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this music makes me *SPIN INFINITLY*
@exangue
4 жыл бұрын
Ah, i see you like Boku No Piko as well
@zawarudo69oof78
4 жыл бұрын
@@exangue nigga tf that's a Jojo reference
@Just2532yd
4 жыл бұрын
ZA WARUDO 69 oof Yes, there’s a stand called In a Silent Way
@zawarudo69oof78
4 жыл бұрын
@@Just2532yd ik that from part 7 it's just like echoes act 2
@truthofdsp
4 жыл бұрын
Glad to see that Obama's a fan now
Imagine having Herbie, Chick, and AND Joe Zawinul play on your album.
@timphelan7543
Жыл бұрын
And the others you didn't mention! All star band!
@terrellholmes2726
Жыл бұрын
Imagine having Steph, Klay, AND Kevin Durant on your team!
I'm old enough to remember when this and Bitch's Brew first came out. A lot of people didn't like it, especially Jazz fans. But that's the difference between a pioneer and a follower. Miles had such status, and street creds, that he didn't have to worry about who did or didn't like it. I used to live across the street from him, and I could see him coming and going on 77th and West End Ave. . He was a jazz man who dressed like Jimi Hendrix, and marched to his own genius drummer. He never allowed himself to get stale. As soon as his fans thought they knew him, he would metamorph into something new. That my friends, is the definition of a true artist (think Picasso}.
@lupcokotevski2907
6 жыл бұрын
He admired the music of Hendrix, and the pop genius Laura Nyro, who was recording her 3rd LP 'New York Tendaberry' at Columbia's NYC studio early 1969 and he would drop in to see her. They did some shows together later (separate performances). Nyro asked him to play on Tendaberry, but he replied 'you've done it all'.
@richardmbowman
6 жыл бұрын
D'Accord, kaysujinkin60.
@coraleibowitz6954
6 жыл бұрын
I agree exactly, katsujinkin! I always see Miles and Picasso together.
@lindapierce2328
6 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the Laura Nyro trivia. She really did do it all. R.I.P.
@BigDaddy-oo7ff
6 жыл бұрын
@cora leibowitz Where do you see them hanging out together? I saw a Warewolf in London at Trader Dicks. His hair was perfect.
Still sounds ahead of its time 50 years later.
The calibre of the musicians on this album is absolutely insane....
One of the greatest lineups in modern jazz history. Everyone on this album is a legend.
@wlove528491
2 жыл бұрын
Look at this fucking lineup...
The people in this band are still influencing young musicians.
Native American koichi and and Dino dio use their powers to attack an Italian cowboy and his crippled friend (America, 1890)
@alisyedhasany6594
4 жыл бұрын
♪Pizza Mozzarella, Pizza Mozzarella, Rella rella rella...♪
@Homunculas
4 жыл бұрын
JoJo rots your brain.
@finismyname2188
4 жыл бұрын
@@Homunculas The fuck? How would it do anything like that?
@EctInc
4 жыл бұрын
@@Homunculas Jojo expands your mind through ja💤
@carlosagrf7895
4 жыл бұрын
Kkkkk nice
Quite possibly the greatest band of music geniuses ever put together...all world class line up.
@cinereus3601
Жыл бұрын
Without a doubt
Jazz music really is one of the purest forms of music. For me it’s about the sound, the texture, the colour, and the shape of the melody and chords. I like it because there’s a lot of implying, empty space where there could be more. But that’s what makes jazz awesome, because your imagination fills that space up.
@johnlemoine5571
Жыл бұрын
Very well said. I just landed on this.
@joaquinortiz9615
10 ай бұрын
Good comment.
@elisavieira737
Ай бұрын
Loving jazz we have a different perspective of life...
@benjamind.gordon
Ай бұрын
Well said! I share the same sentiments.
@eleanorsopwith9806
3 күн бұрын
Well said!
This kind of music makes me happy to be alive.
I can't count how many times I've listened to this album. I haven't heard all of Miles' stuff, but this (and Kind of Blue) are my favorite Miles albums. If I ever have kids, this is what they're listening to.
@trip.6499
8 жыл бұрын
man listen to time after time amazing!! It feels like the notes are talking to you simply amazing!
@theoffering7000
8 жыл бұрын
Listen to Bitches Brew!
