Miles Davis - Tutu (That's What Happened - Live In Germany 1987)
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- Опубліковано 26 бер 2014
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From the mid-fifties to his death in the early nineties, Miles Davis was universally recognised as one of the most innovative musicians working in Jazz. He was also one of the most popular with his albums regularly breaking into the pop charts and he picked up a total of eight Grammy Awards. He also launched the careers of many jazz musicians including Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter, Chick Corea, Billy Cobham, John McLaughlin and many more. This concert, filmed in Munich in 1987, followed the release of his Grammy Award winning album Tutu and the set list features two tracks from that record, the title track and "Portia", plus his unique arrangements of Michael Jackson's "Human Nature" and Cyndi Lauper's "Time After Time".
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#MilesDavis #Tutu #LiveInGermany
Miles Davis the most creative jazz
musician ever. No one covered
so many styles as him.
His legacy will remain for a long
long time. Thanks for decades
of inspiration. l' m a drummer
and you played with the very
best. TUTU sure is a remarkable
piece . Justo excellent.
he was musician who can play in any position
"No one covered so many styles as him"
Covered ? What you excatly mean ? Does he not have been one of the most prolific creator of XX century ? And does he not have been also one of the most brilliant and generous talent scout ?
Yeah Mon
With Miles it's all about an ensamble of talented soloists who support each other while soloing without getting in the way. All his groups were jazz orchesrtras and they were air tight, live or studio. The power and presence is staggering....each musician merges with the other and Miles smiles....
Miles was asked why he rarely plays a lot of his old music and he replied “today it’s boring”.
He was the Picasso of jazz, always moving on to new ideas expressed in his music.
je suis d'accord
Or the Stravinsky of jazz... always there where it's happening, while maintaining an immediately recognizabe personal style
This performance of Tutu is a symphony. The band is a rich and diverse, but organic world - a universe on its own.
Miles was the man. I'm glad that I got.to see him twice before he passed. The man was a magician with the horn! Truly one of the GREATEST! Will NEVER be another MILES!!!!
I love how Miles brought in the percussions. This is an absolute monster song and look how much time he gave to the percussion solo. Dude got his money's worth for the tour with that solo.
That guitar solo was incredible and I loved how he ended it in a Major chord.
Kenny Garret superb as usual, flowering up the flute.
Miles Davis was so great and so respectful towards other musician .. I do recall seeing him in that tour in Europe : he was always playing with the young bass player I am trying to find if someone has posted that video ... also all concert he was turning his back to the public 😄very funny no one wd dare to protest !!!is Miles !! 😉Cheers 🥂 !
@@Kassiusday, so beautiful your words ❤️❤️🙏🙏
Yes, wonderful flute player! And the drums!
Miles says he does that bc he can hear better. No disrespect to the audience.
@@manologonzalezmorillas258 qqq
Miles Davis was Just great. Hé should rest in peace. His music remains for ever. We love you Miles🎼💓💕❤
Miles Davis wi'll be for ever and always contemporary, he was who change the music for ever
That percussion player is a dream
Mr.Miles Davis my father left me his music collection I am forever thankful ❤
I followed this Tutu/Hannibal era 1987-1991, seeing him live in small venues in California several times. Foley and Kenny Garrett always tore the venue down !!!!!
I did too. Saratoga at the winery on the hill he left the stage and never returned. It was fine because Kenny, Foley and the band were free to let it rip. Miles wasn’t feeling it that day.
Way, way, way ahead of the prevailing times, attitudes and vanguard...the concepts, ideas and music of this genius, Miles Davis, is still out there on the horizon to this day.
He was Miles Ahead, yo
@@Arycke: I saw what you did there. . . . .😁😁😁😁😁
A supreme masterpiece of musicianship and composing!
Jazz, Funk, and modern improvisational excellence.
Bassist Marcus Miller wrote this piece and Cinelu and Foley's solos were cataclysmic!
Right !Miles was like an explorer,pushing the limits, he shows the way to others, a true precursor !
About this time having been a Miles fan since the '50's I walked out of his gig at Wembley, now i know i was wrong.
