Miles Davis had a raw, multi-syllable name for his group from 1969, and it wasn’t one we can print in this newspaper. Known in various jazz-obsessive circles as the Lost Band, the powerful quintet of ...
While the quintet heard on this first-time commercial issue of four live dates from 1969 was, in fact, already uncovered on the November 4, 1969 Copenhagen concert DVD included in the Bitches Brew: ...
Miles Davis' Live in Europe 1969: The Bootleg Series Vol. 2 is a compilation of previously unreleased material performed by a short-lived incarnation of his touring band. After a slew of multidisc ...
Since the first volume of Miles Davis’ Bootleg Serieswas released in 2011, several other volumes featuring different recordings of live performances and studio sessions the legendary trumpeter had ...
The most—perhaps only—frustrating thing about this first installment in what trumpeter Miles Davis completists can only hope ends up being an exhaustive series of archival releases, is the 44 years it ...
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... Toward the end of his life, trumpeter Miles Davis wrote of his frustration with Columbia Records for not documenting his exploratory touring band from 1969.
Craft Recordings have expanded their Small Batch Series with a vinyl reissue of Relaxin’ with the Miles Davis Quintet. For $109.95. Ouch. This is going to sell-out very quickly and we suggest that you ...
The "Miles Davis Quintet Live in Europe 1967" four-disc set would be a great way to get a taste of 1960s jazz at its best. It will rock your world. Ex-movie theater projectionist Steve Guttenberg has ...
The "Second Quintet" - the Miles Davis Quintet of the mid-1960s - was one of the most innovative and influential groups in the history of the genre. Each of the musicians who performed with Davis- ...
Miles Davis’ live work with his Second Great Quintet — as documented in a handful of unreleased French concerts — is the focus of the upcoming eighth volume in the late jazz legend’s Bootleg Series.
Stunning as these individual players were, the ways they worked together really make the band. Groups often stretch out live more than on studio albums. But these guys subjected pieces to wild ...
After a slew of multidisc sets devoted to key points in the career of Miles Davis, you'd think Columbia Records would have unearthed every speck of consequential music by now. But not quite. This week ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results