Miles Davis - So What (REACTION)
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- Опубліковано 9 кві 2024
- @AirplayBeats reacts to Miles Davis - So What
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Those other guys could take a smoke break because Coltrane was notorious for long solos. He told Miles that once he got going he just didn't know how to stop. Miles said "Try taking the horn out of your mouth, MF."
Miles Davis, trumpet; John Coltrane, tenor; Wynton Kelly, piano; Paul Chambers, bass; Jimmy Cobb, drums; Gil Evans Orchestra, background riffs. 2 Apr 1959, Studio 61.
This version of his band is so goddamn hot. Miles. John Coltrane, Bill Evans on piano. Just top notch. Chambers and Cobb keeping everyone in time.
Almost toooooo gd gud!!! Mmmphhh
Bill Evans was white. He played on the original recording. This is Wynton Kelly on piano for mind.
@@DjAtomize Yes, Bill was on the entire Kinda Blue album except for "all blues" which WK played on.
@@DjAtomize Indeed I saw that later. The studio band did differ.
The best of the best.
It was the 80's. I was turning 15, and my best friend went to a record store to get me a present. He grabbed a salesperson and said "It's my friends birthday and I think he would like jazz. I don't know anything about jazz music. What should I get him?" He sold him Time Out by Brubeck, Ah Um by Mingus and Kind of Blue by Miles. It opened up a whole new world of music for me. I was still listening to all the great music the 80's had to offer, but man did I wear out the vinyl on all 3 of those albums. I still listen to a bit of everything, but jazz and funk are my main go to's these days and a lot of that I believe is from listening to Kind of Blue thousands of times at a young age.
Miles was a collosus of twentieth century music.
I thought that was Sonny Rollins, oh, wait… he was just a saxophone colossus.
As a teen in the 80’s listening to Zeppelin, Rush, Van Halen, and The Who,… I spied the cassette in a friends car and couldn’t wait to play the Kind of Blue album. What a new world of music opened up for me! Great choice gentleman.
Arguably the best “Jazz” ensemble ever! The very definition of cool!
This is spiritual it’s beyond music. It’s perfection. Kind of Blue is possibly the most powerful important album in existence.
The most times re-released jazz album
@@revo1336 Darkside of the moon is right up there 😆
I didn't discover Jazz until I was in my 60s .... I think me and my friends would have loved Miles Davis's electro-jazz-funk in the 1970s if we'd known it existed but we didn't (in the UK)
Isn't that often the way. That's also when it became attractive to me.
You must have been living under a rock , I'm in my 60's and grew up in the UK and I was listening to Bitches Brew , In a silent way etc in my teens. All that great music was out there if you wanted it.
@@philipmccarthy6175 I didn't say I didn't know it existed. I was into Motown. I don't like the Bitches Brew type of jazz anyway. I like the Birth of the Cool style.
Pianist and bass are so subtle, but they keep that train rolling so beautifully.
The Goat of the Goats .. Miles and Coltrane all these guys whole nutha level ..Kind of Blue timeless
Miles is a giant in music. I was very lucky to see him perform live at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center in the '80's....just brilliant.
Miles Davis is the man. I was fortunate enough to see him live in concert twice. And that was Miles' first great quintet
Miles Davis is the man. I was fortunate enough to see him live in concert twice.
Grant Park in Atlanta in the summer of '89 for me
SO ENVIOUS!!!
One of the great things about watching Miles Davis is you can see him listen... He follows the rest of the band so well that it really becomes a true group. He sets the stage and mood for everyone...
At Last ! we've got some jazz ! thanks fella's . Looking forward to more jazz legends like Jimmy Smith, Kenny Burrell, Wes Montgomery, Lou Donaldson and a host of others presented by you guy's.
p.s Let's not forget the amazing vocalists like Ella Fitzgerald and Billie Holiday
Add Art Blakey, Horace Silver, Hank Mobley, Charles Mingus, Thelonius Monk, Eric Dolphy, and some Louis Armstrong, of course.
This is what great jazz is about. As pure and beautiful as it gets.
Subtle drums, subtle bass.
Astounding!
Thank you.
OHHHH - YAAAASSSSSSSS!!! LOVE THIS JAM!!! Love the way he casually goes over and has a lil' chat and a smoke, on the side, while everyone's JAMMIN'!!! :) Miles was SO GREAT: and, COLTRANE and EVANS!!!! Oh, MY!!!! ENJOY, YOU-GUYS - ya'll are REALLY HITTIN' IT, TODAY!!!!
