![]() ![]() ![]() Highlighting three tracks featured on Brew coupled with the live debut of the thrilling “Willie Nelson” (tracked in the studio mere weeks earlier) the songs here brim with rapturous transcendence. And a mere three weeks before the release of Brew, Miles undertook the first of five multi-night residencies across Bill Graham’s esteemed Fillmore East/West venues.įeaturing Davis on trumpet, Wayne Shorter on tenor and soprano saxophones, Chick Corea on electric piano, Dave Holland on bass, Jack De Johnette on drums and Airto Moriera on percussion, the two performances (early/late) opening for Neil Young & Crazy Horse and the Steve Miller Band from March 7th, 1970 go hard.Īrguably finding more in common with the Stooges soon-to-be released triumph Fun House than anything else adjacent in the jazz realm, this sextet runs the floor with an intensity and ferocity that still leaves listeners gasping for air over five decades later. Shortly thereafter, Davis would record his genre-defining, stand-alone fusion colossus Bitches Brew. With In A Silent Way in 1969, Davis made his first dedicated work in the realm. Davis’s fourth reinvention of popular music would come via his marriage between rock and jazz. He was already a generational genius three times over for his contributions to the American musical canon, from the cool jazz cornerstone Birth Of The Cool, to his modal jazz masterpiece Kind Of Blue and through his groundbreaking work ushering in the post-bop era with his second quintet. Plumb right in the middle of the intersection of these diametrically opposed realms was Miles Davis. Long serving as the preferred genre of with-it thinkers, beatniks, poets and premier countercultural aesthetes, jazz had largely and unceremoniously been relegated to “old people’s music” as the burgeoning youth movement loomed large over creative and artistic hegemony. 1970 serves as a tectonic shift within the crossroads of American popular music. With rock and roll on the cusp of dive bombing into its arena-era, the more adventurous and esoteric off-shoots tended to be whisked away from the spotlight while oppressive corporate behemoths drooled at the opportunity to rule labels, touring, publicity and all of their ancillary business interests with an iron fist.Īt the opposite end of the spectrum, jazz music sat wondering what in the hell had happened. ![]()
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