This is just another level of musicianship, this is something that gets closer to the perfection of feelings
This was the first time I was exposed to free form jamming. I was a youngster, but I had been playing guitar about 4 years. This album and a little colombian weed really opened up my poor little country mind. A year later I would be in Vietnam. I played a cassette of this for some of my comrades when we had some down time. It really helped relieve the stress.
@markwilensky5547
4 жыл бұрын
Glad Miles helped you get thru Nam!
@johnlemoine5571
Жыл бұрын
DITTO Mark Wilensky. Thanks so much for your words. Sorry that I'm only picking this up now, after three years since your comment. Thank goodness for Bluetooth. This album is new to me, for I have just recently got a phone, and I'm 68 and was lucky not to be there. If I were, I would hang with you. Listening to this gives me an added meaning. Thank you so much.
When I was hospitalized in Detroit ,as a young teenager, Miles Davis was just coming out and his music floored me. It was my first experience with Jazz......when one of the attendants on my floor, heard me listening to Jazz and he brought in some more Jazz, for me to hear and adore. Throughout my childhood, I had heard excellent classical music, because my father was a classical musician. He had taught me all I knew about music and I always loved listening to it........but the Jazz really reeled me in, grabbed my soul and took me to new places!! Miles Davis was one great musician, who took me to even further new “beyonds”. This album always was one of my favorites and it is pure joy to hear it again and again! Thank you for your contribution and sharing, here!!! I love hearing it again and again........it’s so beautiful and never gets old.
@yowzephyr
Жыл бұрын
I usually listen to classical music. But when I got covid and was laid up in bed sick, I found myself having a craving for modern jazz. Day after day I just listened to modern jazz (much of it Miles) and I think it really helped me get thru my illness. The stuff is apparently therapeutic. I don't think classical music would have done it for me at that time.
True Genius creates New Genius! The personnel on this Album when on to become true pioneers in Jazz...Wayne Shorter & and Joe Zawinul created Weather Report, Chick Corea created Return to Forever, John Mclaughlin created the Mahavishnu Orchestra, Tony Williams created Lifetime and Herbie Hancock created the HeadHunters! What a Legacy of Greatness to Lead then Leave Behind! Miles Davis Was and Still Is Miles Ahead of His Time!!!
@Bob-gi2xk
4 жыл бұрын
Yes, good point... True Genius creates New Geniuses. What a monster group this was! And Dave Holland was/is the bassist of choice for numerous jazzers!
@sirjer73
3 жыл бұрын
Groundbreaking personnel at or near their peak. Tony is pretty laid back on this album except when he takes control on the title track toward the crescendo. Never have their been a greater collection of keyboard talent on one album!!!!
@jeffcooper9363
3 жыл бұрын
I like your enthusiasm. Rather than say "True Genius creates New Geniuses" though, my opinion is that Mature Genius attracts Developing Genius, enabling them to leapfrog in a sense to the next dimension of creativity.
@ericbush6124
3 жыл бұрын
The Miles Davis Nursery reads like the Old Testament lineage
One of the greatest albums ever, regardless of genre. Always said if I was stranded on a deserted island and you can only play two albums over and over again, it would be the Allman Brothers Live at Fillmore East and this album. Have worn out both these vinyl copies, so great to hear it remastered. **My wife says Kind of Blue is the best jazz album of all time, hard to argue with. I'm partial to this album and who could go wrong with this keyboard section! Greatest trumpet intro in the electrified era. True gem.....
I Love Miles Davis. He mastered the art of being one's self.
@clembird7837
6 жыл бұрын
that's what trumpet is truly about! woww
There are 25 forward thinking jazz Gods & Miles is 1 of them. After the Big Bang of new experimental jazz music in 1956, arguably 1969/70 may be the last peak creativity & output years. 15 years of true transcendence that inspire me every moment of every day, Thank you a million times, jazz Gods you have made life truly magnificent. Here are the other 24 Gods in my humble opinion, Sun Ra & Arkestra, J. Coltrane, O. Coleman, A. Shepp, Eric Dolphy, Charles Mingus, Cecil Taylor, Sonny Rollins, Don Cherry, Bobby Hutcherson, Andrew Hill, Joe Chambers, Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, Yusef Lateef, George Russell, T. Monk, Freddie Hubbard, Grachan Moncur, Sam Rivers, Roland Kirk, Tony Williams, The Art Ensemble of Chicago.Finally Albert Ayler who died in 1970 & with John Coltranes and Eric Dolphy's untimely & tragic passings the peak was over. Obviously there were many more brilliant jazz musicians & album releases, e.g. Joe Henderson & Sun Ra was amazingly creative and prolific for several more decades. Viva free jazz.
