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Composer James Mtume Destroys Jazz Critic Stanley Crouch in a Debate about Miles Davis.mp4

James Mtume & Stanley Crouch Debate Jazz Great Miles Davis' Electric Period at the Amistad Center for Art & Culture in Hartford, CT

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  • @the_other_dude
    @the_other_dude9 жыл бұрын

    "I'll play it first and tell you what it is later." -- Miles Davis

  • @dreamsnetwork9132

    @dreamsnetwork9132

    3 жыл бұрын

    If i were a bell

  • @mikefields4136

    @mikefields4136

    2 жыл бұрын

    Miles Davis

  • @humanitiesprofessor1912
    @humanitiesprofessor19122 жыл бұрын

    My heart is profoundly heavy right now. RIP, James Mtume (3 January 1946 - 9 January 2022) 🙌🏿🙏🏿😭

  • @crnkmnky

    @crnkmnky

    2 жыл бұрын

    🌹

  • @jonathandoelander6130

    @jonathandoelander6130

    2 жыл бұрын

    Stanley Crouch should be punished.

  • @JayneandDan

    @JayneandDan

    2 жыл бұрын

    Unreal 😢 Great Musician, Great Mind, Great Man. I will miss his voice that made a difference in Black Thought. Be At Rest 👊🏿

  • @CCG749

    @CCG749

    2 жыл бұрын

    One the best that ever do it a true brother

  • @callmemonkh9020

    @callmemonkh9020

    2 жыл бұрын

    You just informed me (1-27-22). Ma'at Kherw. Ma'at Kherw. Ma'at Kherw. He is Justified. He is Free of His earthly fetters, and has become reunited with the essence of Creation Who birthed Him. Honor to His memory.

  • @arfer
    @arfer10 жыл бұрын

    Who cares what critics say. Listen to the music and like it or not. I NEVER listen to music critics. Got my own ears.

  • @axeman2638

    @axeman2638

    5 жыл бұрын

    As the brother says at the start, those that can do, those that can't teach, those that wish they could become critics.

  • @stannote8312

    @stannote8312

    2 жыл бұрын

    Plenty of people care what critics say, and the main people who care are the artists themselves. Don't let any artist (and I am an artist) tell you they don't read what the critics say about their work. What critics write may not influence what the artist does in the future. However, it's only human to care what someone thinks about one's work. A positive word regarding our work signifies acceptance. What other reason would artists of all kinds allow the positive quotes of critics to be featured in advertising representing their work? (They do have a say in this). All of this said, Crouch and Mtume are allowed to disagree. One is giving their opinion (Crouch), and another is offering facts (Mtume).

  • @gabrielegagliardi3956

    @gabrielegagliardi3956

    Ай бұрын

    Critics, historians and music nerd may be useful to create a coherent history of a music genre. Without guidance and with 1000000000000 jazz albums produced you won't have a single idea about how to navigate that made magnum of music. Hence you need a guide, main genres, sub genres, what are the main ideas at the time, who are the key players and so on. Without someone reconstructing music it would be only chaos.

  • @conalrose5223
    @conalrose52234 жыл бұрын

    "They teach you there's a boundary line to music. But, man, there's no boundary line to art": Charlie Parker.

  • @sunflowerpwr.8821
    @sunflowerpwr.88212 жыл бұрын

    Loved this exchange. R.I.P. Mr. Mtume. 🙏🏾❤🖤💚🌹🌹🌹🌹

  • @michaellicko2746
    @michaellicko27462 жыл бұрын

    Guys like Stanley Crouch and Wynton Marsalis practically killed Jazz by trying to turn it into classical music and building a wall around it and trying to gatekeep it. If it were up to them, the development of Jazz would have stopped somewhere in the late 50’s or early 60’s. Jazz to me has always been about innovation and bringing in new sounds and styles, mixing them into something completely new, fresh, and exciting. I’ve never got the hostility to electronic instruments - if you’re playing great shit, who cares if it’s on an electric piano or an acoustic one? Miles didn’t sell out, he was trying to reach a new audience. The worst thing that could ever happen to Jazz is to turn it into “classical” music, becoming less and less relevant as the years go on because it stops developing.

  • @dwood78part23

    @dwood78part23

    2 жыл бұрын

    Agree. This was the main issue I had with Ken Burns' docuseries on jazz- him depended a little too much on the views of Crouch & Marsalis- whose views on post-1960s jazz affected the series as a whole.

  • @slipstreammonkey

    @slipstreammonkey

    2 жыл бұрын

    Classical Music, developed and evolved for over 400 years. Many of the jazz musicians that we regard as the foundations gained insights through classical music and composers.

  • @chingonbass

    @chingonbass

    2 жыл бұрын

    and also wynton is a racist piece of shit that follows in the steps of his white daddies

  • @newagain9964

    @newagain9964

    2 жыл бұрын

    I’m pretty sure miles would love Robert Grasper Experiment. Regardless if he or anyone else considers them “jazz”. He’d hear someone pushing several art form forward

  • @FlaxeMusic

    @FlaxeMusic

    2 жыл бұрын

    Jazz music IS classical music for all intents and purposes, it's an extension of western classical concepts, like a parent and a child. It's this conception, this affirmed cliche, this, frankly broad and tragic MISCONCEPTION that classical music (referring to the likes of Bach, Handel etc) is somehow stuffy and regimented and "set-in-stone" is ironically due to yet another bastardization of an art form. The modern era, critics, academics have bastardized classical like you're saying they're bastardizing jazz, gatekeeping it, building walls around it. We've been through this already. That music was free and interpretive before academia started attempting to standardize and mould it into some kind of hardened conceptual ruleset. I was taught strictly to not write consecutive fifths when writing 4 part harmony and that I would be marked down for that when I got my degree- Yet they told me to look at Bach's music, so I did. There are no less than 54 instances of consecutive perfect fifths and octaves in Bach's Chorales. Some of them in parallel. It's this kind of bullshit that kills the spirit of anything. It was ACADEMIA that made people interpret Bach in the same god damn way every time, so they could measure one human against another without having to think too goddamn hard, it was ACADEMIA that established a false pedagogy filled with nonsense limiters in order to force a system of "stylistic appropriateness". Don't get it twisted, all music is free and breathing until some fool with authority puts it in a cage and throws a blanket over it to make his life easier.

  • @d.fennelljr.1567
    @d.fennelljr.15678 жыл бұрын

    11:45 "influence found in the next generation" See, Flying Lotus; See, Thundercat; See, Christian Scott; See, Kamasi Washington; See, Nujabes; See, DJ Shadow; See, Nightmares on Wax; See, Cinematic Orchestra…the list goes on and on and on. Miles Davis was a Genius, who fathered this new generation of artists who fuse jazz and electronics - their listeners, and their critics.

