Posted on 06/07/2016 11:32:17 AM PDT by Eddie01
Commemorating the 90th birthday of Miles Davis and Miles Ahead, a biopic of the iconic jazz trumpeters life we have the new", Davis-inspired album Everythings Beautiful, a conceptually confused but captivating virtual duet with trendsetting pianist and producer Robert Glasper.
The late-1990s remix series Panthalassa has aged badly, and Glasper is the obvious choice to move Davis into the 21st century he is a credible jazz innovator himself, with enough crossover success to reach a mainstream audience.
Rather than delivering the straight remixes he was initially asked to oversee, Glasper raided the Davis archive, sampling choice nuggets as jumping off points for a new series of compositions.
Naturally, he brings along a packed contacts book, calling in guest turns from a host of notables, including Erykah Badu and Stevie Wonder.
Despite drawing readily from Daviss dense, frenetic electric 1970s work, the mood here is one of chilled intensity mellow, ethereal, R&B grooves not dissimilar in mood to Glaspers Grammy-winning breakout Black Radio.
Sourced from an In A Silent Way outtake, Ghetto Walkin features Bilal crooning soulfully over hip-hop beats and a vamping Fender Rhodes.
In Violets, Phonte raps on a looped outtake of pianist Bill Evans fluffing the intro to the ballad Blue in Green, from the 1959 landmark album Kind of Blue.
The purest duet is Badus star turn on Maiysha (So Long), a moody 1974 vamp recast as a longing, bossa-nova lilt, with Daviss wilting, wah-wah trumpet floating over the vocal.
Its a rare reference, with Daviss horn all but missing in action (as is Glaspers piano, featuring in just two solos). Instead of clean quotes, samples are subtle and inventive opening invitation Talking S*** combines studio clips of Davis instructing his sidemen into one flowing monologue or manifesto.
Funk-rock jam Im Leaving You is built around a clip of Davis intoning wait a minute". Driven by a layer of guitar wails from 1980s collaborator John Scofield, it sounds most like something Davis himself might have recorded.
The LPs second-half moves into darker, jazzier territory. A straightish cover of modal masterpiece Milestones mixes wah guitar and block-rocking beats to alarming effect. Wonder turns up on haunting closer Right on Brotha, spiralling out the melody to Daviss Nefertiti on harmonica. Closest in sound to the source material is spooky 1970 instrumental Little Church, here dealt additional psychedelia and a wordless vocal. It is, of course, tempting to wonder what Davis would have made of it all one likes to imagine an alternative universe where he and Glasper might even have collaborated.
But the truth is, outweighing even his restless spirit was Daviss narcissism, suspicion and spite.
As it is, this virtual duo offers a fleeting glimpse of synthesis, which fails to truly grasp the genius of either man and for that, only one of the pair can be blamed.
Gimme Clifford Brown instead.
I believe it was Miles Davis who said if he had an hour to live, he’d spend it strangling a white man.
Just play “Kind of Blue”, that should be enough on its’ own.
Correct.
Sometimes when remembering a heroin addled jazz musician, you just can’t win.
I’ll take Yanni and Zamfir any day.
That’s a lot nicer then what the pos said to Nancy Reagan when she asked him what he did to get to be invited to the White house for dinner.
The douche answered, All you did was F the president.
real class.
Blech. Any jazz after the mid forties is noise. Discordant squealing that when it gets back to the actual song people applause ...... It’s the Picaso modern art of music.
I’ll take Rock, R&B and Delta/Chicago Blues any day.
How about Art Pepper?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wPn7TERvg0Q
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sQPh4f9wrqk
I bought the CD for that and listened to it a couple of times. Good stuff I guess, I’m not a big jazz guy. Pretty out there.
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