| | Seven Steps: The Complete Columbia Recordings Of Miles Davis: 1963-1964 CD Miles Davis Discography of CDs
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Initial pressings of SEVEN STEPS are packaged with a deluxe metal spine. Also includes a 92-page booklet with rare photos, complete discography and essays by Michael Cuscuna and Bob Blumenthal. Personnel: Miles Davis (trumpet); Miles Davis; Ron Carter (double bass); Tony Ruption Williams , Tony Williams (drums); George Coleman, Sam Rivers, Wayne Shorter (tenor saxophone); Victor Feldman, Herbie Hancock (piano); Frank Butler (drums). Audio Remixer: Mark Wilder. Liner Note Authors: Michael Cuscuna; Bob Blumenthal. Recording information: Berlin Philharmonic Hall, Berlin, Germany (04/16/1963-09/19/1964); Columbia 30th Street Studio, New York, NY (04/16/1963-09/19/1964); Columbia Studios, LA (04/16/1963-09/19/1964); Kohseinenkin Hall, Tokyo, Japan (04/16/1963-09/19/1964); Philharmonic Hall, New York, NY (04/16/1963-09/19/1964); The Festival Mondial Du Jazz Antibes, Juan-Les-Pins, Fr (04/16/1963-09/19/1964). All tracks have been digitally mastered using 24-bit technology. Introduction bys: Billy Taylor ; Andre Francis; Terry Isono; Mort Fega. Photographers: Vernon Smith; John Wilkes; Ted Williams; Joe Alper; Jan Persson; Roger Marshutz; Lee Tanner; Chuck Stewart. Seven Steps: The Complete Columbia Recordings of Miles Davis 1963-1964 is an anomaly among the retrospective sets that have been issued from the late artist's catalog. It does not focus on particular collaborations (Miles with Coltrane, Gil Evans, the second quintet), complete sessions of historic albums (Bitches Brew, In a Silent Way, and Jack Johnson), or live runs (Plugged Nickel and Montreux). Instead, it is a portrait of the artist in flux, in the space between legendary bands, when he was looking for a new mode of expression, trying to find the band that would help him get there. These seven CDs begin after the demise of bands that included John Coltrane, Cannonball Adderley, Bill Evans, Paul Chambers, Jimmy Cobb, and Wynton Kelly, after his landmark Gil Evans period, and even after his attempts at creating a new band with everyone from Frank Strozier and Harold Mabern to Sonny Rollins and J.J. Johnson. The transition period depicted on recordings here is the one that would lead directly to the second great quintet, beginning with the addition of bassist Ron Carter and eventually Tony Williams in 1963 on Seven Steps to Heaven. That band also included pianist and composer Victor Feldman, drummer Frank Butler (before Williams), and saxophonist George Coleman. The album Seven Steps to Heaven is extended here with two previously unissued alternate takes of the title track and an amazing alternate of "Joshua" that opens the entire box, both of which were written by Feldman and added dimension to Miles' tried and true songbook. The track "Summer Nights" from this session is present here as part of these sessions even though it was originally released as part of Quiet Nights. Herbie Hancock enters the picture in July of 1963, replacing Feldman for the Live in Europe recording. The box includes unreleased performances of "Bye Bye Blackbird" and "The Theme" in addition to the original album. Other unreleased material here includes a fine "Autumn Leaves" from the live dates that resulted in the albums Four & More and My Funny Valentine as well as those recordings in their entirety. These years also contain the Miles in Tokyo performances. These are uneasy yet utterly compelling recordings that star Sam Rivers on tenor as Coleman's replacement. Williams recommended Rivers when Coleman decided the band was becoming too adventurous for his tastes as a soloist. While these cuts don't necessarily work on a symbiotic level in terms of communication, they do help define the terms in which Miles decided how "out" to get with his developing band. By the time Wayne Shorter comes on board for the Miles in Berlin date, the picture is complete and the perfect balance has been found leading to the studio sessions that began in 1965 with the new quintet. All tollUncut (p.159) - 4 stars out of 5 - "These seven CDs see him build on the pensive, spacious, elegant style he'd developed with players like John Coltrane and Bill Evans." Magnet (p.134) - "[The recording] provides insight into how the trumpeter brought his genre-transforming creativity to a boil." The Wire (p.66) - "These are almost entirely live recordings, and the contrast with the quintet with Coltrane is striking..." Down Beat (p.83) - 4 1/2 stars out of 5 - "[The box set] documents trumpeter Davis' ongoing steps away from the studio, as he wrestled with time-tested standards, searched for ideas and tried on different players in the process." Mojo (Publisher) (p.128) - 5 stars out of 5 - "After it, jazz was never the same again." Seven Steps: The Complete Columbia Recordings Of Miles Davis: 1963-1964 Music Average Rating: (4 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews Wonderful as ever A wonderful package, as usual, for the third set of the complete Miles Davis on Columbia. This is not a coherent bulk of music: it's a transitional period, and a mix of studio and live recordings, but it's wonderful music, as ever. Forgive my English Submitted by leonardo.gori (Italy)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 2 found this helpful.
Awsome!!! Another excellent Box Set of Miles work what else needs to be said. Highly Recommend!!! Submitted by Thomas (Plymouth)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 2 found this helpful.
Excellent music, excellent sound, excellent presentation. This music is as good as anything Miles recorded on Columbia, though it doesn't seem to have the stature of his other landmarks, such as Kind of Blue, Sketches of Spain, or Bitches Brew, or the music he made with his second great quintet. The playing is great, the music swings, and personally I find it much MORE accessible than some of the quintet studio recordings he'd be making in just a few short months. The music simply ROCKS. Submitted by dogpope (Los Angeles, CA, USA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 2 found this helpful.
Vinyl records? Rob in Spomak:
Rob, this set contains great music. I understand you don't like cd's. You might be interested to know that this box set (as well as the other MD boxes) is being released on vinyl by Mosaic Records. Be well informed before you start complaining...
Submitted by John (New York) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 2 found this helpful.
Great music, in a silly package Six of the seven discs contain great music, sounding better than ever thanks to remastering. One disc, live in Antibes, sounds OK (though the French announcer is great fun). The live discs Four & More and Funny Valentine rank among the best Miles Davis ever released. Live in Tokyo and live in Europe (Berlin) are also excellent, and the usually not so well-rated Seven Steps to Heaven comes across excellent too, and Miles Davis plays so beautifully here. The package is silly, similar to the previous sets in this series. I think the designers are not music fans - if they were, they would know how impractical their design is to use and they would have come up with something better, useable, readable and better suited for the storage of CDs too. The recent re-releases of the earlier sets seem to have a better design. That is too late for me, but if you are patient and wait, you might get this set in better packaging too. Submitted by Kari (Washington DC) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 2 found this helpful.
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