la banda completa de ese dia en Oslo :Miles Davis (trompeta), Gary Bartz (saxo soprano, alto, saxo), Keith Jarrett (piano Fender Rhodes, órgano Fender Contempo), Michael Henderson (bajo eléctrico), Ndugu Leon Chancler (batería), Charles Don Alias (conga , percusión), James Mtume Forman (conga, percusión)….EN UN MUNDO profundo , búsqueda de música y de un lirismo sin pausa ( siguiendo a bird , a coltrane ) …Miles , rompiendo los limites del mundo , "un camino" fuera de lo mismo , de la rutina de confort de ese momento …."UN CAMINO" QUE SE RECONSTRUYE , TAMBIEN , DESDE AHORA , al oírlo en estas horas
Spambots aside I think you're probably right, although I would expand the definition of "Miles' electric period" to include Miles in the Sky (or earlier, whenever the electric keys started) as well as everything up until he passed. The guy continued to evolve and although I personally don't listen to as much of Scofield/Stern as I do the earlier guitarists I think Miles knew what was best for his band until the end. I don't think there's anything of his I don't like but everything modal that he did is super important for me personally as a lowly rock guitarist lol
I think the 2nd great quintet is the apex of his career, but the "electric" period is unfairly overlooked and dismissed. Ken Burns' "Jazz" docu-series contained some of the most nasty, biased comments about, not only Miles' fusion efforts, but Cecil Taylor's work as well. The only real problem I have about Miles' 70's albums is that 99% of them are live recordings. I would love to hear what Miles and the 70's ensembles could have cooked up in the studio.
I'm sure I am not alone in saying this: WE MISS YOU MILES! There are so many reminders on UA-cam of the great man's talent now. There is no other musician quite like him: he was magical, mesmerising and sometimes maddening but never dull. This is a great upload, reminding us of a wonderful time in jazz history, a time when there was music being created that made your hairs stand on end far more regularly than now. Thank you symbolkid.
Can you image that every night for 40 years Miles played with the greatest conveyors of our culture. He listened, directed, and created a musical vocabulary that changed the world. The music he created and the musicians he as associated stand on a library of cultural monuments that simply can not be imitated by any forces in the universe. No matter how sophisticated and advance civilizations are that exist outside of our dominion the products of Miles’ achievements will always be viewed and studied with awe. To feel the majesty of his musical excursions has been an admission ticket to the wonders of humanity’s legacy.
Honestly Miles is the godfather of this 30 years from now this music will be etch in our minds,I saw him play when he came back after 7yr hatius at indigo blues, & the pier in Manhattan in pouring rain for 30 mins of the show it pour back turn and played his Ass off thanks for the memories🍷🍷
What an impressive change Miles went through: only four years before he was in Europe with his second great quintet, playing Standards and wearing suits.
The wonder of our universe contains many things that are unexplainable and this music is part of that in a slice of time....that electric piano solo is just amazing and so melancholic going into so many different directions
Amazing footage. Also amazing that this was recorded the night before Keith Jarrett went into the studio in the same city to record his debut solo piano album for ECM, "Facing You"
Miles Davis - Trumpet Gary Bartz - Saxophone Keith Jarrett - Keyboards Mike Henderson - Bass Leon Chandler - Drums Don Alias - Percussion James "Mtume" Forman - Percussion
Yeah this era wasn't captured enough. Obviously there's plenty of his late era funk fusion stuff, but this is a more subdued and musically grounded style of jamming than his really atonal harsher stuff.
I like this 1 keyboard lineup because without Chic on rhodes,, Jarrett was able to get off that harsh sounding organ miles had him playing and play some more conventional elec piano/rhodes himself and REALLY express himself much more. His playing and effect over the mood here, for example, is sublime. Much more musical than some of his late-period fusion stuff.
@@kevinr.3542 you realize that Keith continued to play that Fender Combo organ until he left Miles right? He played some of his finest riffs and comping on it during this entire 1971 tour
This is slow to develop but the close up camera work is some of the best of Miles, in my opinion. Great to see him using the wah pedal. Keys and sax are great in this clip.
Обожаю Майлза Дэвиса. Майлз Дэвис - непревзойденный джазовый трубач. Много лет назад я купила дивиди о нём и его коллективе. Частный самолёт приземлился, семья человека, который занимается отстрелом динго, концерт группы Майлза Дэвиса в этих пустынных местах, возвращение коллектива Майлза домой, немного о жизни Майлза вне сцены. Одолжила этот диск, чтобы посмотреть, другому такому же фанату Майлза, как и я, и диск "ушёл". Хорошо, что сейчас есть ютуб, где Майлза Дэвиса можно смотреть и слушать бесконечно.