  • @methedrineradio6858

    @methedrineradio6858

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Darrell Fennell 100% agreed. His vision on masterpieces like "On The Corner" (Oh, the 'Complete Sessions' are pure magic) was waaaay ahead of its time. You will find it years later on hip-hop rhythms, drum n' bass, etc etc. And that fat dude's still stuck in the fucking 1950's.

  • @Takami469

    @Takami469

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Darrell Fennell-Yup and Animals as leaders, anything from Radiohead after Kid A, Medeski Martin and Wood, The Bad Plus, Primus, Tool, Red hot Chili Peppers, even Metallica ( Trujillo doing a Doc on Jaco this year!), Phish, Bela Fleck, Artist Genius, Dave Matthews Band, and on and on

  • @andym28

    @andym28

    7 жыл бұрын

    That's a list. I am very confused why the electric period wasnt continued as much as traditional music. Bitches Brew to me is a universe of future music still to be explored.

  • @Padybu

    @Padybu

    6 жыл бұрын

    Funny how you mentioned Flylo and Nujabes but left out Dilla who even sampled Miles

  • @jamescurran9002

    @jamescurran9002

    4 жыл бұрын

    They sayJazz is dead...I laugh at the Premature Autopsies once again. Precisely because of young Artists like these who are picking up the flag and running with it.

  • @docbobster
    @docbobster8 жыл бұрын

    Nice to hear Mtume call BS against the Jazz police. Much more than that: fascinating new insights on a fertile period.

  • @PolaOpposite
    @PolaOpposite2 жыл бұрын

    Mtume spoke like a musician who understood musical expression and exploration. Crouch spoke like a journalist who wanted to narrowly define jazz to match his biases. But Crouch's idea that the fusion music that Miles played a big part in creating is disappearing is completely wrong. Today we're living in a musical era that rewards cross pollenation and innovation. What Crouch thought is disappearing was really just the process of the evolution of an art form. From those early pioneers like Miles we ended up with Chick Corea and Return to Forever, Michael Brecker, The Crusaders, David Sanborn, Kirk Whalum, Larry Carlton, The Yellowjackets, Pat Metheny, Stanley Clark, Robben Ford, Roy Hargrove, and George Benson, to name a few. Sorry Mr. Crouch, you were wrong in so many ways. If I'm going to believe anyone, it's going to be the man with first hand knowledge!

  • @jabari22

    @jabari22

    2 жыл бұрын

    Exactly!!!!

  • @Uptown59

    @Uptown59

    2 жыл бұрын

    I agree. Miles' influence on music is, not was but is, is boundless. IMOP, even his "acoustic" works were forward looking.

  • @vernondgermanRecordingLoft

    @vernondgermanRecordingLoft

    2 жыл бұрын

    i agree brother T also they left out Prince and jay dilla and who put a muted trumpet in Hiphop? Certainly not Winton his brother Branford yes !! time for the old plantation thinking to take a nap i say Peace....

  • @mabonman

    @mabonman

    2 жыл бұрын

    Bakunin says 'in matters of boots, refer to the bootmaker'

  • @ismaildavis7692

    @ismaildavis7692

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@vernondgermanRecordingLoft I saw your comment what does Plantation thinking have to do with this or at least the way that I understand Plantation thinking it's obvious we have a different Outlook on what that term implies

  • @rj3817
    @rj38172 жыл бұрын

    "Those who can't do, those who can't teach, those who wish they could become critics"

  • @ShawnC.T.
    @ShawnC.T.2 жыл бұрын

    James Mtume was in touch with his musical generation, the musical generations that preceded him, and the musical generations that succeeded him. That is where his genius resonates the most in my mind, his openness to the fact, that all music has its place in time, no music is insignificant, it all has value. May the "Most High" forever bless his soul...🙏🏼...

  • @HawkAmExpat
    @HawkAmExpat10 жыл бұрын

    So damn glad to see Stanley Crouch get his ass handed to him by James Mtume. Thank you, James Mtume. Say good night, Wynton Marsalis, Stanley Crouch and the rest of the downtown knitting club in Concrete National Park.

  • @spb7883
    @spb78837 жыл бұрын

    As one of my music graduate professors aptly put it, when you think about Miles's career, it can be split into two parts: from '44 - '67 (roughly), Miles played acoustic. From '68 - '91 (his death), he played electric. Equal parts. Think about that for a second. 23 years in the acoustic world, 23 years in the electric world. Miles didn't sell out. This is how he heard music, and the duration of his allegiance to the electric sound underscores his artistic motivation.

  • @mja91352

    @mja91352

    2 жыл бұрын

    Excellent comment. However, you left out that Davis' electronic stuff was crap.

  • @Don-md6wn

    @Don-md6wn

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@mja91352 He also left out that Miles went electronic after he saw that the record sales of rock/psychedelic albums were dwarfing best sellers in jazz. I don't have a quote at hand, but Clive Davis talked about it in a show on Netflix. The idea that Miles woke up one day and made a strictly artistic decision to go electronic is a fantasy.

  • @fritzjackson4336

    @fritzjackson4336

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@missingsig It's from a documentary that basically quotes miles as saying he was frustrated that these kids who didn't know jack shit about music could sell out a stadium with fifths and electronic volume excitement despite being rockers who could barely tell you the difference between a A and an E. And those slights to rockers and funkers isn't even mine. Miles said that.

  • @ChordtoChord

    @ChordtoChord

    2 жыл бұрын

    Completly agree with spb. Miles had already made massive contributions to jazz. I don't care if you call it "selling out" He had a right to do anything he wanted. Besides, I would have never listened to "Kind of Blue" "Sketches of Spain" or "Porgy and Bess" If I had not been introduced to Jazz through "Bitches Brew" "Live Evil" and "In a Silent Way".

  • @flyingfrogofdeath9616

    @flyingfrogofdeath9616

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ChordtoChord this! Miles Davis had already made some of the greatest contributions to the genre so he can do whatever he likes as, not just an artist but a pioneer and figurehead for an entire genre of music

  • @Cyber_Diva
    @Cyber_Diva2 жыл бұрын

    ❤️ you James Mtume! Thank you visiting earth and sharing your music, thinking and absolute brilliance. ‘Hope to see you again.

  • @devonmitchell5294
    @devonmitchell52942 жыл бұрын

    Your talent, genius and gift of enlightening and educating others will be missed. RIP, James Mtume.

  • @rudygoofysrh
    @rudygoofysrh2 жыл бұрын

    Some Musicians are brilliant when they put down their instruments and tools to talk to you like an intellectual who will blow your mind away. These people are students of human nature, philosophy, psychology, music and other forms of artistic excellence.

