| | Miles Davis Bitches Brew CD Miles Davis Discography of CDs
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Personnel: Miles Davis (trumpet); John McLaughlin (guitar, electric guitar); Harvey Brooks (electric guitar, electric bass, bass guitar); Bennie Maupin (bass clarinet); Wayne Shorter (soprano saxophone); Joe Zawinul (electric piano, organ); Chick Corea, Larry Young (electric piano); Don Alias (drums, congas, percussion); Jack DeJohnette, Lenny White (drums); Jumma Santos (congas, shaker, percussion); Airto Moreira (cuica, percussion); Jim Riley, Jimmy Riley (percussion). Recording information: Columbia Recording Studio B., New York, NY (08/19/1969-01/28/1970). Illustrator: Mati Klarwein. Thought by many to be the most revolutionary album in jazz history, having virtually created the genre known as jazz-rock fusion (for better or worse) and being the jazz album to most influence rock and funk musicians, Bitches Brew is, by its very nature, mercurial. The original double LP included only six cuts and featured up to 12 musicians at any given time, most of whom would go on to be high-level players in their own right: Joe Zawinul, Wayne Shorter, Airto, John McLaughlin, Chick Corea, Jack DeJohnette, Dave Holland, Don Alias, Benny Maupin, Larry Young, Lenny White, and others. Originally thought to be a series of long jams locked into grooves around one or two keyboard, bass, or guitar figures, Bitches Brew is anything but. Producer Teo Macero had as much to do with the end product on Bitches Brew as Davis. Macero and Davis assembled, from splice to splice, section to section, much of the music recorded over three days in August 1969. First, there's the slow, modal, opening grooves of "Pharaoh's Dance," with its slippery trumpet lines to McLaughlin's snaky guitar figures skirting the edge of the rhythm section and Don Alias' conga slipping through the middle. The keyboards of Corea and Zawinul create a haunting, riffing groove echoed and accented by the two basses of Harvey Brooks and Dave Holland. The title cut was originally composed as a five-part suite, though only three were used. Here the keyboards punch through the mix, big chords and distorted harmonics ring up a racket for Davis to solo over rhythmically outside the mode. McLaughlin is comping on fat chords, creating the groove, and the bass and drums carry the rest for a small taste of deep-voodoo funk. Side three opens with McLaughlin and Davis trading funky fours and eights over the lock-step groove of hypnotic proportion that is "Spanish Key." Zawinul's trademark melodic sensibility provides a kind of chorus for Corea to flat around, and the congas and drummers working in complement against the basslines. This nearly segues into the four-and-a-half minute "John McLaughlin," with its signature organ mode and arpeggiated blues guitar runs. The end of Bitches Brew, signified by the stellar "Miles Runs the Voodoo Down," echoes the influence of Jimi Hendrix; with its chuck-and-slip chords and lead figures and Davis playing a ghostly melody through the shimmering funkiness of the rhythm section, it literally dances and becomes increasingly more chaotic until about nine minutes in, where it falls apart. Yet one doesn't know it until near the end, when it simmers down into smoke-and-ice fog once more. The disc closes with "Sanctuary," a previously recorded Davis tune that is completely redone here as an electric moody ballad reworked for this band, but keeping enough of its modal integrity to be outside the rest of Bitches Brew's retinue. The CD reissue adds "Feio," a track recorded early in 1970 with the same band. Unreleased -- except on the box set of the complete sessions -- "Feio" has more in common with the exploratory music of the previous August than with later, more structured Davis music in the jazz-rock vein. A three-note bass vamp centers the entire thing as three different modes entwine one another, seeking a groove to bolt onto. It never finds it, but becomes its own nocturnal beast, offering ethereal dark tones and textures to slide theRolling Stone (12/11/03, p.118) - Ranked #94 in Rolling Stone's "500 Greatest Albums Of All Time" - "...The word 'fusion' was never big enough to describe the visceral thrill of these explosive studio explorations and the pioneering tape-edit wizardry of producer Ted Macero..." Rolling Stone (5/28/70, p.50) - "...Miles' music continues to grow in its beauty, subtlety and sheer magnificence...these chaps have discovered a new way to cook..." Q (4/99, p.128) - Included in Q's "Best Jazz Albums of All Time." Down Beat (p.66) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "[T]he pitch-shifting echoes at the start of the title track seemingly drift into infinity." Miles Davis Bitches Brew Songs Bitches Brew Music Review Average Rating: (4.1 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews Noise? Yes. Wonderful noise. No other Davis album expresses the soul of the artist as well this one. It is pure energy on a slow burn interpolated with fantastic flights. It is one of the few albums that I never tire of--each time I listen to it I get chills, and I must have heard it a thousand times--often enough to wear out two sets in vinyl and another in tape. Put me on the proverbial desert island with a few books and a few records and this would be first on my list. The only reason I can think of not to get it is that "The Complete Bitchs Brew Sessions" is even better--much better. Davis had a way of getting the very best out of the very best players and CBBS shows this even more forcefully than the original release.
It appears, however, that this album also attracts considerable resentment-- those in self-forged chains often resent flights of freedom in others. If Picasso had never left his 'Blue Period,' he would not be remembered, and if Miles had continued to bop he would not have been the force in jazz that he came to be--here a master frees himself from conventional expression and shows what is possible. Submitted by stainpouch (Atlanta) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 1 found this helpful.
Romance? The music on this CD is a must. The second disc made for a very romantic night with my mate!!! Submitted by thebigred67 (Sacto, CA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Hmm. I pride myself on being an adventurous listener, and I'm a musician to boot, but I have a hard time finding something to hold on to here. Unlike some, I don't suspect that all lovers of this album are posing as aesthetes, but I'm embarrassed to say that my harmonic and melodic tastes are a little more traditional than this album allows. It's odd--I love a lot of ambient music that doesn't value melody at all--but this music feels like oversaturation to me. I'm glad that Miles continued to explore...it's what he did (and his best records are ALL post-bop anyway) but this one leaves me cold. Submitted by James (Minneapolis, MN) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Bitches As far as jazz goes this album is more full of life than any other album ive ever heard. Miles is amazing at putting a lot of feeling into one note and this album is full of emotion. Submitted by Mustin (Anderson, IN) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Essential. I know a lot of jazz 'purists' disagree, but the music here is what I consider to be 'the real thing'. Even though I don't consider myself a 'music bully'(like the majority of Beatles fans...yes, you know who you are), this time I'll have to state that everybody needs to listen to this all the way through at least once in their life.
Any music conversation you may have in the future will be sorely uninformed due to your neglect of this masterpiece.
Listen - learn - then tell others. Submitted by Paul (Liverpool, UK.) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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