1st time listening this album, right now at 2018, sunday, 7:30h AM. What a beautiful way to wakeup. Thanks King Miles.
The late 60's to the late 70's...what an awesome time for music.And now? It's a parched desert...
@MaestroTJS
4 жыл бұрын
There are some glimmers of hope in classical music right now, at least, compared to the time you're talking about--which was ITS parched desert period, if you ask me. Maybe that can spill over to other genres in the future.
@Sound8VisionVibe
4 жыл бұрын
Actually this is the best time SINCE those times for music, you just dont hear any of it on the radio like you did back then.
@cristianmicu
4 жыл бұрын
real shit started on the turn of new century, year 2000, like a switch, everything in music turned to zero
You can hear and feel "Bitches Brew" silently "cookin' in this music. What an incredible journey Miles takes us on.
@johmstrom3523
5 жыл бұрын
absolutely...
never knew that those guys made an album together. so many geniuses at work, and I'm not disappointed at all.
When your entire character changes in one chapter
@joot474
4 жыл бұрын
I wished he became sort of an ally like Hot Pants
@ebenezeramare1
3 жыл бұрын
Soundman is alt. Universe sandman that Valentine took
@jonahwillis2781
3 жыл бұрын
@@ebenezeramare1 Sadly that's just a fan theory that has never been confirmed within the story or by the author. But maybe Araki intentionally left that plot point ambiguous.
@makiniita
3 жыл бұрын
Yeah sandman disappointed me
The great Dave Holland. A humbling experience to meet the british giant. What great music.
in a silent way...sparks every emotion in me...absolutely transcendental!
My father had a million jazz lps on wax. This was one favorite.
This is one of the greatest albums ever. Miles was a genius, RIP.
@gustavvymetal5950
8 жыл бұрын
+Alex Rincon gustav vymetal prague-this album in my twenties has shaped my live for ever
@tjcolatrella943
4 жыл бұрын
One of the greatest bands ever assembled look at the players!
@garyrouyea8314
4 жыл бұрын
Yes it is...R.I.P. MR. DAVIS...Glad to find someone discussing MILES DAVIS...Hell yeah...
This album is still as beautiful and eerie as the first time I heard it in the early 70's on an 8 Track tape...simply an amazing recording!
@kennethtalbott2233
4 жыл бұрын
i think i still have one of those 8 track recorders somewhere.....
Miles Dewey Davis wrote and played this, and nearly fifty years ago, The man was an absolute genius.
Miles ... one of the best musicians of all time.
I can't believe what the last 38 minutes have done to me! Never heard of this album until today, now it's among my favourites. Thanks for sharing this.
There are trumpeters, but never one that has played like this !
One of his all time masterpieces with a heaven on earth ensemble.
Had the great fortune of seeing Miles in Dallas, in 83 and 85. Unreal passion live...
For a shy guy miles does make a lot of conversation on the third track. Rest in peace mr Davis.
to call it a masterpiece would not be enough or even fair...this has just changed the way music had to be understood, felt an enjoyed from then on...and that was almost half of a century ago...thanks Miles
@hollywoodmusiccompany
5 жыл бұрын
Wow. What an accurate and incredibly well said statement!
@kodykidd8067
4 жыл бұрын
@Frank Heuvelman I'm not sure he was all that modest, one of the best though.
THE BEST rainy day/Late night music
1969 was the single greatest year for music
@fowlae4414
5 жыл бұрын
It's certainly up there. I'd argue 1967 or 1991 are close contenders.
Happy Birthday Miles Davis (May 26, 1926) One of the greatest jazz musicians of all time (from my hometown of St. Louis.)
if this isn't beautiful then nothing. is beautiful
The greatest album ever made in the history of humanity
@hamlettelmah441
7 жыл бұрын
100%
@andym28
7 жыл бұрын
Yeah something about this period makes me feel it's one of the pinnacles of human achievement in art. Everything after this is weak.
@befree8850
7 жыл бұрын
Andy M the wicked era happend right after.