  • @mountainlinx
    @mountainlinx10 жыл бұрын

    Stanley Crouch always had a problem with Miles Davis and James Baldwin. Sometimes he sounds like Wendy Williams about Whitney Houston...damn

  • @jeremyellismusic
    @jeremyellismusic3 жыл бұрын

    "What has that turned into?" Wow, Crouch seriously wasn't paying attention to any music of the time. Like, this was the period where Quincy Jones was the lord of the charts. Not noticing the jazz evolution in his productions is insane. Mtume dropping Mos Def's name shows he knew exactly how deep the influence was currently happening, and where it could eventually lead.

  • @mja91352

    @mja91352

    2 жыл бұрын

    However, he probably knows the definition of Evolution," which you clearly do not.

  • @citizencain01

    @citizencain01

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Jeremy Ellis - Exactly. Miles' fusion influence evolved into and inspired the music of Stevie Wonder, Earth Wind and Fire, Robert Flack and even prog rock groups like Pink Floyd and Yes. Not to mention jazz fusion's revival and expansion in the early-mid 90's with hip-hop and neo-soul artists like A Tribe Called Quest, The Fugees, Gang Starr, The Roots, Eryka Badu and Maxwell bringing the sound to a new generation.

  • @fritzjackson4336

    @fritzjackson4336

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@citizencain01 neo soul isn't fusion it's neo soul lol

  • @citizencain01

    @citizencain01

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@fritzjackson4336 Never said it was fusion I said it was influenced by it.

  • @brucescott4261

    @brucescott4261

    2 жыл бұрын

    Jeremy Ellis ...Most of Miles' fusion weren't played over the airwaves. It was very the same for 'Trane, as well!

  • @peterthomasricci1172
    @peterthomasricci11728 жыл бұрын

    Oh how I adore Mtume - he calls out Crouch's pretentiousness right at the start, and in a manner many of us wish we could.

  • @zdogg8

    @zdogg8

    5 жыл бұрын

    See my comments above. Crouch has an opinion, that's all. You chiming in here doesn't make you "pretentious."

  • @kiramead4133
    @kiramead41332 жыл бұрын

    I’m always amused by people who claim the electric period was miles selling out and making a cash grab to appease the label. In what world is something like “Pharoh’s Dance” (especially past the 6 minute mark) seen as viably commercial or mainstream? Bitches Brew is quite obviously a natural though unexpected progression from what he did on Filles De Kilimanjaro,’ with Silent Way being a slight detour yet important in that evolution.

  • @innovativeprogramschool7979
    @innovativeprogramschool79798 жыл бұрын

    Stanley Crouch is so conservative and rigid in his musical tastes it's ridiculous. He's actually very funny. It's almost like he's playing a role.

  • @charlesstevens6705

    @charlesstevens6705

    7 жыл бұрын

    HE REALLY IS ITS DOWNRIGHT EMBARASSING AND IF WE WOULD HAVE COME TOGETHER,DEPENDING ON WHO WAS DRIVING, SOMEBODY WOULD BE CATCHING A CAB!!!!!!! AND THATS REAL!!!!!

  • @axeman2638

    @axeman2638

    5 жыл бұрын

    Well maybe he is.

  • @jeffreycollins7297

    @jeffreycollins7297

    3 жыл бұрын

    How can anyone listen to a person with such limited musical tastes. It always shows through in the personality.

  • @xman333

    @xman333

    2 жыл бұрын

    Crouch was a wanna be scholar who always had something negative to say about Black people.

  • @jazzmanchgo

    @jazzmanchgo

    2 жыл бұрын

    Funny, too, because was once the drummer in David Murray's Black Music Infinity, playing some pretty "outside" stuff, and he was an active participant with Murray in New York's loft scene in the mid-1970s. Hardly a a milieu you'd expect a "conservative" to emerge from. Not sure why he retrenched so.

  • @davruck1
    @davruck12 жыл бұрын

    Miles Davis is one of the greatest producers period. He created several different sounds and influenced music heavily for several decades.

  • @tedwebb646
    @tedwebb6463 жыл бұрын

    Stanley’s playing checkers, James chess.

  • @catboyzee
    @catboyzee2 жыл бұрын

    James Mtume was a both a musical visionary and projector of possibilities, much like his former employer Miles Davis. Mtume dared to look beyond and reach for that which seemed intangible and inhuman when other musicians were content to create small variants of what had already been done. The success he had fusing his particular brand of lyricism and composition with musical synthesizers and drum machines to create a sound that was as lively and organic as with acoustic instruments bears this out. As befitting his Swahili last name, he was truly a messenger to those with an ear to hear. Respect and RIP.

  • @jean-lucbersou758

    @jean-lucbersou758

    2 жыл бұрын

    But probably unable to check the accurate sound when speaking to the mike .

  • @fanomoe
    @fanomoe10 жыл бұрын

    When Miles went electric that was new sounding music. It still sounds new. It doesn't sound "commercial" in the least, and if Davis suggested a change, well so be it. Miles wasn't gonna be stuck in the 60's

  • @mountainlinx
    @mountainlinx10 жыл бұрын

    the critics tend to keep jazz in a place where it's dying

  • @HammondB200

    @HammondB200

    6 жыл бұрын

    this

  • @rkgsd

    @rkgsd

    5 жыл бұрын

    Case in point, the Classic Jazz old timers typically aren't fans of Smooth Jazz.

  • @SJO897

    @SJO897

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@tommyv8312 smooth jazz is basically RnB, they're so bothered by the name its annoying. Get over it

  • @JRCGuitarist

    @JRCGuitarist

    4 жыл бұрын

    S. O I disagree, it should definitely be considered Jazz, while I can hear why people may consider it R&B. It would also depend on the Jazz musician. Certain ones added more Jazz to their style than others, but overall, R&B and Smooth Jazz should be kept separate.

  • @NotYourTypicalNegro
    @NotYourTypicalNegro2 жыл бұрын

    12:29 - Here, James discusses how Miles and Jimi Hendrix were in contact. He says clearly that Miles was never planning on playing with Jimi, but instead Jimi asked for Miles's help in selecting jazz musicians for Jimi's new band to be called "Electric Church".

  • @mormovies
    @mormovies10 жыл бұрын

    What's to debate? You either dig it or not. No argument will change the fact about whether you feel the music or not.

  • @zdogg8

    @zdogg8

    5 жыл бұрын

    Exactly, a tempest in a teapot, for sure.

  • @sym667
    @sym6673 жыл бұрын

    "Talking about music is like dancing about architecture" (Frank Zappa)

  • @mingusman84

    @mingusman84

    2 жыл бұрын

    Duke Ellington, actually

  • @sym667

    @sym667

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@mingusman84 Actually actually it seems to be controversial.