"Everyone up there is cool."
You said it. In the whole history of cool, I doubt there was ever so much cool assembled on one stage at one time in front of some TV cameras. The instant-classic composition, the all-star players (both front line and rhythm section), the gorgeous solos, the studio setting, the sheer swag from everyone (especially of course Miles, setting the tone), hell even the damn clothes. A mountain top experience in the history of cool. Thank God it was preserved.
Wynton Kelly piano , Paul chambers bass , Jimmy Cobb drums .
Yep - this is the lineup here.
There is some serious talent up there. The best!
Kinda Blue is so awesome........Ive listened to it HUNDREDS of times
I was 8yrs old when my older brother purchased in the early 60s the Davis Kind of Blue album and this song was on it and I was hooked. I didn't understand the music but to me it sounded so neat . I now own every record the Miles Davis released . So I have been listening to him for 62 years
Very cool! Legends. I'll bet your grandpa had old '78 blues records. '78's were phased our in 1959, but for years they were a great source of American blues and folk music.
i could loop this song for the rest of my days and be happy
Mlles & his spectacular band in their prime ...incomparable 👍
I love how you guys were exposed to a different variety of music growing up with your parents and your grandfather. As I’ve gotten older, I’ve broadened my horizons and I have learned all sorts of different music. Jazz is one that I have grown to appreciate big-time! One of the things that makes you guys the best in the business!
Ooohhhhhhh Nice!! Miles rules...oh this is from Kinda Blue!! Excellent choice...I love that you boys move to the beat of your own drum!
Guys , I cannot believe you played this…
I feel like I know you guys now.
This album changed my life.
I’m a white drummer who plays mostly jazz.
Been watching you guys almost every day for a year .
I suggested Radiohead a while back .
Can’t wait until you go down that rabbit hole .
Try ok computer album!
My first time hearing .. just beautiful
So What is one of the greatest recordings in the annals of jazz. From Kind of Blue - an all time great. Some argue the GOAT. or jazz and all music.
So What, and the entire Kind of Blue album, made jazz accessible to everyone, including people who previously thought they didn't like jazz, without diminishing the authenticity of the music.
Follow this with Charley Parker and Dizzy Gillespie playing “Salt Peanuts”- as chaotic and soaring as this is transcendent and smooth. Miles started playing with Charley Parker as a teenager- Parker and Dizzy are the only duo to match Miles and ‘Trane. Be-bop, my boys…cheers…
Just was driving with this playing few days ago
Me too.
Thank you guys for this remarkable video!!
Sheer brilliance .
What a legacy he left ...so many of the finest Jazz Fusion artists were in his orbit .
Iconic Miles Davis joint. Love this tune. The definition of cool.
Amazing. Such great musicians.
You guys are the best! Thanks for taking the time to share your reactions 🔥
Miles tells a complete story with just a few perfectly placed notes. Then Trane takes it up a notch(or more!). I love the expressions of excitement on your faces as Trane begins to blow!! I'm right there with you! He changed everything. I recommend "Afro Blue Impressions" with his classic quartet. In this video, It's Wynton Kelly on piano & Jimmy Cobb on drums. I saw Jimmy maybe 6 years ago before he died. Still played, great, a time machine. Paul Chambers, MR. PC on bass! Bill Evans played piano on original from the record-"Kinda Blue", Wynton was on 1 track, check it out. To a large degree, the album was a collaboration between Miles & Bill. & btw- Wynton Kelly was a cousin of bass guitar legend Marcus Miller, who began his career in with Miles many years later. Miles always had legends in his bands. Dig that!
There's a great documentary about Marcus Miller.
@@324cmac I'll check it out, thanks.
I've seen you guys react to the Allman Brothers before. One of the All man drummers, a cat named Jaimo, was actually a jazz drummer. He turned the Allmans onto Miles and Trane. So not only was this quintet influential in jazz circles, they also crossed genres, influencing several generations of rock and roll players. As it should be. Time travelers changing the world. Thanks for playing this.