@willeizlini
7 жыл бұрын
and a great album to smoke to, or more
@yggdrasil9039
7 жыл бұрын
I think you are understating it. This is the greatest album that will ever be made in the history of the entire universe.
1969..my first summer in college.......Miles helped me to Grow Up
@jonathanpineda5968
8 жыл бұрын
Grow every time you hear something new Judith Loue.
@michaelsachen2494
8 жыл бұрын
Miles is helping me through my first summer in college 47 years later
@henrytudorpole5803
7 жыл бұрын
Miles helped me through my second summer in college 46 years later
@kevgh3869
7 жыл бұрын
I burned down my old college listening to Miles now he's helping me get through prison 47 years later.
@Jaydit7
7 жыл бұрын
College was Hell, for me......I survived....hope Miles helps you through....
I think the best musicians know how to create an atmosphere with their sound. Allowing the listener to really immerse themselves in the music. This is a perfect example of that.
I snuck into my older brother's room when I was 4 years old in about 1961 and listen to sketches of Spain I love Miles Davis ever since all his incarnations are beautiful
By the way, check out the list of musicians. After playing with Miles, these guys became the vanguard of the Jazz Fusion movement. Groups such as Mahavishnu Orchestra, Return to Forever, and Weather Report all came about because of the seeds planted in This phase of Mile's work. These guys kept Jazz alive for the next 20 years, and still are.
@wildjazz9133
6 жыл бұрын
Don't forget the Headhunters
@davidbarnes3864
5 жыл бұрын
Everybody he touched turned to Gold...
@gregoryformey724
5 жыл бұрын
he created yet again a new genre of music
I remember hearing this played when I was a kid, around the time this album was released. This was one of Miles's greats, showing how he stayed true to his work yet experimented with the new styles coming out at the time.
i love it, perfect
@juliusnepos6013
3 жыл бұрын
Hey
I've no words for this music... may be just thank you.
imagine being a native, then join a horse race without horse and die
@Morty143
3 жыл бұрын
Imagine someone join the same horse race just because some random fortune teller lady told him he is lucky
@bnshitposting2765
3 жыл бұрын
@@Morty143 nice to see u comment in every video I've watched again
@presentlee9403
3 жыл бұрын
@@bnshitposting2765 The comments are coming towards you! So is the forest and the ocean!
@Morty143
3 жыл бұрын
@@bnshitposting2765 thanks :)
@coca9152
3 жыл бұрын
@@Morty143 lmao
Never herd this until last night. Immediately bought it from Itunes. I've got a number of Miles recordings however , I have never come across anyone mentioning 'In a Silent Way'... At 68, I can see all the influence it had on so many artists in the 70's! I've always looked at Miles as the 'Babe Ruth' of Jazz music. Many great but he was the penultimate! When I lived in Mesa, Arizona, I had a patio with a 12 foot tree in front of it. I was playing the 'Kind of Blue' album with my patio screen open. As soon as the first song started a little bird lighted on the tree and for the entire album just chirped away to the music. For the entire album! When the album finished, the little bird flew off. I decided to replay the album, and within a minute that little bird was back on the tree singing along with the music. He stayed for more than half of the album. It was truly a blessing... Amazing...
This is a gorgeous album. As I listened I started to wonder about the creative process involved and looked the album up on Wikipedia. It's very interesting and quite collaborative. It's the result of one three hour studio session, various takes of which were assembled afterward. The whole album is like a warm stimulating bath. Interesting, resigned, beautiful, soothing, intricate, lovely, living, breathing like life, music.
@johnlemoine5571
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for your words. Thank goodness for Bluetooth. It wasn't until recently that I got a phone.
Ethereal yet funky at the same time!!
Oh my goodness! There are no words to explain the beauty of this.
@jacksonh7883
5 жыл бұрын
@Frank Heuvelman Smoooth man
@woorldpresident5963
4 жыл бұрын
Because sandman took them all
@mid7752
4 жыл бұрын
@@woorldpresident5963 lmao
@marvinjohnson1417
4 жыл бұрын
then stop trying
@ethanhill9460
4 жыл бұрын
You did just that. MILES is shaking his head.
When I listen to this music I hear the voice of the great creator wispering the truth of all existance to me like feather in the breeze, floating yet fleeting but there and very much real. Thank You for your insperation Miles, you were one of the greatest channelers of all time.