  • @mja91352

    @mja91352

    2 жыл бұрын

    Asinine

  • @lilacrain3283

    @lilacrain3283

    2 жыл бұрын

    Love Zappa but that quote has always struck me as so stupid

  • @sym667

    @sym667

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@lilacrain3283 I also love Zappa, but I also love talking about music! We should try to dance about architecture, and see if he was right! 😉

  • @rayjr62
    @rayjr6211 жыл бұрын

    The late Duke Ellington said it best. . . there are only two types of music: Good music and bad music.

  • @brucescott4261

    @brucescott4261

    2 жыл бұрын

    Tysons Accosta ...Ellington wasn't the only one who said that!

  • @EffemeyJon
    @EffemeyJon10 жыл бұрын

    Miles Davis unique contribution was that he kept his ears open. I can't think many other musicians or composers who could do this like Miles. From Be Bop to Hip Hop, from Classical to Funk. He went a long way in inventing Cool Jazz. many musicians were brought through by Miles, Chic Corea Herbie Hancock, Kenny Garret many more. there was no sell out. Jazz is based on popular music any way. How High the Moon is the starting point for Ornithology. that critics whole argument is none sense. For me the exciting stuff now is in mixing and the creative use of samples etc. The best hip hop matches the best be bop. Take a track in Tutu towards the end, dub reggae is mixed in with musique concrete with a hard funk back beat, blended seamlessly. whats the issue. The danger for jazz is that it becomes a "classical music" that people interpret.. When Bach's Well tempered Clavier appeared were people up in arms because tonality was now seemingly fixed. Miles spirit is essential. Listen, feel the pulse of the time you are in, this is not a sell out, this is keeping your ears open. Or do we all want a Simon Cowell universe where everything is predetermined for every one? The Tenor sax...yes there is a problem getting beyond the trane. All modern players seem to sound like him. I play a tenor and it is a very open instrument. There is a problem. Miles solution was simple....keep your ears open always!.

  • @DucksDeLucks

    @DucksDeLucks

    9 жыл бұрын

    Jon Effemey Sell out. But it's okay. He made some fun music for the hippies and made some money that he thoroughly deserved. Music is a form of entertainment. I'm sure Bach wrote some pieces that he thought were garbage, intended to satisfy some prince he owed a piece to.

  • @gcrav

    @gcrav

    9 жыл бұрын

    Jon Effemey "The best hip hop matches the best be bop." In your dreams! Nice rhyme, though.

  • @allen6924

    @allen6924

    4 жыл бұрын

    His analogue is spot on. Nothing he said was wrong, just another interpretation of a thought. That's what "jazz" is. Keep your ears open.

  • @mja91352

    @mja91352

    2 жыл бұрын

    Unfortunately, his later music was crap

  • @sosanista

    @sosanista

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@gcrav obviously you've never listened to Freestyle Fellowship.

  • @joelmalone7922
    @joelmalone79222 жыл бұрын

    Mtume is a joy to listen to here. He really takes Stanley to school and educates us all about the evils of conservatism as well as the danger of close-mindedness. Once you close your mind AND your ears you stop learning as well. Miles' music was at the peak of its creativity and he was at his most innovative during his electric period. He stood out from all of the bop and cool artists in a way that wouldn't have been possible twenty years before.

  • @tomcarl8021

    @tomcarl8021

    2 жыл бұрын

    "Once you close your mind AND your ears you stop learning". Wow, you're a regular fucking Aristotle...

  • @aquilomanganelli175

    @aquilomanganelli175

    2 жыл бұрын

    "evils of conservatism"? LMFAO, ok hillary. boomer!

  • @Gregorypeckory

    @Gregorypeckory

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@tomcarl8021 So your complaint is the other post stated a truth that was too obvious? I guess you were pretty determined to find something to mock, but that's the best you can do? You didn't embarrass your target; the only one you embarrassed was yourself, although not really because to feel embarrassed you'd need enough intelligence to see why it was a such a dumb attempt at trolling, and you clearly lack that, so you're safe.

  • @tomcarl8021

    @tomcarl8021

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Gregorypeckory Jesus Christ. You sound like Mr Brady lecturing one of the kids at the end of a Brady Bunch episode.

  • @Gregorypeckory

    @Gregorypeckory

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@tomcarl8021 I didn't watch the show so can't judge, but it sounds like Mr Brady was a rational person. You, on the other hand, just sounded like a dick.

  • @driesanalog4187
    @driesanalog41878 жыл бұрын

    "if the sun goes down, that's it" - lol.

  • @MLATX512
    @MLATX51212 жыл бұрын

    This is an argument between a conservative and a ground breaker. Many folks who loved Big Band thought that Bop was noise when it came out. But after 20-30 years Bop became the new standard. Conservative folks always gravitate to what they are familiar and comfortable with. Ground breakers are always striving to move forward, to break from convention into new territory. Stanly Crouch is conservative, had he lived during the Big Band era, he would have thought Bop was a sell out. Simple as that.

  • @supahsekzy
    @supahsekzy13 жыл бұрын

    "If you wanna be consistent, go back to a quill." DAMN. Mtume SMOKED Crouch.

  • @ROCKNROLLFAN
    @ROCKNROLLFAN2 жыл бұрын

    I saw this clip 11 YEARS AGO and the heading was always that "James Mtume destroyed Stanley Crouch" on this debate.

  • @bryanherward4679
    @bryanherward4679 Жыл бұрын

    Reminds me about a conversation I had with my dad about this. He said critics can only observe art from the outside. Not being artists, they can only echo what other critics agree are higher forms of art. They intellectualize, but cannot form art themselves. As such, they will never truly understand the mind of an artist and the motivations that push them to create.

  • @strumdrum2024
    @strumdrum20242 жыл бұрын

    James Brown was an influence on them all. The elements of so call funk was mastered by James Brown his music was never going to be abandoned by the Youth. He was a commercial success and a cross over long before many other Artist/ Performers.

  • @brucescott4261

    @brucescott4261

    2 жыл бұрын

    Sherman McKinney ...False!

  • @sismeo1

    @sismeo1

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@brucescott4261 You cannot say false. You can say you think it's wrong, but not necessarily false. James was influenced by jazz. Funk was heavily influenced by Jazz and Funk then influenced Jazz. Inspiration is influenced and influence is constant. Quincy Jones had an ear but was a poor composer. He influenced funk by mixing some sounds. Herbie Hancock is a funk master and a Jazz master.James Brown sound is the basis of the psychedelic funk that was influenced by rock that in turn would influenced Jazz. It evolves, rolls searches for new direction. Jazz would influenced Hip Hop, Hip Hop would influenced trip top, trip top would become House music and would go back to basis as acid jazz....and it goes on and on and on.