My dad was born and raised in St Louis and moved to Canada, when I was a teenager I always wondered why his record collection was mostly Jazz and not as much pop and rock, then he gave me a copy of this and said listen. Kind of Blue was the record, and every time I want to connect to him I just put this on. Smooth AF. ❤
Okay, guys; now you have to react to Diana Krall (if you haven't already). "The Look of Love" is great. So is "East of the Sun, West of the Moon" or "Walk On By" - all from her "Live in Paris" videos. She is a massive talent.
Was lucky enough to see Miles in Philly back in the early 1980s. Kind of Blue is one of the best albums ever recorded imho. Miles was masterful in his tonal perfection. And Coltrane just otherworldly
A magnificent choice.
That was a TV show in 1959 (when a TV set was relatively new for the average person). That's what those titles in the beginning were for. This was definitely Miles' band for quite a while. Then Coltrane left. I'd say they were playing improv within structure and Miles was definitely in charge of how it was going to go. I just love this!
There is definitely structure here.
@@christinapazzanese2837 They certainly are making smooth transitions. They are on TV so they probably had to be more structured than they would be for a concert given the time constraints.
@@christinapazzanese2837 Right: traditionally, jazz tunes had a written “head” (name for the opening section -maybe 16 or 24 bars? -which establishes the main theme), then the improv section(s) where the soloists “blow” over the changes (and/or fly into different changes altogether!). Transitions between soloists sometimes marked by written short band sections. Then approaching the end, often another written (or arranged) whole-combo chunk that returns to some version of the head. Trad jazz all about taking a “simple” theme, then blowing/improv on the theme. Good tutorial for beginners on how this works: Coltrane “My Favorite Things”.
What a great live performance. Looked up the band on this, three of the five musicians died by the time they were 40. It was a tough life for jazz musicians.
I love Jazz, thank you for keeping this American art form alive…Jazz is not dead, it just smells funny….More Jazz archetypes, Coltrane, Oscar, Joe Sample, Oliver Nelson, Bill Evans, Monk
I think it was recored in a TV Studio/soundstage , I don't think there was a crowd, just the show's production, filming and audio personnel. Pianist is Wynton Kelly. Him, along Bassist Paul Chambers and drummer Jimmy Cobb broke off into a great Trio and also formed a killin' quartet w/ guitarist Wes Montgomery.
I first heard Miles in the late 1960s when a friend played me the album “the birth of cool“. That experience got me hooked on jazz and bebop.
🕊❤️🎼
I think that's Wynton Kelly on piano on this live recording.
Giants upon giants of musicians on Kind of Blue: Miles Davis - trumpet; Julian "Cannonball" Adderley - alto saxophone except on "Blue in Green" and bonus disc track "So What"; John Coltrane - tenor saxophone; Bill Evans - piano except on "Freddie Freeloader" and bonus disc track "So What"; Wynton Kelly - piano on "Freddie Freeloader" and bonus disc track "So What"; Paul Chambers - double bass; Jimmy Cobb - drums
This was Miles' Davis' band. The second quintet. Miles just kept reinventing music. Cool jazz, fusion in the 1960s, jazz-funk in the 70s.
Pure Genius! Kind of Blue is a masterpiece from the first note to the last. Check out "Blue in Green" That first trumpet note is amazing!
When Miles came back in "his trumpet is saying Say What"
Top shelf musician today 👏😎..legendary dudes ..coltrain 🫡 👑 spiritual mystical dude ! Levels ❤
Some sort of Miles Davis plays each and every day at my house...
You have to listend to the whole album Kind Of Blue! It's one of the best albums ever made.
And the biggest selling jazz album of all time.
MILES'S sound has such a lonely feeling, isolated, maybe that's what he was trying to express 😢😅
"Bye Bye Blackbird" is a must y'all.
Hell Yeah
Iconic. There's a live version of So What on a later Miles album, Four & More (1964) that is insanely fast tempo. Why? Apparently the band (Herbie Hancock, Tony Williams, Ron Carter & George Coleman) was pissed, cuz they weren't being paid right and it shows in their solos... killer!
Now check out the rythmic 1992 'Acid Jazz' version of "So What" by British 'urban jazz' guitarist Ronnie Jordan. Totally different vibe, but you'll love it...😏
I just want to kick back and be there, it’s such an evocative sound.
The FOR YOU section of this channel's home page now shows: Stephanie Mills & Teddy Pendergrass, Aretha Franklin, Miles Davis, and Marvin Gaye. I'm in heaven! LOL Thank you La & Che for these great reactions!
