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What is cool? At its very essence, cool is all about what's happening next.
In popular culture, what's happening next is a kaleidoscope encompassing past,
present and future: that which is about to happen may be cool, and that which
happened in the distant past may also be cool. This timeless quality, when
it applies to music, allows minimalist debate — with few exceptions, that
which has been cool will always be cool.
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For nearly six decades, Miles Davis has embodied all that is cool —
in his music (and most especially jazz), in his art, fashion, romance, and in his
international, if not intergalactic, presence that looms strong as ever today.
2006 — the year in which Miles Davis was inducted into the Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame on March 13th — is a land-mark year, commemorating the 80th
anniversary of his birth on May 26, 1926, and the 15th anniversary of his death
on September 28, 1991. In between those two markers is more than a half-century
of brilliance — often exasperating, brutally honest with himself and
to others, uncompromising in a way that transcended mere intuition.
In carrying out what always seemed like a mission, Miles Dewey Davis III —
musician, composer, arranger, producer, and band leader — was always in the
right place at the right time, another defining aspect of cool. Born in Alton,
Illinois, and raised in East St. Louis, where his father was a dentist, Miles was
given his first trumpet at age 13. A child prodigy, his mastery of the instrument
accelerated as he came under the spell of older jazzmen Clark Terry, Charlie
Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Billy Eckstine, and others who passed through. He
accepted admission to the Juilliard School in 1944, but it was a ruse to get
to New York and hook up with Bird and Diz. Miles was 18. Cool.
Within a year, he accomplished his goal. He can be heard on sessions led by
Parker that were released on Savoy in 1945 (with Max Roach), '46 (with Bud Powell),
'47 (with Duke Jordan and J.J. Johnson), and '48 (with John Lewis). In 1947,
the Miles Davis All-Stars (with Bird, Roach, Lewis, and Nelson Boyd) debuted
on Savoy. His years on 52nd Street during the last half of the 1940s brought
him into the bop orbit of musicians whose legends he would share before
he was 25 years old.
At the turn of the decade into 1950, as Miles led his first small groups,
an association with Gerry Mulligan and arranger Gil Evans ushered in
The Birth of the Cool (Capitol), a movement that challenged
the dominance of bebop and hard-bop. Miles' subsequent record dates
as leader in the early '50s (on Blue Note, then Prestige) helped introduce
Sonny Rollins, Jackie McLean, Horace Silver, and Percy Heath, among
many others, establishing Miles' role as the premier jazz talent
scout for the rest of his career.
An historic set at the Newport Jazz Festival in 1955 resulted in George
Avakian signing Miles to Columbia Records, and led to the formation of
his so-called "first great quintet," featuring John Coltrane, Red
Garland, Paul Chambers, and Philly Joe Jones (the 'Round about Midnight
sessions). Miles' 30 years at Columbia was one of the longest exclusive
signings in the history of jazz, and one that spanned at least a
half-dozen distinct generations of changes in the music —
virtually all of which were anticipated or led by Miles or his former sidemen.
Over the course of those 30 years, service with Miles became an imprimatur
for the Who's Who of jazzmen. Kind of Blue, undisputedly the coolest
jazz album ever recorded, was done in 1959 with the second edition of Miles'
"first great quintet" — principally Coltrane, Chambers, Cannonball
Adderley, Bill Evans, and Jimmy Cobb — who stayed together until 1961.
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© 2010 The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts. All rights reserved.
Miles Davis, Newport Festival, Palais des Sports, Paris. November 15, 1973. After photos © Christian Rose
Important notice: copyright and reproduction rights
http://www.mmfa.qc.ca/milesdavis
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Miles Davis, Columbia Studios, New York, July 1958. Photo Don Hunstein. © Courtesy of SME. |
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