  • @neilseletlowhisler2522

    @neilseletlowhisler2522

    2 жыл бұрын

    Ok you on to something here. The precursor to "black pop" the artists that made the wider/whiter audience come to them. From Neptunes (with Pharrell), MJ, Stevie, to JB the Godfather

  • @dthought5673
    @dthought56732 жыл бұрын

    Mtune was a musical pioneer, performer, and teacher. Your legacy will forever be with us.

  • @PutItAway101
    @PutItAway1012 жыл бұрын

    I've done some dumb things in my life, but I've never been in an argument about music on the side that's against Miles Davis.

  • @fritzjackson4336

    @fritzjackson4336

    2 жыл бұрын

    he's not. you just got fooled by a hit piece.

  • @gmac6503
    @gmac65036 жыл бұрын

    That was a great exchange! Thanks for the video and being able to hear/see both sides.

  • @chuckdeezul2180
    @chuckdeezul218010 жыл бұрын

    "Second hand smoke screen" DAMN!!!

  • @Riddim4
    @Riddim413 жыл бұрын

    Columbia was unhappy with Miles’s sales in 1967-68. They’d advanced him money, and wanted it back. Miles wanted to reach black youth. He knew most were not buying his music, but that of Sly, Stax, Motown, James Brown, and Hendrix instead. He incorporated elements of their musical language - 8th or 16th note grooves, electric bass, guitar, got deeper into the pocket, and reached more folks.

  • @gregoryphillips760
    @gregoryphillips7602 жыл бұрын

    WOW!! First off, kudos to KZread for putting this video in my feed, otherwise I would not have known that Mtume died. I have respect for both of these men. I actually met Stanly because he sat in once for Archie Shepp, who taught a course at Umass-Amherst in the late 70s (I also met some Jazz greats there too, Frank Foster and Marion Brown). He was a nice person to talk with, wouldn’t belittle my opinions. I saw Mtume a couple of times on BET’s “Video Soul” with Donnie Simpson, and he was just as deep, intense and in-your-face. As for the content of the debate, technology always changed the rules, starting with records, then the Electric Guitar, Bass Guitar, Fuzz Box, Synthesizer, Turntable (scratching) Samplers and on and on. I haven’t listened to part two of this debate yet, but was so excited I had to respond!

  • @mr.c8033

    @mr.c8033

    2 жыл бұрын

    Ah... Dude? Thanking youtube for putting this in your feed is like thanking a calculator for the answer 4 when you put in 2 + 2.

  • @gregoryphillips760

    @gregoryphillips760

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@mr.c8033 , I don't have any reliable source of information on the music/artists that interest me and the 'urban' radio stations in my city are totally useless, they didn't even mention Mtume's death. How and when did you find out?

  • @mr.c8033

    @mr.c8033

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@gregoryphillips760 You got a point, Greg. I was insinuating that while you may not have realized, your viewing history and the algorhythm math brought you here. Same as me dude. I had no clue either.

  • @philgarwood4712
    @philgarwood47128 жыл бұрын

    I'm so bored of hearing about what other people have to say about Miles Davies.

  • @jeffreycollins7297

    @jeffreycollins7297

    3 жыл бұрын

    Then do as I did. Read his autobiography...numerous times. :D

  • @zeruchofficial

    @zeruchofficial

    3 жыл бұрын

    When its people who were actually there with him, I get less bored.

  • @kevinlakeman5043

    @kevinlakeman5043

    3 жыл бұрын

    And yet you intentionally clicked on this link where guys talk about him. Are you just a tool, a troll, a hypocrite or a masochist?

  • @stanmarsh912

    @stanmarsh912

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@kevinlakeman5043 It'll be OK bud

  • @michaelsammin9055

    @michaelsammin9055

    3 жыл бұрын

    All you have to do is listen to his music. Don't listen to anyone else, just listen to his music, man.

  • @johnsluggett1822
    @johnsluggett18226 жыл бұрын

    Miles' body of work is like a grand river, wide, and it goes forever and ever. You don't just listen to a song or a hot solo. You bathe in the vibe and mood and you float downstream. The music will carry you and envelope you. It feels open, the rules are not the same. Listen, don't listen. Banal becomes beautiful and fascinating. Monotony becomes riveting, each note may become very intriguing, even though you've heard it played to death before in other contexts. Simple becomes complex. Repetitive but never the same way twice. Simultaneously trance inducing and electrically kinetic. The roadmap has become intuitive, marked with roads NOT to take. Contradictions make sense. For me, that's an aesthetic accomplishment.

  • @jamilkayin
    @jamilkayin13 жыл бұрын

    "Out of Bitches Brew came all those other broths" haha, my man.

  • @clarkewi
    @clarkewi6 жыл бұрын

    I loved Miles with Parker and Dizz. I loved Miles with Coltrane. I loved Miles with "Bitch's Brew". I only wish Miles had made a record with Hendrix. It almost happened. Miles was a giant.

  • @jazzmanchgo

    @jazzmanchgo

    2 жыл бұрын

    Miles and Hendrix had great mutual respect. I agree that would have been a historical pairing.

  • @annalyman2616
    @annalyman26168 жыл бұрын

    We musicians get weary of music "know-it-all" music critics blasting Miles Davis...sigh... James Mtume, you are a genius - keep telling it like it is!!

  • @louishamilton9648

    @louishamilton9648

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yo….if Crouch doesn’t like Miles’ electronic music (some of which l think is crap), he is entitled to do so, PERIOD.

  • @tybolini2
    @tybolini210 жыл бұрын

    James Mtume = If I played on it / it must be good

  • @serverrunner

    @serverrunner

    10 жыл бұрын

    Yah, got that right!

  • @shellybelly2245
    @shellybelly22452 жыл бұрын

    R.I.P. James Mtume

  • @howardweingrad115
    @howardweingrad1152 жыл бұрын

    In the Miles doc on Netflix an argument is made as to why Miles “went electric”. It was late 1968 or so and he was playing to half filled audiences at places like the Vanguard, and he saw rock bands filling the Fillmore, MSG, festivals, etc - and he wanted that audience reach. That said - Miles being Miles forged a whole new genre of jazz with Bitches Brew and In A Silent Way and did it his way with super talented young musicians who went on to become legends in their own right (Zawinal, Jarrett, Corea, Steve Grossman, and Mtumbe and others ). Ironically, early on when Miles first came to NYC, he didn’t fully take to the bop scene with Parker and others, the Netflix doc suggesting that Miles may have had more of a classical (conservative ??) aesthetic, leading him to the Birth of Cool and then on to his great quintets. Wind bags like Crouch (and Wynton) just wouldn’t have it when Miles stopped playing what they liked him to play or really what they thought he should play

  • @troyjones2358
    @troyjones23583 жыл бұрын

    Any true artist is constantly evolving, for Miles to keep playing the same music in the same format as the Kind of Blue era would have been his artistic death. No great artist in any form of art, Visual, Written, Music etc... stayed the same through the entirety of their life. People who are stuck in the conventions of a period 60 or 70 years ago are missing the point.