The rhythm/percussion section is unreal
I'm in my feelings ...stay connected
Wow!! This is like an adventure in the universe. Miles Davis is the King!!!
My mom & aunt (from America) were together in Paris the day Dewey died. Both these ladies were of 100% French-descent Both were hip to his music since his days w/Bird. They both said the next 3 days were fascinating by the reverence & compassion shown to Davis by the people of France. Radio, television, front pages of newspapers, blaring speakers inside cabs...as if a certain part of France had also died. For me, his legacy of mentorship and support of younger players will always have the same level of greatness as does his music. May that...never die.
That's great to hear!
Leave it to the Parisiennes to do things RIGHT!
Yeah, and over here other than the 24 hour tribute KJAZ 92.7 began that night, not much else that I can remember that was in tribute.
The following day however USA TODAY ran an article inferring that Davis was both homosexual and had died of HIV/A.I.D.S.
After reading that newspaper for close to eight years prior to that article, after that edition I never picked up that rag again, not even as much as to check a ballgame score.
This Percussionist is KILLING🔥
Mino Cinelu is a French Percussionist born in Paris, He is a multi-intrumentalist, singer, producer, composer, but he is best known as a Percussionist, He also played with Sting and many others.......
@@cappelloroger thanks for the great knowledge!
You have to admire Miles for embracing a taste of synthesizer sound with Tutu in 1986. It's a shame that he died just a handful of years later.
Saw yesterday Marcus Miller in concert, he played Tutu with his band and the magic is still intact !
Miles In The Sky
First music to came to my mind yesterday. What a music! RIP Tutu.
MIles deserted jazz and played good music. Ho him. Boring.
@@lesmowhomever174 what?
les percussions ne sont pas en reste, non plus
I think this one of Miles' best performances-just breathtaking
I agree with what's been said. In this in this piece tutu miles outdid himself. This piece is about the best you're going to get. Is it kind of thing you can listen to over and over and over again. I heard him do tutu
Inpoom
NP by b e
Om.
@@billswain43❤
I Luv this! I saw myself from 35 years ago. On-stage with Miles!
Without a doubt my all-time favorite musician, have most of his Cds, have to finish up. Saw him perform twice. The last time two months before he passed away. Will always love his music and his horn!!!
Pure improvisitions... The best Miles... forever Miles!!!
Miles...the man who never misses a note.
Come on !!!! Miles himself would not like this falsehood and he could be very heavy with this kind of bulls......
Geniuses are men not robot !!! Please !!!!!!! PLEASE !!!
@@taf44tt8io He was simply saying that he could turn a missed note into something CREATIVE! LOL!
The whole group, sanguine in Germany, Peace, the good , Miles trumpet at his clearest, love the flute. Clean. Reminds of Hubert Laws, Bobby Humfrey. Respected your Autobiography, Miles. Cool guitar, that is my instrument. Thanks
WORDS
CANNOT
DESCRIBE
THE
GENIUS
OF
MILES DAVIS.
🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
JUST
THANK YOU FOR
SHARING!
PEACE ✌️ ☮️ 🕊
BE WITH YOU!
🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉 !
What a freaking great percussionist!!!
En 1987,Miles Davis n'était plus le trompettiste qu'il avait été,mais quel leader il était pour les jeunes musiciens!🎺🎺🎺
The beginning of fusion and it still sounds like the best examples of the genre LMAO.... They still chasing this level of music. Miles forever...
Allen C. Not the beginning of fusion at all but still very uniquely miles. When you talk fusion you have to go back to Return to Forever and Weather Report. Miles was a genius because he came from the height of bebop with Cannonball, Coltrane etc. but lived long enough to have such an impact on a completely different generation.
@@lw6323 Or go back 2 bitches brew, the project that catalysed the groups you mention.
No denying Davis is a genuine jazz genius but I never was much one of his fans until this one, which I find hauntingly attractive and appealing.
Miles had such a stage presence without trying. Goodness....
He had a perceptible aura everyone around him felt. He was truly special.