Thank you my friend!!
I found out that the piano player in this video, Wynton Kelly, was a cousin of the great electric bass player, Marcus Miller, who is now 64 years old and still touring.
Wow I'm just now finding out they had a video for this I didn't know that I'm going to have to download this I have this on the album I play it quite often kind of blue is one of Miles Davis best albums ever !👍💯 A Love supreme that's another classic from the late great John Coltrane ! Oh I almost forgot in case you guys didn't know that's Bill Evans on the piano great piano player
This was most of the band from that time (and who appeared on: Kind Of Blue -'mostly' ....).
Miles Davis Quintet [the FIRST one]
(Later: it became a Sextuplet -also, rather briefly- with: Coltrane & "Cannonball" Adderley (sometimes with BOTH Cannonball and Coltrane pushing things closer to a new "brink"-musically)).
It was a TV special, recorded for broadcast (in 1959).
Absolutely: a rarity, for the time!
That is Wynton Kelly on piano (who replaced: Bill Evans...).
Wynton played on a track (maybe two🤔🤔) on Kind Of Blue, as well.
The album features "Cannonball" Adderley as well as Coltrane, but this was, sort-of, Coltrane's return to the band (he had been struggling with addiction and Miles forced him out, in '57. He returned in '58 -owing to ...whatever would have been called "rehab" in those days (no such term or practice existed, in public/popular culture, then!). 'Trane's wife had converted to Islam by this point and that and personal focus helped him overcome his issues (largely).).
I think that by THIS point. (...when this program was recorded), 'Trane was the only sax player in the band. Cannonball departed in '59 (and reformed his own outfit with younger brother, Nat -et al.)-as 'Trane would do, a little while; hence!). 'Trane recorded his debut: Giant Steps, almost "in tandem with" doing Kind Of Blue ...and his and Miles' love/hate, oppositional (personality-wise) relationship was about to have run its course, as well.
Miles rarely "just had guys playing with him," ever.
He liked the band dynamic and he liked having an intimacy with all of the players and them having that between one-another, as well.
He liked knowing he could trust in certain things/elements/behaviors (etc.) and having the security of an outfit who knew how to listen to one-another and respond to one-another.
Definitely.
Of course, there were tons of "entrances and exits" across his career. but: overall, I would say that:" it's safer to assume that" if you are hearing/seeing Miles with a band (and not "guesting" on someone's performance), -particularly, prior to the late '80s/'90s-, it would more commonly be
a band that Miles had put together and who had been playing (practicing and gigging ...and writing) together.
...Not in EVERY case (NATURALLY!), but: if you find something and don't recoignoze who the players are?? more likely it's, just, a version of Miles' band that you are unfamiliar with/didn't know existed/never head before.
It just don’t get much better than this! 🎺 🎷
The subtle changes are EVERYthing. Listen to what James Cobb does on drums at 6:50 when Miles comes in with the deee-dot riff during that piano solo… just a switch to the quiet rim shot tap. Boom. That’s good listening in a tight band. So much going on, and they are all dialled in at 100%.
Loving this channel… thanks from Australia.
Heard the Album "Kind of Blue" when I was 10 on WBRU the FM station run by Brown university changed what I thought about Music. Miles brought so many great musicians to the fore. The ALbum version is very different because of Cannonball adderly on Sax in addition to Coltrane. THere were many members of Milesd Bands over the years. A year or two after this Herbie Hancock was on the piano.
Wow! That’s John Coltrane on Sax. How cool is that! Kind of Blue… one of his best.
Thank the Lord for JAZZ!!!
I would love to see you guys go down a propper Old School Blues rabbit hole. 1. Smokestack Lightnin~Howlin Wolf. 2. What Kind of Woaman is this?~Buddy Guy 3. Goin Down South ~R.L. Burnside. 4. My Babe~Little Walter. 5. Master Charge~Albert Collins
Smooth jazz is the best for me had a stroke can't deal with the ups and downs for me this is cool thanks for playing it 8 years ago couldn't listen to anything God bless you and your family 🙏🙏😎
This music: The definition of cool. 😎
Gotta check out Domi and JD Beck. Two prodigies that are gonna rewrite jazz and bring it to a new generation. The song Whatup is the best intro to their style.
I am a huge jazz head. Loved this version. Fabulous
When horn players neck's "blow-up" like that they're doing something called "circular breathing".