- First character to appear - Has a noble motivation - Run faster than a horse - Make team with Dio - Refuses to elaborate further - Dies
I almost get a Doors/Jim Morrison vibe from this... Amazing music!
One of the greatest recordings of all-time. Miles is a genius.
@richardmbowman
5 жыл бұрын
Forever in our hearts.....and in our headphones......
This 1969 tune resonates wonderfully in the turbulent world of the pandemic Era of 2020 & 2021. No matter how horrible the Era , jazz brings the message that: life goes on and we are better off than we think. In a silent way, miles brings the correct fitting message decades later. Thank you Mr DAVIS 🙏😊☺😇🤑😎😎😎👍
@johnlemoine5571
Жыл бұрын
Well said, Carl, and I'm glad to be in the company of those who appreciate his music, as well as jazz in general.
A master. A master at his craft.
essential in car music Miles is always getting me there and back I never go anywhere without him
This album and "Kind of Blue" are timeless and never get old. And as good as "Bitches Brew" is "Jack Johnson" is just as good.
Miles was the best of 20th century!!!
Davis from 67' till the end, everything he did was gold
Another Miles' milestone... Thanks Man and to all Musicians....RIP Miles, Joe Zawinul , Tony Williams
This album is very searching......it marks the beginnings of a sea change and a new electronic sound........it explored new territory treading very carefully ......it's the tenderness In it which I like.....it reflected the changing times of the late 60s....it is a milestone if you excuse the pun. For me it turned me inside out when I first heard it and made me see the world differently.
Nothing like this was ever made before or after!
HE HAS THE FLOW OF THE BUSINESS OF LIFE in the city!
Ive been listening to Miles for years... this just blew my head off.... again.
As soon as I hear the opening line it evokes something inside so deep.....such a mellow album
In a silent way is not a silent wave but a sonic wave of beauty.....
Miles....The Man who changed JAZZ a few times in his career....Thanks
my first jazz album. still my favorite after 47 years.
@chqara
7 жыл бұрын
same experience ^_^
@tvsuncanilijek7477
6 жыл бұрын
youre a boss lady i love you
@joshibrahim1537
6 жыл бұрын
Nice
@HerbalistGuybrush
5 жыл бұрын
Haile selassie I you are on every video man
@LPH216
5 жыл бұрын
It is beautiful Amanda Philipp
Daaaamn I didn't know John McLaughlin was on guitar for this album!! Makes me love this album even more, if that's possible. :-).
I was 16 in 1969. The perfect age in the perfect year. Young musician - playing bass & electric guitar. My mind opened when I heard this music. Hasn't closed since. Like Picasso, Miles couldn't stop growing. Even called it a "curse" in his memoirs, but not really. Just tough for the people who couldn't keep up with him. Hell, he started playing with Bird and Dizzy when he was still in college - fugettabouit. The music - esp if you hear the prologue in the "Silent Way" box set. There was a kind of complicated rhumba type procession thru a bunch of chords, then they'd break into what you hear today. Then back to the rhumba. By God's Grace the rhumba went out the window. Miles & Teo (his long-time producer) stuck with the stripped down modal procession. Just off the one, 3 keyboards weaving in and out. Chick, Herbie and Joe Zawinul. And Tony, his over-active drummer. Miles just kept him on the high-hat - no fills, no fancy nothin'. He was like "just keep the time". Like a clock, that's it The rhythm phrasing from Dave Holland was minimal but took the place of drum accents. The whole show was the keyboards making a whole new kinda gumbo. McLaughlin is the star of this session. Comping while solo'ing but never really solo'ing. More like a 4th keyboard - layers, textures, pure intuitive playing - winding apart, coming together. Miles comes in briefly, so beautifully laying out themes on top of the winding bass, keyboards & guitar with Tony on the high-hat wash like a clock keeping time. I'd never heard something so inventive, so captivating, so sensuous and frankly it set a high bar that's never quite been surpassed by anything, anytime since. I guess it's like the 1st time falling in love but it's influenced my music and my art practice ever since. You can see & hear some of that influence at: www.DougFrohman.com and PriorWorld.com.
music of the future, then now and forevermore.
Who’s listening during the coronavirus pandemic panic 2020?