  • @mja91352

    @mja91352

    2 жыл бұрын

    Many, many great artists stay the same the same throughout the entirety of their lives: Michelangelo, Rubens, Da Vinci, Titian, Goya, Hemingway, Faulkner, Trevor ... Look them up.

  • @thoughtsforthebuilders

    @thoughtsforthebuilders

    2 жыл бұрын

    If you're an up-and-coming musician and you don't at least sit down and learn some of the great rep of earlier jazz musicians, you're doing yourself a disservice. Just because it old don't mean it get jettisoned. It still has value. Do you play a horn? Do you play drums? You ever learn Papa Joe Jones or Max Roach phrases? There is still great value in what they played. Even if you don't do the Wynton thing and _stick wit it_ , that rep should still be in your ear and in your horn.

  • @ChristianBurrola

    @ChristianBurrola

    Жыл бұрын

    And what point is that? That because you like new music you think everyone else should? That is so selfish.

  • @harrisfrankou2368
    @harrisfrankou23682 жыл бұрын

    That is the most profound truth on innovation versus reverence that I have ever heard, and how he sums up Genius is poetic. The critic reminds me in ways of an NME critic laughing at Queen, reviewers like this, they are stuck in their narrow field of view...or blinkered ears. RIP what a Man.

  • @MiguelBaptista1981
    @MiguelBaptista19813 жыл бұрын

    Imagine a critic asking, after Van Gogh died "So what did he really accomplish at this point? Why is his creative art worth it, instead of sticking with what everyone else was doing?" Alot of people earn their living by being harvesters, and spreaders of people's misery, be it critics, journalists, politicians, and most media.

  • @drecool6976
    @drecool69762 жыл бұрын

    Most critics are people who cant master or perform the very thing they criticize.

  • @sunflowerpwr.8821

    @sunflowerpwr.8821

    2 жыл бұрын

    That's what I was going to say.

  • @jazzmanchgo

    @jazzmanchgo

    2 жыл бұрын

    " Critics: They sing, dance, play the piano, bass, drums, saxes, and most of the oral instruments. I even know one who can hear." (Charles Mingus)

  • @guaguancos.montunodcubop8923
    @guaguancos.montunodcubop89232 жыл бұрын

    When I listen to Mtume speak it makes me realize how stuck in my "purist" or "traditionalist" ways I am. I don't know why i just love the roots of it all more than the plant produced. And im an afro cuban/afro cuban jazz musician (percussionist) but it crosses over to jazz for me too. R.I.P. Mtume & Stanley

  • @ericanderson7059
    @ericanderson70592 жыл бұрын

    " The note after the one you think is bad corrects the one in front of it " . - M.D. R.I.P. Mr . Mtume .

  • @timothyvaughn3077
    @timothyvaughn307710 жыл бұрын

    Stanley Crouch left a bad taste in my mouth when he said Miles' Bitches Brew was his worst work. How can someone say such a thing?! Jazz isn't defined by a sound or instrument it's always been the approach and mentality towards execution and expression. Stanley, where were you when Coltrane was preaching this?! Shame.

  • @wowserstar

    @wowserstar

    9 жыл бұрын

    He doesn't like later Coltrane either.

  • @tiluriso

    @tiluriso

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yet, he supposedly was/worked as an Avant-Garde Jazz Drummer in the 1960s...I wonder if he was any good...

  • @lonhillyer

    @lonhillyer

    5 жыл бұрын

    But, that wasn't jazz...., it was "social music".

  • @oudaram1

    @oudaram1

    5 жыл бұрын

    What do you think? @@tiluriso

  • @tiluriso

    @tiluriso

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@wowserstar Yep and neither does Wynton Marsalis for that matter.

  • @dalemcilwain
    @dalemcilwain2 жыл бұрын

    I'm a big jazz fan. I couldn't stand Stanley Grouch. I loved James Mtume. I knew that him in his music group Mtume. I widely knew James Mtume on the Sunday radio talk shows Kiss Sunday Morning and The Week In Review with Bob Slade on WBLS 107.5. I loved his honest, sensible and no nonsense talk. May he rest in power. ✊🏿

  • @semperoccultus1969
    @semperoccultus19699 жыл бұрын

    I found it to be a lively and fun debate to listen to. They are both intelligent and honest about their views on the artform.

  • @skyjuiceification

    @skyjuiceification

    2 жыл бұрын

    Agreed!

  • @farshimelt
    @farshimelt12 жыл бұрын

    if you're familiar with miles davis's work you'll know that in his electric period he played the same as before the electric period, he just changed his rythym section to reflect what was going on in the current music.

  • @cbjrcher1
    @cbjrcher18 жыл бұрын

    It's good to hear from Brother James after a long time

  • @vanceelliottwright2341
    @vanceelliottwright23413 жыл бұрын

    Love Mtume!! Clear concise. Couch needed to concede. .”...those who wish”.

  • @gregoryhertzog5634
    @gregoryhertzog56342 жыл бұрын

    This Genius of Genetic Mr.James Mtume Legendary Genius Masters Created among most Music Today . R.I.P/Mr.Stanley Crouch Amazing Journey Jornual Wall Street Journal/New York Times writer.Ri.p.. Amazing leadership 👀 Watching Litsen Learning 🌳 Trees Brothers speaks I

  • @RonnieLeeDuck
    @RonnieLeeDuck7 жыл бұрын

    I have never understood why jazz critics make such a big issue (either way) of using "electric" instruments. By the time Bitches Brew was released, country bluesmen like Muddy Waters had been using electric guitars for a good 20 years. It shouldn't have been any big deal. But I totally disagree with Mtume that traditional jazz instruments had reached "technical exhaustion".

  • @contactkeithstack

    @contactkeithstack

    7 жыл бұрын

    RonnieLeeDuck I sort of disagree too but how much more technically amazing can people get beyond Tony Williams, coltrane, or chik corea? Technique should be a means and not an end in itself- so what's the social the cultural point of becoming let's say 2x as proficient as any of the musicians I mentioned? Would it make better music? people like Hendrix and the Beatles showed how maybe a future development in music might not be in doubling technique but in creating new timbres and sounds, tape loops, recording techniques. I'm not sure just a thought.

  • @jazzmanchgo

    @jazzmanchgo

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@contactkeithstack I agree -- that's why the legions who try to "imitate" Williams, Trans, Corea, Bird, Henrdrix, or anyone else by trying to imitate their technique ("Oooh, if I can jam as many notes as possible into this solo . . .!") almost invariably fall short. They need to remember what Dizzy said: "It has taken me my whole life to learn what NOT to play."