Stage presence of a drugged up homeless person. But it was just cool because he was Miles!
Why do you say homeless? He really was a genius, and slowly evolved from being a studious kid, loving, and learning music, to moving w/his family, having a controlling, and domineering mother, to being accepted to Julliard (pause, and think about that!), to quitting, and starting his own adventure in music! I’m just wondering how much money he would’ve had by the age of 60, if it hadn’t been for all the disorganized chaos he had in his personal life, by the time of his untimely passing😢 ie, instead of only having 1-2 mill,
he in actuality made about 24, of which it was unaccounted for, eg, mismanaged.
I've watched this masterpiece countless times and I still get giddy every time! It's the part where Miles puts his arm around Foley and walks him out front for me!
I seen a lineup similar to this... very young...we found out that miles had recruited several young cats from Youngstown St... bout 85/86.. down town Stanley Theatre in Pittsburgh PA...wadda nite...I almost knocked Miles and Cicely over coming out side door onto Penn ave.if I know Pittsburgh.. Miles always finished last note never does an encore..n we left quick cos of traffic...onto penn.side door opened n wow..close..I said miles...great show..I apologized to both
..glad u enjoyed it young man. Into White Lincoln stretch..whole occurrence took mebbe a minute .. tops..my claim to fame
.
I’ve been poking around the edges of Miles Davis on the consensus that he’s the guy to listen to if you want to immerse yourself in the best. Looking for vinyl to embellish my new / old obsession. I started watching some footage from the 1960 final tour with Coltrane and after about 5 minutes I started to get fidgety, so I moved on and saw a screenshot of Mr. Davis with longer hair shades and hipper threads. So I took a look. I do appreciate the foundation of the more traditional but this offering is more to my personal taste. A more contemporary style of playing. I guess I’m more a product of my generation but I’m glad I found this video. Now I know just what I’m looking for where before I wasn’t sure. He is/was the best
Who’s that AMAZING percussionist? Miles is the Truth
Mino Cinelu, also played with Weather Report and wrote a beautiful song called Confians that appears on their Sportin’ Life album.
So cool, it flows melodically, well orchestrated, it's funk and it's so stank love it
This is a very happy Miles Davis, loving his band and the beautiful sound of the venue. So great to see this.
the GENIUS of Miles was "PULLING THE CREATIVITY OUT OF HIS BAND IN REAL TIME!!!!!" he lit them up
POWER-FULL! Never leave tha’ groove!
That was a fkn Symphony!!!!
As always, Miles is just way too cool for the room.
Miles, man....Love this dude's art, all of it. 4 decades worth of genre expanding, innovative treasures.
Miles,dizzy gillespie,Gillespie, bird Parker Coltrane,many many jazz artists were playing in the 40s
80 years ago. Learn history. The foundation upon the present is built.
Therefore, one is as great as the other... Since history tends to repeat itself. We all have our favorite artist don't you think PH???@@peterhamlinhamlin8908
Thank you Google, making this experience available after so many years of creation, this is wonderful music
Fantastic session. Wonderful tune. My jazz genius forever.
Thanks for posting!!!I I listened to this stellar band in Rome, same year and I was 19. When at the end of the tune Mino Cinelu sited at the center of the scene and played that low frequency notes from that bowl of clay, all stadium shook to its foundations. Great memory!!!
The King of Cool! Loved by South Africa
Seen miles bout _86; ...downtown Pittsburgh PA Stanley theatre.. hadda lot young cats playing w him....from Youngstown St I later learned....this was n still is best concertt I have ever been to...seenn all the greats from dizzy to joe zawinul....etc etc....best ever jack
Miles teaches us how rhythm is supreme in jazz...
Yes. Time was his best feature.
I had the privilege to sit in the audience and i will never forget it.
simply put - "we want Miles!" - stay connected
又又、異次元空間を、ライブで出来るんですね。凄いなぁ、動画の提供ありがとうございます😊
no words. just listen and be in "heaven'" forget the covidcrisis. never stop loving music. I experienced TUTU in the Hague with Markus Miller.