@nickryan6787
4 жыл бұрын
Me here
@philreavis3670
4 жыл бұрын
Yeah, working from home. Perfect music for this moment.
@flowthrupranayama
4 жыл бұрын
SANITY INDUCING MADNESS (duality) by the best ensemble of improvisors ever assembled in studio. Mind power comes from the etheric rainbow of sound waves as a boomerang- artist to and from listener. I improvise better after albums like this turn my cochlear membranes to proper jelly. Are you experienced? See BohemianMemeMusic for some psych guitar instrumental in the raw.
@orlygarcia3922
4 жыл бұрын
In Nicaragua central america,sublime.
@tommylawrence3095
4 жыл бұрын
I'm listening in the coronavirus pandemic panic 2130
That fierce melancholy Miles could conjure inside that horn, and pour it out like a benediction for our ears.
@carlbowles1808
4 жыл бұрын
Well said!
1969! Miles Davis drives us a moment in our universe with musical fuel (without a kind of pollution) . It seems to be, on a silent way. Is it? I doubt about it. I hear a magnificent trumphet!
@johnlemoine5571
Жыл бұрын
Well said John!
Such a great album I got it in 1979
R.I.P. Sandman. You deserved a better treatment than that as a character.
@ar9549
7 жыл бұрын
*Soundman Sandman is what the White Man calls him.
@LinkedSnake
7 жыл бұрын
His stand was actually a sand ability at the beginning of SBR. But it got retconned.
@ar9549
7 жыл бұрын
+LinkedSnake Honestly, Sandman should not have been treated like an antagonist. It would have been cool to see him become some sort of ally like Hot Pants.
@LinkedSnake
7 жыл бұрын
I totally agree. He also deserved to win the SBR.
@ar9549
7 жыл бұрын
+LinkedSnake He was set up to be a main character, but became a minor antagonist. I still don't understand why Araki did that.
Another great album from the genius of Miles Davis. This album is so far haunting sounding. Love Miles work.
I, veteran rock fan, a non-musician, with no real understanding of jazz, LIKES this, in a relaxing way...
The year music changed forever, 1969.
@Riam-sc1ir
4 жыл бұрын
50 years of beautifull music,2019
I can't believe this was recorded in one day. 80 minutes of music cut into this album. I got to know it only a few weeks ago and I can't stop listening.
@cazgerald9471
3 жыл бұрын
Not highly unusual. Two sessions in 1956 resulted in four albums Cookin', Relaxin', Workin' and Steamin' (more accurately Cookin' with the Miles Davis Quintet, Relaxin' with the Miles Davis Quintet, etc.).
I am now 67 years of age. I have listen to Miles since I was in my 20’s, introduced to “the genius” by a friend of mine from long ago. This album definitely stands up to the tests of time.
@ZordaxV
6 жыл бұрын
Nice Ken....Have loved this for a long time. There are a lot of themes/melodies going on....The MAN had much to offer. So he played around....Jammed he good people ....and? Big like!
@MyBubbaMan
5 жыл бұрын
I with u bro
@buzzyhyendee
4 жыл бұрын
same age.Had to see Miles live. 5x 69-74. jaded me for life.
@jasonnstegall
4 жыл бұрын
Actually, virtually ALL of Miles' recorded output stands the test of time. (AND Monk's. AND Brubeck's. AND Coltrane's. AND the MJQ's.)
The very best music is timeless . This is absolutely wonderful ❤️
Creative mind,soul and reflection on the time period !!! Godfather of new sounds that are relevant to this day!!!! Rock,Funk,Soul,Hip Hop,R&B, Country,Punk Rock!!!
Studying for exams while listening to the legendary Miles makes life tolerable
@terrellholmes2726
4 жыл бұрын
And I hope the spirit of Miles blessed you with straight A's!
@buzzyhyendee
4 жыл бұрын
Baby maker.
@BlueBagooKidsSongs
4 жыл бұрын
i used to study to Lush Life in grad school. Same thing.
This is pure genius! Why people nowdays turn their back on some inspirational art like this?
I saw Miles and Weather Report performing this live; totally transporting.
