Miles DAVIS
(1926 – 1991)
«Jazz is an Uncle Tom word. They should stop using that word… just [call it] music, man.»
Both a musical chameleon constantly on the lookout for new sounds and an inflexible personality who always demanded the respect (and the fees!) that were his due, Miles Davis (1926-1991) accompanied - and often anticipated - the evolution of black American music for almost half a century. In his final years, he became something more than just a star: a true myth.
The more he seemed to play only for himself, the more his aura grew. The influence of Miles Davis on the music of his time is inversely proportional to the parsimony of his trumpet playing. From 1944 until his death, Miles participated, successively and sometimes simultaneously, in all the revolutions of the blue note: pioneer of bebop alongside Charlie Parker, inventor of cool jazz (Birth of the Cool), genius of film music (Lift to the Scaffold), great master of hard-bop at the head of his various quintets, hero of orchestral jazz thanks to Gil Evans' arrangements (Sketches of Spain), forerunner of electronic music (In A Silent Way), precursor of jazz-rock (Bitches Brew), wizard of jazz-funk (Dark Magus), and finally, at the end of his career, icon of a universal fusion between jazz and its pop or even hip-hop derivatives!
Miles is also - and perhaps above all - an extraordinary talent scout, a leader with unparalleled flair. With each new adventure, he picks the musicians best able to do justice to his creative vision: John Coltrane, Bill Evans, Wayne Shorter, Tony Williams, Chick Corea, Herbie Hancock, Dave Holland, Keith Jarrett, John McLaughlin, Marcus Miller or Joe Zawinul have all joined Miles as promising talents, as diamonds in the rough. And they all became stars as soon as they left him...
Miles Dewey Davis III was born in East St. Louis, Illinois, into a relatively affluent middle-class black family. His father was a successful dentist, his mother a housewife who trained as a music teacher. The teenager has a gift for the trumpet: his parents finance his enrolment at the prestigious Institute of Musical Art in New York (now the Juilliard School). For a year, he studies during the day and goes to jazz clubs at night. At 18, he meets his idols Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker. The latter invites him to replace Dizzy in his band and Miles drops out of school. "If I had stayed in school longer, I would have ended up playing like a white man," he said.
His muted trumpet playing, seemingly ill-suited to the feverish runs of bebop, is precisely what makes him unique and instantly recognisable. His reputation grows rapidly. At the end of the 1940s, he tours Europe for the first time. In Paris, he meets Juliette Gréco, with whom he has an affair. He struggles after returning to the United States, sinks into drugs, and barely escapes with his life. His health would suffer until his death. In 1955, a rising star of jazz, he signs an exclusive contract with Columbia, which gives him complete creative freedom. Miles alternates between small band records and four albums of orchestral jazz arranged by Gil Evans, which are highly acclaimed by the public and the specialist press.
1959 sees the release of Kind of Blue, a modal and impressionistic masterpiece in which his melancholic trumpet works wonders. The album went on to become one of the best-selling albums in the history of jazz (over five million copies). At the same time, with its libertarian approach to improvisation, the free jazz movement shatters the established musical order. Not interested at all, the trumpeter prefers to refine the traditional formula of the trumpet-saxophone-piano-bass-drums quintet, until he reaches a quasi-telepathic perfection with the band comprising Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter and Tony Williams.
Having reached the pinnacle of hard-bop, Miles Davis finds himself in a stylistic impasse. Conscious that the public's appetite for jazz is inexorably declining in favour of rock and pop, Miles gets up to date: he introduces guitars, bass and up to three electric keyboards into his new group. The trumpeter also swaps his impeccable suits for increasingly eccentric, colourful and funky stage outfits. Above all, he definitively abandons the last formal remnants of "mainstream" jazz for a sound closer to rock: dark, violent, declined in long uninterrupted sequences with incantatory improvisations worthy of a voodoo ceremony.
His regular fans struggle to keep up with him, but his band is a hit with a younger audience at rock venues and festivals. The album Bitches Brew hits the charts and sells a million copies. But in 1975, the trumpeter's drug problems and failing health force him to withdraw from the music scene for five years.
His third wife, the actress Cicely Tyson, helps him out of this bad patch. He returns to the forefront in 1981 with the release of the album The Man With The Horn. Until his death ten years later, with Miles now favouring a more accessible music, between funk and pop, he tours continuously in front of an ever-growing audience. He covers Cyndi Lauper's Time After Time and Michael Jackson's Human Nature, collaborates with Prince, Toto and Zucchero. He also starts painting at the instigation of his last partner, the artist Jo Gelbard.
Miles Davis moves from Columbia to Warner in 1985, but the change of label does not affect his new "universal" approach. From 1984 onwards, the trumpeter plays every year (except 1987) at the Montreux Jazz Festival. It was there, in July 1991, at the instigation of Quincy Jones, that Miles returns to his past for the first and only time in his career, playing excerpts from the famous arrangements that Gil Evans had written for him over 30 years earlier. Two months later, the trumpeter dies in California of complications from pneumonia. Released after his death, the album Doo-Bop, overseen by hip-hop producer Easy Mo Bee, marks a final shift for Miles, towards rap and acid jazz.
