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Miles
Dewey Davis, III
Born: May 25, 1926, Alton, IL
Died: September 28, 1991, Santa Monica, CA

Miles
Davis had quite a career, one with so many innovations
that his name is one of the few that can be spoken
in the same sentence with Duke Ellington.
As
a trumpeter, Davis was never a virtuoso on the
level of his idol Dizzy Gillespie but by 1947
he possessed a distinctive cool-toned sound of
his own. His ballad renditions (utilizing a Harmon
mute) were exquisite yet never predictable, he
mastered and then stripped down the bebop vocabulary
to its essentials and he generally made every
note count; as with Thelonious Monk, less was
more in Miles' music.
But
Miles Davis was much more than just a trumpeter.
As a bandleader he was a brilliant talent scout,
able to recognize potential in its formative stage
and bring out the best in his sidemen.
Among
the musicians who greatly benefitted from their
association with Davis were Gerry Mulligan (virtually
unknown when he played with Miles' Birth of the
Cool Nonet), Gil Evans, John Coltrane, Red Garland,
Paul Chambers, Philly Joe Jones, Cannonball Adderley,
Bill Evans, Jimmy Cobb, Wynton Kelly, George Coleman,
Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter, Tony
Williams, Chick Corea, Jack DeJohnette, Dave Holland,
John McLaughlin, Joe Zawinul, Keith Jarrett, Steve
Grossman, Gary Bartz, Dave Liebman, Al Foster,
Sonny Fortune, Bill Evans (the saxophonist), Kenny
Garrett, Marcus Miller, Mike Stern and John Scofield.
This partial list forms a who's who of modern
jazz.
In
addition to his playing and nurturing of young
talent, Miles Davis was quite remarkable in his
rare ability to continually evolve. Most jazz
musicians (with the exceptions of John Coltrane
and Duke Ellington) generally form their style
early on and spend the rest of their careers refining
their sound.
In contrast Miles Davis every five years or so
would forge ahead, and due to his restless nature
he not only played bop but helped found cool jazz,
hard bop, modal music, his own unusual brand of
the avant-garde and fusion. Jazz history would
be much different if Davis had not existed.
Born
in Alton, IL, Miles Davis grew up in a middle-class
family in East St. Louis. He started on trumpet
when he was nine or ten, played in his high-school
band and picked up early experience gigging with
Eddie Randall's Blue Devils. Miles Davis has said
that the greatest musical experience of his life
was hearing the Billy Eckstine Orchestra (with
Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker) when it passed
through St. Louis.
In
September 1944 Davis went to New York to study
at Juilliard but spent much more time hanging
out on 52nd Street and eventually dropped out
of school. He played with Coleman Hawkins, made
his recording debut in early 1945 (a rather nervous
session with singer Rubberlegs Williams) and by
late 1945 was playing regularly with Charlie Parker.
Davis
made an impression with his playing on Bird's
recordings of "Now's the Time" and "Billie's Bounce."
Although influenced by Dizzy Gillespie, even at
this early stage the 19-year old had something
of his own to contribute.
When
Charlie Parker went with Gillespie out to California,
Miles followed him a few months later by travelling
cross-country with Benny Carter's Orchestra. He
recorded with Parker in California and when Bird
formed a quintet in New York the following year,
Davis was a key member.
By
late 1948 when he went out on his own, Miles Davis
had formed a nonet that with arrangements by Gerry
Mulligan, Gil Evans and John Lewis, helped usher
in "cool jazz."
Although
the group only had one paying job (two weeks in
September 1948 as an intermission band for Count
Basie at the Royal Roost), its dozen recordings
for Capitol were highly influential in the West
Coast jazz movement.
Typically,
by the time his nonet dates were renamed "Birth
of the Cool," Miles Davis had moved on. He played
at the Paris Jazz Festival in 1949 with Tadd Dameron
and during 1951-54 was recording music with such
sidemen as J.J. Johnson, Jimmy Heath, Horace Silver,
Art Blakey and Sonny Rollins that directly led
to hard bop.
However this was very much an off period for Miles
because he was a heroin addict who was only working
on an irregular basis. In 1954 he used all of
his will power to permanently kick heroin and
his recording that year of "Walkin '," although
overlooked at the time, is a classic.
1955
was Miles Davis' breakthrough year. His performance
of "'Round Midnight" at the Newport Jazz Festival
alerted the critics that he was "back." Davis
formed his classic quintet with John Coltrane,
Red Garland, Paul Chambers and Philly Joe Jones
and during 1955-56 they recorded four well-received
albums for Prestige and 'Round Midnight for Columbia.