Marcus Miller wrote and produced tutu that cut was named after arch Bay ship Desmond Tutu from Africa as a real story if you listen to Miles Davis part one and part two where he has the Asian keyboard he kills it this music is like Miles Davis coming out with a machine gun I listen to this three and four times a day and dissect every one of the hardest because I am going to learn a lotAn instrument a trumpet and Kenny Garrett saxophone and I have to get a key tar which looks like a keyboard with a neck on the sound is extraordinaire
YES..its great !!!!!!!!!!
Listening to Miles Davis 2 to 2 on tutu with the Asian synthesizer keyboard Kei Akagi he too cold on the synthesizer Miles in Foley and Kenny Garrett John BIgham electric percussionin an Foley rockstars all of them jazz funk rock stars he was the most sharpest dressed trumpet player around all the way up to 2020 nobody could compare his musicians who played with him on tour started following suit and all of them started to dress a little like miles There’s not a day that goes by I don’t listen to the Senate to two Portia 4 or 5 times a day
Tutu is my album!
@@edwardsjr65 pppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppmp
..........only one word.......... BEAUTIFUL..........!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
A much higher level of musical understanding and interpretation.
The Picasso of Jazz....wow...I really like that! That`s on spot!
Miles was so ridiculously cool... of course, he DID give birth to it!
The guitar solo was amazing...
Yes ( It was a bass )
Every time I listen, someone else is kickin it. They're all playing independently yet they blend
Lois Drummer I so agree! This by far is the finest rendition of"Tutu" by MD imho.
@@likearollingstone007 I think it's a 4 string guitar?
No it's a piccolo bass
A powerhouse of creativeness every listen sounds new thats the greatness of Miles
That's my name right there, he sang about.❤❤😊😊
I saw Miles with this group at the Northsea JF at The Haag - an unforgettable Event !
Miles in the Sky (1968), In a Silent Way (1969), and Bitches Brew (1970) marked the beginnings of so-called jazz fusion. In any case, MILES DAVIS is at the origin point of so-called jazz fusion... ALL the celebrated musicians considered pioneers of jazz fusion including Zawinul and Shorter of Weather Report, Corea, Cobham, McLaughlin, etc., performed with Miles Davis.
Why "so-called" ? How would you name it ?
Almost all of modern jazz fusion can be traced to musicians who played on Bitches Brew.
@@sirfriendzone1228 Miles was a big part of jazz fusion but its beginnings had a lot to do with people like Larry Coryell and Bob Moses.
Saw Miles on this tour w/ 3 keyboard players, 2 drummers, full band at the Bowl, had CD, vinyl, program from show - he had a few yrs. LEFT
Flirting at it's HIGHEST ! A True Love Affair with Music!... Thanks GOAT...Mr. Davis and All involved!💞
A true musician that shared his gift with us in so many different ways. I was fortunate to see him in Chicago and he performed in the same manner. I read that he blew the trumpet in that fashion via him hearing it and if it sound good to him then he knew the audience was enjoying the notes from his horn. What a genius that the Higher Power blessed us with if not shared with us for a while...
Not so many like miles would open so much place to a percussionist and Mino Cinelu did a wonderful solo (like always)!!!
Wow! Thanks for posting this gem!!!
smokin jazz thank you mr. miles davis
The two keyboardists are the most important in this tune!!
Bass and percussion all day!
I saw this magic group a short time before at the North Sea JF in Den Haag. I shall never forget!!
Frank
This performance is just absolutely magical, takes you somewhere. Miles knows what he wants from music and knows how to get it. He just brings the best musicians together and creates something dark, yet exquisite 🥺😍💯🎯🔮
!!!😵
Bellissimo, grande, outstanding,...magnifique...YIKES!
writen ,produced,arranged and played by marcus miller himsellf thank you
Marcus Miller is a genius - very versatile - great person
Miss you!
One of the greatest artist ever. Always in my heart.
awesome flute player . at first the electronic stuff was louder than him but later his solo was very clear and superb .