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Miles Davis is an American jazz composer and trumpeter.
Miles Davis, Lyon
1983
CHF 690.–
Miles Davis, Lyon
1983
SoldMiles Davis, Lyon
1983
CHF 470.–
Miles Davis, Lyon
1983
CHF 330.–
Miles Davis, Lyon
1983
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Miles Davis, Montreux
1984
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Miles Davis, Montreux
1984
CHF 590.–
Miles Davis, Montreux
1985
CHF 450.–
Miles Davis & Darryl Jones, Montreux
1985
CHF 1420.–
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1985
CHF 530.–
Miles Davis, Montreux
1985
CHF 330.–
Miles Davis, Montreux
1985
Price upon request
Miles Davis & Darryl Jones, Montreux
1985
CHF 1420.–
Miles Davis & Steve Thornton, Nice
1986
CHF 790.–
Bob Berg, Adam Holzman, Vincent WilburnJr et Felton Crew, Nice
1986
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Miles Davis, Nice
1986
CHF 275.–
Miles Davis, Nice
1986
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Vincent Wilburn & Al Foster, Nice
circa 1986
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Felton Crews & Erin Davis, Nice
1986
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Miles Davis & Steve Thornton, Nice
1986
CHF 790.–
Miles Davis, Lausanne
1987
CHF 560.–
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1987
CHF 920.–
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1987
CHF 1150.–
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1987
CHF 830.–
Miles Davis
circa 1987
CHF 890.–
Miles Davis
circa 1987
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1987
CHF 1150.–
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1987
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1987
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1987
CHF 460.–
Miles Davis, Cologne
1987
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Philarmonie, avant le concert de Miles Davis, Cologne
1987
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1987
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Miles Davis, Adam Holzman
1987
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Miles Davis, "Foley" McCreary
1987
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Miles Davis
1987
CHF 550.–
Miles Davis
1987
CHF 590.–
Miles Davis, Darryl Jones
1987
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Miles Davis, tournée 87
1987
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Miles Davis, tournée 87
1987
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Miles Davis, tournée 87
1987
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Miles Davis, Marseille
1987
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Miles Davis & Ricky Wellman, Marseille
1987
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Miles Davis, Lausanne
1987
CHF 920.–
Miles Davis
circa 1987
CHF 1450.–
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1987
CHF 830.–
Miles Davis
circa 1987
CHF 1050.–
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1987
CHF 1750.–
Miles Davis & Foley McCreary, Montreux
1988
CHF 1550.–
Miles Davis, Miramas
1988
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Miles Davis, Miramas
1988
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Miles Davis, Miramas
1988
CHF 490.–
"Foley" McCreary, Lido di Camaiore
1988
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Miles Davis, Lido di Camaiore
1988
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Miles Davis, Lido di Camaiore
1988
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Miles Davis - tournée 88, Aix-en-Provence
1988
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Darryl Jones, Miramas
1988
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Miles Davis, tournée
circa 1988
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Miles Davis & Foley McCreary, Montreux
circa 1988
CHF 1550.–
Miles Davis, Budapest
1989
CHF 620.–
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1989
CHF 1090.–
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1989
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1989
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1989
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1989
CHF 330.–
Kenny Garrett, Graz
1989
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"Foley" McCreary, Budapest
1989
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Miles Davis, tournée 1989, Budapest
1989
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Miles Davis & Kei Akagi
1989
CHF 360.–
Miles Davis & Kei Akagi
1989
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Miles Davis & John Bigham, Lausanne
1989
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Miles Davis, Richard Patterson, Nice
1989
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Ricky Wellman, Aix-en-Provence
1989
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Miles Davis, Montreux Jazz Festival
1989
CHF 960.–
Miles Davis, Nyon
1990
CHF 260.–
Miles Davis & Erin Davis, Salon-de-Provence
1990
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Miles Davis, Montreux et Paris
1991
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Miles Davis, Paris
1991
CHF 1750.–
Miles Davis, Paris
1991
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Miles Davis, Paris
1991
CHF 190.–
Miles Davis, Paris
1991
CHF 270.–
Herbie Hancock & Al Foster, Paris
1991
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Herbie Hancock & Joe Zawinul, Paris
1991
CHF 270.–
Miles Davis & Herbie Hancock, Paris
1991
CHF 330.–
Miles Davis, Paris
1991
Price upon request
Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea & Bill Evans, Paris
1991
CHF 270.–
Miles Davis & Darryl Jones, Paris
1991
Price upon request
Miles Davis, rencontre au sommet, Paris
1991
CHF 330.–
Miles Davis, rencontre au sommet, Paris
1991
CHF 330.–
Miles Davis, rencontre au sommet, Paris
1991
Price upon request
Miles Davis, Joe Zawinul, Wayne Shorter, Paris
1991
CHF 390.–
Miles Davis, Paris
1991
CHF 460.–
Miles Davis, Paris
1991
CHF 1750.–