That's James Mtume, son of the great saxophonist, Jimmy Heath. James Mtume was one of the great percussionists of the early jazz fusion period and was the founder and leader of one of the great mid 1970s funk groups, MTUME. James Mtume's uncle is the great jazz bassist Percy Heath, and his uncle is Albert "Tootie" Heath, drummer of the Modern Jazz Quartet with Milt Jackson, John Lewis, Albert "Tootie" Heath and Percy Heath, and was one of the greatest and classiest jazz groups in American music and jazz history. James Mtume comes from a rich legacy of jazz history. Perhaps you should try be a little more respectful with your comments. I mean, you were the one here watching James Mtume play with Miles Davis on European television in this amazing band.
@CHIP STERN- I saw an earlier version of this band with Jack DeJohnette, Henderson on Bass, Bartz sax, jarrett keys, and miles on electric trumpet, no percussions @ Shelly 's Manne Hole - spring 1971- los angeles,calif. heavy jack johnson music & the stuff off the Live stuff from New York club.
@FatoushDosEmirados Actually, no. There are two percussionists here: the guy sitting down is Don Alias and the guy standing is James Mtume Foreman - son of legendary HardBop tenor saxophonist Jimmy Heath. They are both American. Airto Moreira, played in the band until late 1970 or early 1971.
Hey...E.M. -- y'know, I had to think about it awhile ago..I wish Don could've played with Miles longer, in that period, because other than the fact of who Mtume was (the son of Miles' Best Friend/the closest to Miles in the band), AND the fact that Miles always wanted to TEACH younger Musicians...Airto & Don were MILES ABOVE what James was able to bring forth. I'm sorry..
This is not "Funky Tonk." On JACK JOHNSON it was part of a side B suite called "Yesternow." Wonderful stuff. I heard this same band with Jack DeJohnette on drums some 40 years ago. I love Jarrett's Fender Rhodes solo towards the end. For someone who hated electric keys he certainly elicited a wonderful, original sound.
Keith recently said to me that he does not heat electric instruments. He just thinks they should be put in the right context for it to work with the music.
i love the beat that Michael Henerson and Leon Chandler introduce. this performance would be so much more relevant today if it weren't for the ceaseless rattling and shaking of the rhythm instruments. in my opinion.
he nevere realized that his perfect partner in tis period would have been Ornette ... I've always wondered about such a partnership.. even for a recording project and just one tour. I know it can sound weird, and that probabily Miles hated Ornette, nevertheless I think it could have been a great encounter
Yeah, not to diss Mr. Jarrett(?) but he was in a difft world there and then from where that tune was dposed to go. Herbie did it first(?) And what kinda equipment id Michael Henderson using?? What a bass sound on that album?? WOW!!
A bass player friend told me it was a Fender Jazz bass--popular with funk players of the time--on the Jack Johnson album, but I couldn't tell what kind of amp he was using. I'm not sure it made a difference, the Fender Jazz was known for its big fat sound.
Everyone is talking about Keith, as they should. Perhaps the most interesting thing is that Keith, who, after this band, will never play another electric/electronic instrument and has said the only reason he played electric then was for Miles, is, as bassist Michael Henderson has said, was having as good a time as anyone doing this.
@@trombonisteau "keith j is a great player, but annoying as hell to watch." he's got - you can agree more or less with him, but the point is not to have hears or not. I can't see Hendrix on stage... I find him annoying (much more than Jarret - whose movements I think are spontaneous) and still think he was a great musician (much more than Jarret ...)
Visually Keith Jarrett got everything wrong - the clothes, the hair, the grimacing - all deeply, deeply, naff. But the playing atoned for a multitude of sins...
la banda completa de ese dia en Oslo :Miles Davis (trompeta), Gary Bartz (saxo soprano, alto, saxo), Keith Jarrett (piano Fender Rhodes, órgano Fender Contempo), Michael Henderson (bajo eléctrico), Ndugu Leon Chancler (batería), Charles Don Alias (conga , percusión), James Mtume Forman (conga, percusión)….EN UN MUNDO profundo , búsqueda de música y de un lirismo sin pausa ( siguiendo a bird , a coltrane ) …Miles , rompiendo los limites del mundo , "un camino" fuera de lo mismo , de la rutina de confort de ese momento …."UN CAMINO" QUE SE RECONSTRUYE , TAMBIEN , DESDE AHORA , al oírlo en estas horas
Superb. Jarrett is on fire. I think Miles electric period is the most interesting.
