’s desolate romanticism perfectly.
14. On the Corner (1972)
Bill Laswell, Miles’s posthumous remixer, called 1972’s On the Corner
“mutant hip-hop” – others have heard dub, pre-punk, drum’n’bass and
more in its oceanic, thick-textured, harmony-purged turmoil of multiple
keyboards, overdubs, saxes and percussion. https://www.theguardian.com/music/2007/oct/26/jazz.shopping" rel="nofollow - Long ignored , the session is on its way to rehabilitation. 13. Miles Davis: Vol 2 (1956)Miles preferred patience, tension, release and expressiveness of tone
to the torrents of notes that often characterised bebop. This classy
50s compilation, including the saxophonist Jackie McLean, pianist Horace
Silver and drummer https://www.theguardian.com/music/art-blakey" rel="nofollow - Art Blakey , features both his ballad elegance and some of his most surefooted improv over a bop groove.
12. Relaxin’ with the Miles Davis Quintet (1958)
Miles buffs refer to his “first and second great quintets”. The second was the 1960s group including Wayne Shorter, https://www.theguardian.com/music/herbie-hancock" rel="nofollow - Herbie Hancock ,
Ron Carter and Tony Williams. This, with saxophonist John Coltrane, is
the dazzling first. The contrast between the reticent, incisive
trumpeter and the unquenchable Coltrane is mesmerising.
11. Aura (1989)
In 1985, Denmark’s government awarded https://www.theguardian.com/music/miles-davis" rel="nofollow - Miles Davis
its normally classical Sonning prize, and Danish trumpeter Palle
Mikkelborg wrote an orchestral suite for the star and – somehow –
persuaded him to play on it. Superb solos from an engaged and attentive
Miles, navigating Mikkelborg’s references to all kinds of 20th-century
music.
https://www.theguardian.com/music/2019/aug/01/miles-daviss-20-greatest-albums-ranked#img-2" rel="nofollow - 10. You’re Under Arrest (1985) https://www.theguardian.com/music/2019/aug/01/miles-daviss-20-greatest-albums-ranked#img-2" rel="nofollow -
Miles’s last session for Columbia Records, notably including
beautiful interpretations of two pop songs – Cyndi Lauper’s Time After
Time and Michael Jackson’s Human Nature. Also striking is guitar
newcomer John Scofield’s fast and convoluted title-track blues, one of
the great original compositions for a late-period Miles lineup. 9. Bitches Brew (1969)
From
a film-score assignment about boxing legend Jack Johnson, Miles
launched a new band (hiring Stevie Wonder bassist Michael Henderson
among others) and built a thrillingly hard-rocking sound out of long
studio jams and radical editing. The seeds of his next five years are in
this uncompromising music.
2. In a Silent Way (1969)
Time stands still on this 1969 Davis classic. Electric sounds and
textures (notably from new guitarist John McLaughlin and keyboardist Joe
Zawinul) make clear breaks from the trumpeter’s acoustic bands – but
Miles’s horn and Wayne Shorter’s keening soprano sax sketch passages of
an exquisite, irresistible tranquillity. 1. Kind of Blue (1959)Revered by pundits and fans, radiating an enduringly contemporary sound,
and with un-jazz-like sales of 4 million plus at the last count, https://www.theguardian.com/music/musicblog/2009/aug/20/miles-davis-kind-blue" rel="nofollow - Kind of Blue
– the 1959 session recorded in just a few hours and with minimal
rehearsal – changed the way listeners and practitioners everywhere heard
and made music. The Milestones band, with John Coltrane and Cannonball
Adderley on saxes, was the core, with the graceful pianist Bill Evans
added, and the use of modes rather than song chords throughout gave the
music an ethereal, free-associative spaciousness that draws new
audiences to jazz to this day.
from www.theguardian.com
|