Who is Miles Davis

Ranked #5,330 in Music, #147,732 overall

Miles Davis

Miles DavisĀ  was an American jazz musician, trumpeter, bandleader and composer.

In 1986, the New England Conservatory awarded Miles Davis an Honorary Doctorate for his extraordinary contributions to music.

Since 1960 the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (NARAS) has honored him with eight Grammy Awards, a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, and three Grammy Hall of Fame Awards.

Miles Davis Jazz - Miles Davis Albums

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Miles Davies So What - Album Kind of Blue

Kind of Blue Original recording remastered

KIND OF BLUE (1959) has a stark, hushed, understated, but very heady nature, a staggering difference from the previous year's MILESTONES. KIND OF BLUE went on to become a mega-classic, historic and trend setting. It introduced modal tunes to jazz, which provide much more space for improvising on each chord compared to conventional jazz tunes and standards. Consider "So What," which opens the album. There are but two chords, D minor 7th and E-flat minor 7th, and there are spots were 24 bars pass, all on the D minor 7th. This allows the soloist to--as Miles put it--stay in the mode. The song initiated a wave of influence and inspired a host of modal tunes, including John Coltrane's "Impressions" (built on the same chords and structure). "So What" also has the very rare instance of the melody being played by the bassist (but this was Paul Chambers; check out his Blue Note album BASS ON TOP from 1957). For those who don't know, the late Bill Evans is a jazz-piano icon. This brilliant innovator contributed two compositions here: "Blue In Green" and "Flamenco Sketches." Bill's hypnotic vamps and harmonically rich voicings add to the heady atmosphere that Miles typically created with his sparse, cerebral style.

It's difficult to pick out high points; the whole album is on such a high level. Coltrane, Adderley, Evans...these guys could play. The solos throughout are haunting and magical. All of the compositions exhibit unusual and sometimes subtle characteristics, like the altered blues changes in "Freddie Freeloader" (on which Wynton Kelly plays piano) and the 10-bar, "A"-section-only form of "Blue In Green." In "All Blues," pay special attention to the harmonic treatment during the last eight bars of its 24-bar blues-waltz structure. You don't have to be a music student to recognize the unique magic or the mood-inducing power that pervades this album. With players of this caliber, the music making is magnificent and amazing. The talent and importance of these truly monumental musicians cannot be stressed enough. And, the importance of KIND OF BLUE as a record is deserving of all the hoopla that can possibly be mustered on its behalf. This is a legendary recording by a legendary band.

Another reason this album is historic is the introduction of what came to be known as "So What" chords. They are the chords that answer the melody line in "So What." Here are the two chords Bill Evans played there:

E below middle C, up a fourth to A, up a fourth to D, up a fourth to G and up a major third to B.

D below middle C, up a fourth to G, up a fourth to C, up a fourth to F and up a major third to A.

If you're so inclined, try playing those two chords to answer the melody and you will hear the heady magic they produce. To use this chord elsewhere, just remember it's the root, eleventh, seventh, third and fifth of a minor seventh chord.
Cheers, Murray -- MurrayTheCat (upstate New York)

Kind of Blue

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1. So What 9:22
2. Freddie Freeloader 9:46
3. Blue In Green 5:37
4. All Blues 11:32 Album Only
5. Flamenco Sketches 9:26
6. Flamenco Sketches (alternate take) 9:31

This is the one jazz record owned by people who don't listen to jazz, and with good reason. The band itself is extraordinary (proof of Miles Davis's masterful casting skills, if not of God's existence), listing John Coltrane and Julian "Cannonball" Adderley on saxophones, Bill Evans (or, on "Freddie Freeloader," Wynton Kelly) on piano, and the crack rhythm unit of Paul Chambers on bass and Jimmy Cobb on drums. Coltrane's astringency on tenor is counterpoised to Adderley's funky self on alto, with Davis moderating between them as Bill Evans conjures up a still lake of sound on which they walk. Meanwhile, the rhythm partnership of Cobb and Chambers is prepared to click off time until eternity. It was the key recording of what became modal jazz, a music free of the fixed harmonies and forms of pop songs. In Davis's men's hands it was a weightless music, but one that refused to fade into the background. In retrospect every note seems perfect, and each piece moves inexorably towards its destiny. -- John Szwed

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Blue in Green by. Miles Davis
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Miles Davis - Awards

* Winner; Down Beat Reader's Poll Best Trumpet Player 1955
* Winner; Down Beat Reader's Poll Best Trumpet Player 1957
* Winner; Down Beat Reader's Poll Best Trumpet Player 1961
* Grammy Award for Best Jazz Composition Of More Than Five Minutes Duration for Sketches of Spain (1960)
* Grammy Award for Best Jazz Performance, Large Group Or Soloist With Large Group for Bitches Brew (1970)
* Grammy Award for Best Jazz Instrumental Performance, Soloist for We Want Miles (1982)
* Sonning Award for Lifetime Achievement In Music (1984; Copenhagen, Denmark)
* Doctor of Music, honoris causa (1986; New England Conservatory)
* Grammy Award for Best Jazz Instrumental Performance, Soloist for Tutu (1986)
* Grammy Award for Best Jazz Instrumental Performance, Soloist for Aura (1989)
* Grammy Award for Best Jazz Instrumental Performance, Big Band for Aura (1989)
* Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award (1990)
* Australian Film Institute Award for Best Original Music Score for Dingo, shared with Michel Legrand (1991)
* Knighted into the Legion of Honor (July 16, 1991; Paris)
* Grammy Award for Best R&B Instrumental Performance for Doo-Bop (1992)
* Grammy Award for Best Large Jazz Ensemble Performance for Miles & Quincy Live at Montreux (1993)
* Hollywood Walk of Fame Star (February 19, 1998)
* Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction (March 13, 2006)
* Hollywood's Rockwalk Induction (September 28, 2006)
* RIAA Quadruple Platinum for Kind of Blue
* St. Louis Walk of Fame

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