I find it much worse than his 50s and 60s, yet most expressive
It's my favorite period as well, so singular and heavy
@@zdunas23 I'm sort of 50/50.
Peace to all.
Spambots aside I think you're probably right, although I would expand the definition of "Miles' electric period" to include Miles in the Sky (or earlier, whenever the electric keys started) as well as everything up until he passed. The guy continued to evolve and although I personally don't listen to as much of Scofield/Stern as I do the earlier guitarists I think Miles knew what was best for his band until the end. I don't think there's anything of his I don't like but everything modal that he did is super important for me personally as a lowly rock guitarist lol
I think the 2nd great quintet is the apex of his career, but the "electric" period is unfairly overlooked and dismissed. Ken Burns' "Jazz" docu-series contained some of the most nasty, biased comments about, not only Miles' fusion efforts, but Cecil Taylor's work as well. The only real problem I have about Miles' 70's albums is that 99% of them are live recordings. I would love to hear what Miles and the 70's ensembles could have cooked up in the studio.
I'm sure I am not alone in saying this: WE MISS YOU MILES! There are so many reminders on UA-cam of the great man's talent now. There is no other musician quite like him: he was magical, mesmerising and sometimes maddening but never dull. This is a great upload, reminding us of a wonderful time in jazz history, a time when there was music being created that made your hairs stand on end far more regularly than now. Thank you symbolkid.
Mr. Davis is a genius of putting right people in the right place on the right time
Can you image that every night for 40 years Miles played with the greatest conveyors of our culture. He listened, directed, and created a musical vocabulary that changed the world. The music he created and the musicians he as associated stand on a library of cultural monuments that simply can not be imitated by any forces in the universe. No matter how sophisticated and advance civilizations are that exist outside of our dominion the products of Miles’ achievements will always be viewed and studied with awe. To feel the majesty of his musical excursions has been an admission ticket to the wonders of humanity’s legacy.
Honestly Miles is the godfather of this 30 years from now this music will be etch in our minds,I saw him play when he came back after 7yr hatius at indigo blues, & the pier in Manhattan in pouring rain for 30 mins of the show it pour back turn and played his Ass off thanks for the memories🍷🍷
THE GREATEST OF THEM ALL 1926-1991
-Musician Magazine
What an impressive change Miles went through: only four years before he was in Europe with his second great quintet, playing Standards and wearing suits.
The wonder of our universe contains many things that are unexplainable and this music is part of that in a slice of time....that electric piano solo is just amazing and so melancholic going into so many different directions
Amazing footage. Also amazing that this was recorded the night before Keith Jarrett went into the studio in the same city to record his debut solo piano album for ECM, "Facing You"
Miles Davis - Trumpet
Gary Bartz - Saxophone
Keith Jarrett - Keyboards
Mike Henderson - Bass
Leon Chandler - Drums
Don Alias - Percussion
James "Mtume" Forman - Percussion
Keith Jarrett is a creative genius. Listen to his mesmerizing solo towards the end. Pure joy.
Btw, Keith hated electric pianos but Miles wanted a Fender Rhodes. You didn’t argue with Miles.
Two geniuses. they both heard different versions of songs in their head but you can never doubt Miles vision 🤣
Keith Jarrett, wow. This is classic Miles. Wish the studio albums were like this . . .
Yeah this era wasn't captured enough. Obviously there's plenty of his late era funk fusion stuff, but this is a more subdued and musically grounded style of jamming than his really atonal harsher stuff.
I Been wanting to her this live for ever thanks for posting "Jack Johnson" lp.is one of my favorites kick ass album thank you,thank you🍷🍷
Keith Jarrett and a Rhodes= PERFECTION
The band with Miles: Keith Jarrett, Michael Henderson, Gary Bartz, Don Alias, Ndugu and Mtume.
I like this 1 keyboard lineup because without Chic on rhodes,, Jarrett was able to get off that harsh sounding organ miles had him playing and play some more conventional elec piano/rhodes himself and REALLY express himself much more. His playing and effect over the mood here, for example, is sublime. Much more musical than some of his late-period fusion stuff.
