October 13, 2011

Miles Davis Group live at Berliner Jazztage 1971


Miles Davis (trumpet)
Gary Bartz (saxophone)
Keith Jarrett (electric piano, organ)
Michael Henderson (bass)
Ndugu Leon Chancler (drums)
Charles Don Alias (percussions)
James Mtume Forman (percussions)
recorded live at Philharmonie Berlin, November 6, 1971

1. Directions (J. Zawinul) (incomplete)
2. Honky Tonk (M. Davis)
3. What I Say (M. Davis)
4. Sanctuary (W. Shorter-M. Davis)
5. It's About That Time (M. Davis)
6. Funky Tonk (M. Davis) (incomplete)

Just one year before this concert, Miles recorded a string of live dates  at the Cellar Door with a similar group and a similar repertoire. Read here parts of the allmusic.com review by Thom Jurek:
"Davis was keen on having Columbia record his live sets, and pressured them to do so for these four nights, just a week before Christmas in 1970. This set is a solid look at what's in-the-can, since the vast majority of these tracks -- three hours' worth of them -- have never seen the light of day in any form.
This music reveals a truly muscular Miles Davis at the top of his form as an improviser and as a bandleader with the most intense and nearly mystical sense of the right place-the right time-the right lineup. These shows, played in a club instead of a concert hall, provided a virtual laboratory for possibilities Davis was exploring. The money for the gig was nearly non-existent compared to what he was used to making playing halls, so he paid the band out of his own pocket.
The music here fades in with Joe Zawinul's "Directions." There is a five-note bass figure that repeats almost constantly throughout, offering DeJohnette a solid bass from which to enhance the groove and dance around. From the beginning, Davis is blowing his ass off, soloing furiously in the middle register. Jarrett is filling the space, playing both a Rhodes and an organ at the same time. When Bartz begins to solo on soprano, the deep, funky groove is well-established, giving the musicians room to dig in and let loose. Jarrett's solo is like a spaced-out Sly Stone, offering back the groove and then building on it like a man possessed. He matches both DeJohnette and Henderson with a slippery, utterly rhythmic sense of pure groove and then moves them somewhere else until Davis brings them back.
Disc two opens with Jarrett, Henderson, and Airto locking horns in a ferocious groove on "What I Say" that has the members of the audience showing their appreciation with shouts of "Yeah!" and "Blow!" and "You Go!" Jarrett's solo at the beginning is unlike anything he has ever played -- before or since. As they move through the set and get to "Inamorata," the gate to heaven and hell is wide open. The spaced-out blues in "Honky Tonk" reveals Davis' total mastery of the wah wah he employed in so much of his material of the time. "Inamorata" is wildly funky, dirty, and outright nasty in places. But the middle sections offer, as Bartz notes in his liner essay, the kinds of vocalese concepts that are reflected in his solo, Davis' solo, and in the actual voices of Airto and Henderson.
The Cellar Door Sessions set is like a combination of the Tribute to Jack Johnson set and the complete It's About That Time disc, with a watershed of information providing a complete bridge from one phase of that exploratory period in Davis' career to another. As Jarrett observes in his liner essay (each bandmember has one) after this date, Davis never played with a group as musically sophisticated again. And for all the ego displayed in stating this, one may tend to agree with him. Lavishly packaged and annotated, The Cellar Door Sessions is the last great reissue of the year 2005, and an essential testament to the genius Davis displayed in weaving together exploratory jazz, funk, and rock." 

5 comments:

bogard said...

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wightdj said...

Cool, thanks.

Slidewell said...

This is definitely one of my favorite electric Miles sets! Great separation and clarity. The band was laying down some great funk on this night, whereas too many 70's shows were all dense fury and bluster. Very cool. Thanks much!

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