And if you want to see the best example of that (and a very dramatic one) just watch Dizzy Gillespie - cheeks and throat.
Bill Evans is on piano.... all are giants of jazz! ❤
I was fortunate enough to see Miles in 1988 at the Dallas Jazz Festival, along with The Yellow Jackets and Weather Report. This was when I realized that my ex fiancée would become my ex fiancée... She just didn't get it.
It is magical seeing them live with the super-low-tech video production of the time. Feels like you are right there. Love the way the video blooms off the brass reflections!
I have figured out that with the bass and drums keeping a steady rhythm I can feel anchored when they start improvising into a little more progressive sounds. But, the Birth of the Cool era was my favorite with Gil Evans and Miles working together.
You want a hot Miles Davis tip? His soundtrack to the French New Wave movie Elevator to the Gallows, (English translation) is fabulous. First cut: Generique is smoky noir genius.
Director Louis Malle and Miles creating the soundtrack while watching the movie. Nothing written.
Omg.....best f n reaction ive seen in months. Ty cats! 🙏
Love hearing about what your family listened to.
Great piece! The studio version from the Kind of blue LP had Bill Evans on piano and Cannonball Adderley on alto sax.Here we have Winton Kelly replacing Evans and only one sax by John Coltrane.Jimmy Cobb on drums and Paul Chambers on bass are here as they were on the LP.I can´t tell who are the trombonists.
Back in the day, there was a jazz club in Toronto upstairs from a 20-cent glass of draft bar that on Fridays had guests from America sit in and free form from dixieland to fusion type to bluesy. It was great but the drinks were expensive 😊
Great seeing Miles and The Train!
Miles and miles
Miles was a gamechanger ❤
Their solos cross so seamless 2:50
Whole Kind Of Blue album is fire.
I saw Miles Davis at the Auditorium Theater in Chicago in 1974. The music you just reviewed sounded great in a real music hall. My dad, his brother and wife spent half a day site seeing (my uncle lived there), Navy Pier, before we went to the venue at around 9pm.
I was 21 then. Thanks for that memory.
My dad had a military reunion that week; 10th Combat Engineer Brigade, 3rd INF DiV.
I heard a lot of stories about N Africa, Sicily, Italy, S France, Central Europe and Germany, stuff I had no idea my father had done during WW2.
Just listen and enjoy this music. 🎧
Great stuff guys. These sessions have some great players Studio 58 I think. There is a great session with Billie Holiday with some of the greatest sax players ever. Coleman Hawkins Lester Young Johnny Hodges and Gerry Mulligan all paying homage to Lady Dat
epic beyond words. thanks for reminding me how good these guys were.
Love it. Miles- Tutu
Miles Davis is #5 on my personal list of the most important American musicians who have ever lived.
I believe the piano is Bill Evans, btw😊
Here are my top 5
#1 Louis Armstrong
#2 Jimi Hendrix
#3 Duke Ellington
#4 Count Basie
#5 Miles Davis
Miles played with Bird, Dizzy, Max Roach and a host of literal legends of American music. Not to mention the bit about Miles Davis being the creator of Cool Jazz and a co-creator of Be-Bop. Yup, to my mind he's that important to American music.
Lovin'your reactions to the music 🎶 that has been the soundtrack to my life and times 🤘
Tioraidh an-drasta 🏴
The FIRST, LEGENDARY QUINTET (SEXTET).
'Trane
and Adderley
the insane genius rhythm section of:
Bill Evans [piano];
Paul Chambers [drums & perc.];
Jimmy Cobb [bass]
This band wouldn't be equalled until Miles SECOND legendary Quintet
[Davis, Williams, Hancock, Shorter, Carter].
If you don't own and/or haven't heard THIS album:
you are only living 1/1000th of a life.
So, rightfully, legendary.
💜🔥🤘🤘
[Also: Bill Evans may be the most unfairly underappreciated keyboard genius, ever! 🫂🫂]
I highly recommend checking out In A Sentimental Mood - Duke Ellington & Coltrane. In my opinion, this is Coltrane at his finest…beautiful song.
Gobs and gobs of talent
I kept seeing Idris with Miles, and I was thinking, man the background is different it must be split screen, Idris was even moving, and then I realized it was the T-shirt. Then I realized it was Marvin, not Idris Muhammad.
Welp, back to the gutter.