@@kevinr.3542 you realize that Keith continued to play that Fender Combo organ until he left Miles right? He played some of his finest riffs and comping on it during this entire 1971 tour
This is slow to develop but the close up camera work is some of the best of Miles, in my opinion. Great to see him using the wah pedal. Keys and sax are great in this clip.
Bass line is dope...it's an interpolation of James Brown's 'Say It Loud...I'm Black and I'm Proud'
51 year now still 🔥
I love this mood completely,,,, wish i could be one,,,, so good
Miles the boxer,miles the dresser.
Oh!! Yeah he plays trumpet :-) :-)
No 'shredding' on that stage. Just music making. A refreshing contrast to the jazz circus acts predominant today.
Thanks for this. Any chance to see and hear Gary Bartz is deeply appreciated.
Simply a phenomenal musician! His sound comes from the mud of Mississippi and the musical joints of Baltimore. A stylist with few peers.
Gary Bartz was so cool-looking. I wish he hadn't had so much of the background vocals on his 70's albums.
Обожаю Майлза Дэвиса.
Майлз Дэвис - непревзойденный джазовый трубач.
Много лет назад я купила дивиди о нём и его коллективе. Частный самолёт приземлился, семья человека, который занимается отстрелом динго, концерт группы Майлза Дэвиса в этих пустынных местах, возвращение коллектива Майлза домой, немного о жизни Майлза вне сцены.
Одолжила этот диск, чтобы посмотреть, другому такому же фанату Майлза, как и я, и диск "ушёл".
Хорошо, что сейчас есть ютуб, где Майлза Дэвиса можно смотреть и слушать бесконечно.
спасибо, что напомнили! саундрек к Динго - одна из последних записей Дэвиса, интересно его послушать
@@symbolkid Спасибо за публикацию видео с Майлзом Дэвисом.
This is the one! Intense.
I played with miles,man
I was the triangle player
That's James Mtume, son of the great saxophonist, Jimmy Heath.
James Mtume was one of the great percussionists of the early jazz fusion period and was the founder and leader of one of the great mid 1970s funk groups, MTUME. James Mtume's uncle is the great jazz bassist Percy Heath, and his uncle is Albert "Tootie" Heath, drummer of the Modern Jazz Quartet with Milt Jackson, John Lewis, Albert "Tootie" Heath and Percy Heath, and was one of the greatest and classiest jazz groups in American music and jazz history. James Mtume comes from a rich legacy of jazz history. Perhaps you should try be a little more respectful with your comments. I mean, you were the one here watching James Mtume play with Miles Davis on European television in this amazing band.
Great band in good mood
Thanks for the upload//////AMZING STUFF!
thanks for posting this
Miles is the shit hella cool ... Nobody told Miles what to do.
It gets no better...
@CHIP STERN- I saw an earlier version of this band with Jack DeJohnette, Henderson on Bass, Bartz sax, jarrett keys, and miles on electric trumpet, no percussions @ Shelly 's Manne Hole - spring 1971- los angeles,calif.
heavy jack johnson music & the stuff off the Live stuff from New York club.
+Robert Carmack the club was in DC. the cellar door...
Tha's cool, bro'.
I fucking love this track man when Keith took it over the bass didn’t even know what to do what an amazing solo
:30 thats some beautiful triangle work
Ma formation préférée à c ette période 70*71
Miles Davis un gigante del jazz de la mitad del siglo 20
@FatoushDosEmirados Actually, no. There are two percussionists here: the guy sitting down is Don Alias and the guy standing is James Mtume Foreman - son of legendary HardBop tenor saxophonist Jimmy Heath. They are both American. Airto Moreira, played in the band until late 1970 or early 1971.
Hey...E.M. -- y'know, I had to think about it awhile ago..I wish Don could've played with Miles longer, in that period, because other than the fact of who Mtume was (the son of Miles' Best Friend/the closest to Miles in the band), AND the fact that Miles always wanted to TEACH younger Musicians...Airto & Don were MILES ABOVE what James was able to bring forth. I'm sorry..
This tune is called Yesternow - from The Tribute to Jack Johnson album.
The triangle player is a virtuoso..underrated triangle solo
This is not "Funky Tonk." On JACK JOHNSON it was part of a side B suite called "Yesternow." Wonderful stuff. I heard this same band with Jack DeJohnette on drums some 40 years ago. I love Jarrett's Fender Rhodes solo towards the end. For someone who hated electric keys he certainly elicited a wonderful, original sound.
well they fixed the title, i guess
Keith recently said to me that he does not heat electric instruments. He just thinks they should be put in the right context for it to work with the music.
jack johnsons quite an underrated album if you ask me
Jarrett!!! Wow!!!!!
exquisite post symbolkid
fckn timeless
Yes...Yes...YES!!!ternow!