  • @zoomonkeydotcom2005
    @zoomonkeydotcom20052 жыл бұрын

    I understood zero percent of the dialogue/argument but enjoyed the passion !!!

  • @dabrupro
    @dabrupro2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for posting this. This man (James Mtume) is a Teacher. Wow. Impressive.

  • @SuperStrik9
    @SuperStrik98 жыл бұрын

    I love Kind Of Blue. That said my favorite period of Miles career is from Bitches Brew to Pangaea.

  • @trevorsmith8950
    @trevorsmith89502 жыл бұрын

    Look out anyone who dared disagree with James Mtume about music, RIP

  • @paradiddlemcflam7167
    @paradiddlemcflam71672 жыл бұрын

    The funny thing about this to me is that I much prefer the earlier music, but not being a critic, I do not pretend to set up my subjective preferences as objective standards.

  • @pageljazz
    @pageljazz12 жыл бұрын

    Miles's music from the On the Corner period is great. As a musician, I can say that it's influenced me and almost everyone I play with. And I play with a lot of great musicians.

  • @09rja
    @09rja6 жыл бұрын

    I must have missed the destruction. And by the way: it is obviously edited (see @ 10:51). I've never seen Stanley be this brief.

  • @MariaAlvarez-mn9nd
    @MariaAlvarez-mn9nd2 жыл бұрын

    I was present at this event and so happy Mtume put things in perspective.

  • @mysteryloaf
    @mysteryloaf2 жыл бұрын

    My favorite part is how Crouch taunted Mtume of being "reductive" in his analogy about language (even putting words into Mtume's mouth), when Crouch's entire premise is ENTIRELY reductive, based on a single of what were clearly many factors in the decision to go electric, and supports that reductive view based on the idea that Miles "never refuted it." Couch bending over backwards to justify a simplistic and CYNICAL interpretation of the facts. Of an entire movement, and a pivotal event in music history. Absurd. So much intellect dedicated to filtering out so much information that could lead him to a more holistic view of Jazz.

  • @Notecrusher
    @Notecrusher5 жыл бұрын

    I hate to say it because i detest Stanley Crouch, but he did get Mtume to reverse course and act like he didn't in a really bullshit way. Mtume specifically said "technical exhaustion -- there's no way to create a work of genius with the saxophone or piano at this point". Then when Crouch made, honestly a rather good analogy to language, Mtume, erased himself and was like, "no I never said throw away the existing vocabulary, I said open up your mind to new words". That was dishonest. Having said that, Crouch's overall argument that Miles, Weather Report and Herbie's fusion material "never went anywhere" shows he knows nothing about music. The reason I hate the Ken Burns Jazz doc is because you have to sit there listening to Stanley Crouch and Wynton Marsalis blather for 700 hours. It's really a form of torture.

  • @ibelieveicansoar

    @ibelieveicansoar

    2 жыл бұрын

    And Mtume dissed critics as poseurs early in this debate, then halfway through favorably cited a classical critic’s argument because he agreed with it.

  • @elbib2446
    @elbib24463 жыл бұрын

    crouch seems to forget ,is that be bop was treated like punk rock by jazz critics when it first appeared,oh they are not playing the solos,melodies note for note,this is punk jazz,now its seen as innovation,jazz is a ever developing thing,a tree with many branches.no one can define what jazz should or shouldnt be

  • @Zekparsh
    @Zekparsh9 жыл бұрын

    James Mtume, and Miles Davis if he were still here, would love flying Lotus. He's doing everything that Mtume is talking about here. Taking the Jazz and fusing it intimately with the electronic. Listen to the entirety of the album You're Dead! by Flying Lotus and you'll see what I'm talking about.

  • @jermyhopkisn9654

    @jermyhopkisn9654

    6 жыл бұрын

    Flying Lotus isn't jazz because there's no real-time relationship with the composer and the players. The players are mostly in his sound card.

  • @superharuhifan

    @superharuhifan

    3 жыл бұрын

    Please don't mention Flume here

  • @IdeasOriginal
    @IdeasOriginal2 жыл бұрын

    The more I think about it over the years, it's not an invalid reason at all to want a different, or larger, or younger, more energetic or "hipper" audience. In fact it's a fundamental choice. Artists, especially in an improvisational medium, feed off their audiences, so it is a key aspect. Choosing an audience is as much an artistic choice as choosing chord structures. Being in a narrow-minded, shrinking, aging audience of mostly white hipsters and "intellectuals" was probably killing his inspiration and reminding him of his age. No one holds it against somebody when they get a new job because they are uninspired with the old one or can't grow in the position. Critics act like musicians are immune to such psychological factors. Secondly, Hendrix and Sly were such forces of nature how could he not want to react to it? Thirdly, how could you be a living musician and ignore the possibilities and timbres that amplification and electronics in general brought to music, not to mention effects, that were around since the mid 50s? The aesthetic effect of amplification on a trumpet is a matter of taste... perhaps it does obscure some "detail", but I assume a lead guitarist and that power was Miles' analogy...

  • @kymlawrence6701
    @kymlawrence67019 жыл бұрын

    I like your style Mtume of telling the facts to Crouch and love your music! May U be blessed always. Right on brother!

  • @aussietruckphotosandmodels8510
    @aussietruckphotosandmodels85102 жыл бұрын

    The problem with critics is that people listen to them. A friend of mine won every peoples choice, in every art competition he entered, but was never rated by art critics.

  • @alansenzaki4148
    @alansenzaki41485 жыл бұрын

    I use to fall asleep reading crouch's long winded liner notes on wynton marsalis albums...and then i would fall asleep to the album. I loved every phase of miles career. The only critlcs i respected were nat hentoff, ralph gleason and leroi jones.

  • @ms-iz9ye
    @ms-iz9ye8 жыл бұрын

    "The influence has been found in the next generation" dam right it has. I was born after the electric era of miles Davis but it's my favorite part of his career.

  • @seop1721
    @seop17218 жыл бұрын

    It's obvious Mtume is correct. The only question is whether the concept of jazz is capacious enough to encompass what Miles did, or if it isn't. If Crouch has his way, he sets limits around jazz and makes it a static region. It's worth bearing in mind that many critics don't like ever-shifting boundaries, as it makes their job more difficult. For example, Joyce Carol Oates, the writer, is so prolific that critics can't keep up, and that angers them. Imagine if she kept redefining the novel, too. That's what Miles did with music, and some critics can't hack it! I agree jazz needs some definition to exist, but if it's about freedom and improvisation, then Miles can surely expand. Wynton is not above being influenced by his education in classical music such that he shares its glacier-like devotion to certain instruments and fixed (rigid) patterns. Now, cellists are breaking out into new territories, finally, but that instrument has long been imprisoned in a solely classical mindset.