In my opinion, Miles Davis is an icon for generations.....RIP...master of the music
For some reason this really reminds me of Echoes by Pink Floyd, especially its second ACT
@puccicountry2535
4 жыл бұрын
THIS IS A NEW LEVEL OF JOJO REFERENCE
@abdulcortes22
4 жыл бұрын
Ooujojo You know men Run using only your feet
@sergiograndio577
4 жыл бұрын
Now this is jojo reference
@borkerman
4 жыл бұрын
me to
@PAULLONDEN
4 жыл бұрын
Reminds me more of "Borboletta" by Santana.....
Miles was so far ahead of his time. A true genius and fearless innovator. When i worked at Tower Records years ago in San Francisco Carlos Santana came into the store. I was so star struck and asked him if he needed any help. He told me after Miles, Coltrane and Bob Marley what more do i need ? Miles and his music not only enlightened me and my spirit but gave me the inspiration and strength to be my own man. Miles was his own man. He spoke his mind. He along with Malcolm X inspired me to tell it like it is.
@strictlynorton
4 жыл бұрын
Interviewed Carlos for a British music magazine when he was promoting the Shaman album. He was so influenced by Miles. The entire Caravanserai project was Santana's homage to Miles. Cool story btw. I miss record stores man!
@ethanhill9460
4 жыл бұрын
MILES was HIS TIME.
@myrepliesprobablydontmakes9571
4 жыл бұрын
Soz but this is kind of a boring comment like where are the jojo references?
@ethanhill9460
4 жыл бұрын
Miles was a jerk, according to few interviwees. Treated women horribly.. Miles did not speak often for attribution on even music. Your post is so fawning I ask if you"re related to Miles. Gotta own BIRTH OF THE COOL, IN A SILENT WAY, KIND OF BLUE, MILES SMILES, ON THE CORNER.
@dimifisher7942
3 жыл бұрын
You need Kate Bush for sure!
Good melody! It became my favorite damn apache! Running fast in a race
The more I listen to Miles,the further I travel.
@peterbuckland408
3 жыл бұрын
We should all be free,to smoke the Herb.
@johnlemoine5571
Жыл бұрын
Well said, Peter
One of the best albums ever!
@rasuobranislav5060
7 жыл бұрын
The BEST. :)
A pure joy from end to end, Miles Davis's genius and ever a game changer. With an incredible line up of Jazz greats all on top of their game. John McLaughlin especially never sounded better, from that very first chord he colors the entire album with a brilliant performance...this stuff never gets old!
@dudeok5978
8 жыл бұрын
+Tim Francis I agree that this is McLaughlin's finest work.
@hudginsfrp3545
8 жыл бұрын
+Tim Francis My favorite John Mclaighlin record.
@shirleymental4189
8 жыл бұрын
+Tim Francis Indeed. As Mclaughlin tells it, I.a.s.w. was a rather more complex Zawinul composition. Miles turns to John and says (rasps) 'play it like you don't know how to play the guitar'. This left him puzzled, 'what can he mean'? So he stripped it down to a very simple arrangement based on the E chord that every beginner learns. As he say's 'Miles could get things out of you that you didn't know were there'.
@timages
8 жыл бұрын
+Johnny Solipsis I've read that before, that famous quote John McLaughlin attributes to Miles Davis but never knew it was about In A Silent Way. There's a lot written about the controversy this music created when it was released. Jazz critics hated it, and Rock critics loved it if you can believe that! Davis first met McLaughlin the night before the session, never heard him play, and invited him to come to the recording. I particularly like his solo on the first track, Davis's Shhh/Peaceful. There's a timelessness to Album along with it's uniqueness, even till today.
@Syncopator
8 жыл бұрын
The interesting thing about this story is it suggests that Mclaughlin didn't really quite understand what Miles was getting at-- I think it's perfectly clear, what Miles wanted was for him to turn off the part of his brain that thinks it "knows" anything about what to play and run on raw instinct-- but what John actually ended up doing, rather than let go and play from pure instinct & inspiration, is to attempt to analyze what a beginner might do-- it's that analysis that Miles was trying to shake him out of I think, and while he got something different out of him, it really seems to me that John completely missed the point. Then again, when I listen to some of John's work, in particular, "Miles Beyond" from Birds of Fire, I have *no* idea what he's doing there, it's so "out there", I suspect maybe he did finally "get it". As John once said to another player, "if I knew what you were doing, I'd steal it." That's how I feel about "Miles Beyond"...
Miles was celebrating my birth in 1969 thank you miles :)
Miles Davis just puts you in another World with his music.