Sounds like being in nyc at 4am and lost in reverie))))
Nobody is attempting the wah wah and guitar pedal today on trumpet. It's hard to try and master. But Miles did
Listen to Roy Hargrove, RH Factor!
Two words... Keith Jarrett!
This Brother on the keys has some interesting posturing. Miles looked allured! LOL
+John White know you're history. this the great keith jarrett. he always become very emotionally involved in each piece...he is an artist even then..
Jarrett is white lol.
church of Keith Jarrett. part of the input/growth of this band. It does get better..
Seriously though.. Interesting how he keeps his pinkie gnarled.. He uses it very little actually.
i love the beat that Michael Henerson and Leon Chandler introduce. this performance would be so much more relevant today
if it weren't for the ceaseless rattling and shaking of the rhythm instruments. in my opinion.
great
💐🥀
🌸🌱❤️😀
👍
"STOP THE PRESSES! I'M KEITH JARRETT AND I'M PLAYING NOW.! THIS IS A VERY BIG DEAL!!
🌱💙🥀😀
Powerful Shit....
he nevere realized that his perfect partner in tis period would have been Ornette ... I've always wondered about such a partnership.. even for a recording project and just one tour. I know it can sound weird, and that probabily Miles hated Ornette, nevertheless I think it could have been a great encounter
Actually Miles came to appreciate Ornette by this time and incorporated some of Ornette’s philosophies into his own music.
Makes you wonder why anyone would play music sitting absolutely still
🙄🌱🌾💙
Ye, this was wonderful - but without at least one of the 2 funky original parts - Yesternow is not complete for me...
Keith Jarrett’s having a seizure
Yeah, not to diss Mr. Jarrett(?) but he was in a difft world there and then from where that tune was dposed to go. Herbie did it first(?) And what kinda equipment id Michael Henderson using?? What a bass sound on that album?? WOW!!
get some ears, BRUH
A bass player friend told me it was a Fender Jazz bass--popular with funk players of the time--on the Jack Johnson album, but I couldn't tell what kind of amp he was using. I'm not sure it made a difference, the Fender Jazz was known for its big fat sound.
1:25 keith jarrett wtf???
Thanks Keith for saving me from Miles
I still prefer Chick... pure music without all the histrionics and annoying grunts...
Keith was perfect for this line up. Funkier and went well with the "blacker" direction Miles was heading towards.
Everyone is talking about Keith, as they should. Perhaps the most interesting thing is that Keith, who, after this band, will never play another electric/electronic instrument and has said the only reason he played electric then was for Miles, is, as bassist Michael Henderson has said, was having as good a time as anyone doing this.
Shame he never did after leaving Davis, I'd love to hear some albums by Jarrett on electric piano :)
@@zztop2ful The only one I know of with Keith on electric piano when he wasn't with Miles was the Ruta and Daitya album he did with Jack DeJohnette.
Miles again like Stan crouch said pimpin for prosperity and fame .dis sum bullshit!! Repeat rinse repeat
without chick corea is much better
Huh?
@@artysanmobile without chick corea is much better
Chick Corea brought much more fire to the band than Keith.
Half the commenters come off like groupies who think the f word is somehow profound.
keith j is a great player, but annoying as hell to watch. sit down!!! miles talked about how annoyed he was with keiths showboating
you sir have no ears
@@trombonisteau "keith j is a great player, but annoying as hell to watch." he's got - you can agree more or less with him, but the point is not to have hears or not.
I can't see Hendrix on stage... I find him annoying (much more than Jarret - whose movements I think are spontaneous) and still think he was a great musician (much more than Jarret ...)
Visually Keith Jarrett got everything wrong - the clothes, the hair, the grimacing - all deeply, deeply, naff. But the playing atoned for a multitude of sins...
+Leigh Hughes No lie! Good grief... is he in pain? Constipated? What's the deal?
+phanjazm j thats some ignorant shit to say about one of the great artist ever..its called emotional involvement in your piece...
+pgonzo98 Where I stand, it's called looking a right twat...
So what if he looks bad?
you're an idiot. just sayin'
@mongolord11 I asked myself that too - I think around that time he was touring with Mahavishnu, they had just released their first album in '71..