  • @interfrastically
    @interfrastically8 жыл бұрын

    Mtume has spent his life making amazing music and enriching the world and Crouch has spent his life... um... well, carrying out the functions necessary for mammals to stay alive at least... I can't think of anything other major accomplishments. Why do people still pay any attention to him? He's a "music critic" that has trouble understanding the difference between polyphony and homophony for dog's sake!

  • @EricWattree
    @EricWattree12 жыл бұрын

    Mtume was also talking about “technical exhaustion.” He said that after a given time, in a given context, everything has been played that can be played in that form of music. That’s also nonsense - in fact, the ability to doing something new with the rhythm and chord progressions of “Stella by Starlight” is exactly what we mean by art. MORE

  • @jazzmanchgo

    @jazzmanchgo

    2 жыл бұрын

    I also disagree with him on that, but I think I see his point -- music, like any art form, needs to grow; it can't remain stagnant and also remain relevant. The great thing about of jazz, of course, is that a master improviser can STILL bring new ideas and new spirit to a "warhorse" like "Stella." And people are still doing new and exciitng things in all-acoustic contexts, as well. New wine from old wineskins is savory and nourishing.

  • @neilseletlowhisler2522

    @neilseletlowhisler2522

    2 жыл бұрын

    Will, to not take it literally- the instruments you play, if they're all you use, will be limiting creativity after some time. Yes, it will appear new but sound "old". The expansion and progression is inevitable

  • @alansenzaki4148
    @alansenzaki41484 жыл бұрын

    Stanley crouch is an armchair intellictual conservative. Miles was an artist. Miles told wynton to get off the stage. Mtume handed stanley his ass on a platter. Miles was always ahead of his time. Were all still playing catch up even 25 years after his death...his acoustic and electric period were all beautiful. My only regret is i often wonder what beautiful music he would be creating if he were still alive today. What a gift he was to all of us. I was lucky enough to see him live two times in the sixties with herbie, wayne, tony, ron and two times in the seventies with bartz, jarrett, michael henderson, liebman etc. I was stunned each time by the beauty of his art. Iam seventy five now so ive seen alot of masters in my time but miles was at the top.

  • @bobblues1158
    @bobblues11582 жыл бұрын

    I miss both of these guys. This discourse is really illuminating.

  • @TomDjll
    @TomDjll9 жыл бұрын

    I hear a shitload of blues in all of Miles' music. You gotta use more than just your ears and your received wisdom about what is "authentic" and "correct" sometimes. Art is about IMAGINATION. Not sure Stanley Crouch gets that.

  • @kenmorley2339

    @kenmorley2339

    2 жыл бұрын

    You do talk tripe , do you not ?

  • @pantherman74kd
    @pantherman74kd7 жыл бұрын

    I was blown away Bitches Brew. Its now number one favorite album.I bought On the Corner in December, 1998. I finally stopped listening to it in November of 1999. At times that's ALL I would listen to.

  • @beatzguy

    @beatzguy

    7 жыл бұрын

    Kenneth Driver same man. I own all of those on vinyl and I go through periods of time where that's all I listen to

  • @oudaram1

    @oudaram1

    5 жыл бұрын

    I hitchhiked 40 miles to buy it the day it came out. If i had to choose one album and throw the rest out, this is the one.

  • @Xavier_Dimoff
    @Xavier_Dimoff2 жыл бұрын

    Mtume’s thinking is so far beyond Crouch, that he managed to make this “debate” a representation of what he was explaining. This speech was not truly meant for the people in the room. The entire point is to inspire the youth, open minded, and future generations. It was not meant to try to get a brick wall to bend like clay.

  • @helgar791
    @helgar7912 жыл бұрын

    Interesting that people would criticize Crouch here for being a poor musician. Yet Stanley played in Black Music Infinity, an explorative music band with such great musicians as Arthur Blythe, David Murray, James Newton and Mark Dresser. Stanley could actually play the drums really well. Mtume was an good keyboardist in an RB band. He also played session music for other R&B artists. His best jazz work was doing explorative jazz with the Mtume Umoja Ensemble with Gary Bartz, Stanley Cowell, Buster Williams and Billy Hart. These two guys weere actually comparable musicians. You may agree with either or not, but lets not pretend that either of these two guys were lesser musicians than the other or that either were world beaters.

  • @squarefellow1
    @squarefellow12 жыл бұрын

    When i first heard return to forever, my mind was not ready for what i was hearing . I grew up on Duke , Basie, etc. Jazz was played every Sunday morning till noon. I hear return to forever by accident changing channels and the knob got stuck on one of those obscure FM stations. It blow my mind. And threw them i started listening to jazz fusion. And i got off the bus when easy listening came along. But i heard Miles through return to forever etc. Miles wasn't afraid of change. Even till this day his life and music is debated among his fans and peers.

  • @charlesislaw
    @charlesislaw5 жыл бұрын

    I appreciate the respectful disagreements

  • @fr1702
    @fr17026 жыл бұрын

    Brother James mad respect and love to you ✊🏾✊🏾✊🏾

  • @motherbrain86
    @motherbrain862 жыл бұрын

    loved mtume in mid 70s live miles, that whole unit is nirvana:lucas,cosey,henderson,fortune,liebman,foster

  • @saj8
    @saj86 жыл бұрын

    Does Stanley Crouch actually believe that Miles Davis went to his grave regretting what he did to help jazz evolve?

  • @mauriciokrebs2913

    @mauriciokrebs2913

    2 жыл бұрын

    lol

  • @gjc82071
    @gjc8207112 жыл бұрын

    I totally understand you & I'm also a musician. I have a love of all things musical & I like nearly all genres of music (although some I like more than others). I can even "appreciate" music that I don't particularly like. Personally I prefer "acoustic" Jazz (1930's - 70's). I worship Oscar Peterson (saw him 2X in concert). I do like some "synthy" jazz & fusion. Stanley Jordan (AMAZING!), Herbie Hancock, Weather Report, etc. My musical preferences alternate randomly with my mood. :-)

  • @moussetache1815
    @moussetache18152 жыл бұрын

    Rest In Peace, James

  • @mjnmjd
    @mjnmjd10 жыл бұрын

    Can't stand these "critics" questioning Mile's musical decisions.....Just shut up and listen and if you don't understand, it's NOT because it's not right or "it's not jazz" it's because you need to learn to open your mind and listen to the leaders because I hate to break it to you they, ( Miles, Coltrane, etc) know a hell of a lot more than you do..I.E. what the hell does Stanley Crouch play?????????

  • @wowserstar

    @wowserstar

    9 жыл бұрын

    He's a failed third rate drummer. Of avant garde too. Personal ax to grind?