Davis' muted ballads were very popular and he
became a celebrity.
Even
the breakup of the quintet in early 1957 did not
slow up the momentum. Miles recorded the first
of his full-length collaborations with arranger
Gil Evans (Miles Ahead) which would be followed
by Porgy and Bess (1958) and Sketches of Spain
(1960); on these recordings Davis became one of
the first trumpeters to stretch out on flugelhorn.
In 1957 he went to France to record the soundtrack
for Lift to the Scaffold and then in 1958 he formed
his greatest band, a super sextet with Coltrane,
Cannonball Adderley, Bill Evans, Paul Chambers
and Philly Joe Jones.
Although
Evans and Jones were eventually succeeded by Wynton
Kelly and Jimmy Cobb, all of the recordings by
this remarkable group somehow live up to their
potential with Milestones and Kind of Blue being
all-time classics that helped to introduce modal
(or scalar) improvising to jazz.
If
Miles Davis had retired in 1960, he would still
be famous in jazz history, but he had many accomplishments
still to come. The sextet gradually changed with
Adderley departing and Coltrane's spot being taken
first by Sonny Stitt then Hank Mobley. Although
1960-63 is thought of as a sort-of resting period
for Davis, his trumpet chops were in prime form
and he was playing at the peak of his powers.
With
the departure of the rhythm section in 1963, it
was time for Miles to form another group. By 1964
he had a brilliant young rhythm section (Herbie
Hancock, Ron Carter and Tony Williams) who were
open to the innovations of Ornette Coleman in
addition to funky soul-jazz.
With
George Coleman on tenor, the sidemen really inspired
Davis and, although he was sticking to his standard
repertoire, the renditions were full of surprises
and adventurous playing. By late 1964 Coleman
had departed and, after Sam Rivers filled in for
a European tour, Wayne Shorter was the new tenor.
During 1965-68 Miles Davis' second classic quintet
bridged the gap between hard bop and free jazz,
playing inside/outside music that was quite unique.
Although at the time the quintet was overshadowed
by the avant-garde players, in the 1980s the music
of this group would finally become very influential,
particularly on Wynton and Branford Marsalis.
During
1968-69 Miles Davis' music continued to change.
He persuaded Hancock to use electric keyboards,
Shorter started doubling on soprano, the influence
of rock began to be felt and, after the rhythm
section changed (to Chick Corea, Dave Holland
and Jack DeJohnette), Davis headed one of the
earliest fusion bands.
Rock
and funk rhythms combined with jazz improvisations
to form a new hybrid music and Miles' recordings
of In a Silent Way and Bitches Brew (both of which
used additional instruments) essentially launched
the fusion era.
Many
of Miles Davis' fans essentially write off his
post-1968 music, not realizing that not all of
the recordings sound the same and that some were
more successful than others. If Miles Davis had
sold out so as to gain a larger audience, than
why did he record so many 20-minute jams that
could not possibly be played on the radio?
During 1970-75 the ensembles of his group (which
sometimes utilized two or three guitars and a
couple of keyboardists) became quite dense, the
rhythms were often intense and Davis unfortunately
often used electronics that distorted the sound
of his horn.
Actually
the only album from this era that is a complete
failure is On the Corner (Davis is largely absent
from that fiasco) and Live/Evil, Jack Johnson
and 1975's Panagea all have memorable sections.
And
then suddenly in 1975 Miles Davis retired. He
was in bad health and, as he frankly discusses
in his autobiography Miles, very much into recreational
drugs. The jazz world speculated about what would
happen if and when he returned. In 1981 Davis
came back with a new band that was similar to
his '70s group except that the ensembles were
quite a bit sparser.
The
rock influence was soon replaced by funk and pop
elements and, as he became stronger, Miles Davis'
trumpet playing proved to still be in excellent
form. He toured constantly during his last decade
and his personality seemed to have mellowed a
bit. Where once he had been quite forbidding and
reluctant to be friendly to nonmusicians, Davis
was at times eager to grant interviews and talk
about his past.
Although
he had never looked back musically, in the summer
of 1991 he shocked everyone by letting Quincy
Jones talk him into performing Gil Evans arrangements
from the past at the Montreux Jazz Festival.
Even if he had Wallace Roney and Kenny Garrett
take some of the solos, Davis was in stronger-than-expected
form playing the old classics. And then two months
later he passed away at the age of 65.
There
are currently over 120 valuable Miles Davis recordings
in print including many live sets issued on European
labels. Taken as a whole, these form quite a legacy.
~
Scott Yanow, All-Music Guide
Miles
Davis
photograph © Don Hunstein |