I just wanted to praise him ... but you already did ;)
Who is the flute player? Kenny Garrett?
this masterpiece is the artistic result of 80 years of jazz history: there's everything inside: misterious moods, challenging harmonies, modal jazz, funky...rock..
Miles Davis was way ahead of his time and his contemporaries.
Miles
Davis Artistic Genius
Jazz never fails anybody
Lim Kaamen
Having grown up on Blue Note records, our household the place of many jams and rehearsals (Joe Pass, Ruby Braff, among others), and the raisin' by a legendary jazz bassist and all his entourage, I can say this without disrespect for the music; when my 6-piece mostly-Latin-ized-classic-jam-rock band of 12 years was about to play a song not yet performed live, I'd precede it with a (intended as jocular) disclaimer:
"This is our first time playing this in public, so....... if any tedious moments arise, just call it "jazz"....." In other words, "we meant to do that"........."improvisation already!" :)
With no hesitancy I can say that Miles Davis was one of the richest pioneers of the genre, and also one of the most perplexing humans to have walked on this planet.
My father's late 50's music career was centered in NYC. One night after a gig he was standing outside a diner, wondering if the black man across the street was okay..... there was a curfew imposed on black people after a certain hour (I mentally dry-heave at that ever having been imposed, much less enforced). A white cop on his foot patrol hassles Miles; Miles holds his ground. My father said the answer to "you know who the %#&^ I AM?????" came in a nightstick, beating Miles to the sidewalk....... it's been said that didn't help Miles' already-sketchy attitude toward whites. My father always said he can't recall ever having felt more helpless, having little other choice than to witness it and not see it.
I'd read that an attempt was made on his life, I think in the parking lot of a shopping mall....... he'd set aside a huge reward for anyone responsible for capture and prosecution of an assassin in future incidents. Backstage, he'd no limits as to what he might say about and to a man's woman, and with impunity, as told by one of his bassists.
Anybody interested, there's a fantastic book from the 80's (I think) "The Jazz Cyclopedia" by Joachim-Ernst Berendt..... can't find via google; it doesn't respond well to the term "Cyclopedia", which I know for sure is the title (sans the "En" before "cyclopedia").
@@oneworld9071 "perplexing"
Instead of millions of humans, Miles was not a "son' of his time but a 'father' of his age, ahead of the times.
@@oneworld9071 Guess you mean "The Jazz Book: From Ragtime to Fusion and Beyond" by Joachim-Ernst Berendt. There is no "cyclopedia" of him, at least not in the title because his Jazz Book can easily be regarded as cyclopedia. And I can recommend it.
@@feldmann65。
v
Miles is a Phenom who is the founder of much of what we hear in modern genre. Always forward
Wow! So different from the quartet. Yet so masterfully leading a group of this kind of diverse talent.
Wow that was awe inspiring and Mino's solo was brilliant!!!! Wellman's groove and playing was a controlled and dynamic 🔥. Man what a great performance of this tune.
What an awesome "guitar" solo. Wow
Bass
It's piccolo strings
BAD!!!!!!!
É um bass barítono - músico: Foley
He was the first Lead Bassist.
A guitar solo from heaven!
Goodness..Timeless.music.Thanks Miles,you simply endured us
Miles davis restera à jamais un monstre de la trompette pour l éternité ainsi que ces musiciens 🎩
Wow 🙆♀️...i love so much this song.
Les grands révolutionnaires de la musique, des inspirateurs. Merci
The greatest innovator of all.
You EXUDE brilliance! A true MASTER creating a MASTERPIECE!!!💕💯
Great music: like the hints of Funkadelic and Weather Report..brilliant synthetic jazz..the best.
The work mood from Adam is impressionnant
Absolute bad ass Miles Davis. Wow.
Miles Davia is the MAN!
What an awesome music
A MAJOR PLUS MUSICAL PIECE
MILES A TRUE LEGEND
HUGE Keith Garrett fan here...Miles on point too!
Music nourishment for the soul!
The world can wait... jazz first...
everytime goose-flesh-feeling - ABSOLUTE WELTKLASSE !!!
goose flesh dein ernst bruder
music give peace