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30.08.2010 / SONY / LEGACY Editon: 2CD + 1 DVD / DELUXE Box Set : 3 CD + 1 DVD + 2 Vinyl
Released in April of 1970, Bitches Brew was informed by and reflective of the music that Miles heard being produced in the late-’60s by Jimi Hendrix, Sly Stone, James Brown, Santana, Marvin Gaye and others, as well as the Beatles’ post-production editing pyrotechnics. The original double-LP’s six tracks, as formulated in the studio by Miles and his long-time producer Teo Macero, presented a seismic breakthrough in jazz/rock/funk/R&B. The tracks comprised the 20-minute side-long “Pharaoh’s Dance” (a Joe Zawinul composition), followed by four Miles compositions, the 27-minute side-long “Bitches Brew,” then “Spanish Key,” “John McLaughlin,” and “Miles Runs the VooDoo Down,” concluding with the Wayne Shorter composition, “Sanctuary.”
The new quintet lineup of Shorter, Corea, Holland, and DeJohnette solidified during the 1968-‘69 recording of Filles De Kilimanjaro andIn a Silent Way. This is the group who performs on the Copenhagen concert DVD of November 1969. By March of 1970, they were a seasoned touring group that had accepted the challenge to go head-to-head with arena rock bands at venues like Bill Graham’s Fillmore where rock audiences embraced them.
But three months earlier at Columbia Studios in New York City, at the principal sessions of August 19th (“Bitches Brew,” “John McLaughlin,” “Sanctuary”), 20th (“Miles Runs the VooDoo Down”), and 21st (“Pharaoh’s Dance,” “Spanish Key”), the ranks had swelled to a dozen musicians, and looked like this: Miles on trumpet, Wayne Shorter (soprano saxophone), Bennie Maupin (bass clarinet), Joe Zawinul (electric piano – left), Chick Corea (electric piano – right), John McLaughlin (guitar), Dave Holland (acoustic bass), Harvey Brooks (electric bass), Lenny White (drums – left), Jack DeJohnette (drums – right), Don Alias (congas), and Jumma Santos (Jim Riley) – shaker. The only variation was Don Alias taking over for Lenny White on the 20th, but White was back on the 21st. The advent of multiple keyboardists, multiple bassists, and multiple percussionists and drummers is one of the defining sonic characteristics of Bitches Brew, and made a serious impression on the FM progressive rock audience.
The COLLECTOR’S EDITION adds four bonus tracks from August – alternate takes of “Spanish Key” and “John McLaughlin,” and rare edits (for 45 rpm single releases) of “Miles Runs the VooDoo Down” and “Spanish Key.”
Miles reconvened at Columbia Studios in New York for two days of sessions on November 19th and 28th (long after Copenhagen) with most of his group intact, except for Shorter. The lineup looked like this: Miles on trumpet), Steve Grossman (soprano saxophone), Bennie Maupin (bass clarinet), Herbie Hancock (electric piano – left), Chick Corea (electric piano – right), John McLaughlin (guitar), Ron Carter (bass), Harvey Brooks (electric bass), Khalil Balakrishna (sitar), Bihari Sharma (tambura, tabla), Billy Cobham (drums, triangle), and Airto Moreira (cuica, berimbau). The only variations were the additions of Larry Young (organ, celeste) and Jack DeJohnette (drums) on the 28th.
None of this music was used for the original Bitches Brew album (although all of it is heard on the 1998 box set). For the COLLECTOR’S EDITION, producers Seidel and Cuscuna have judiciously chosen to include two short pieces – single edits of “Great Expectations” and “Little Blue Frog” – as examples to show the evolution of Miles’ sound in just three short months. “These edited 45 rpm singles,” the producers explain, “bound no doubt for radio stations and juke boxes, were the only nod to traditional marketing that this album received.” Although the music on this single was not included in the original double LP, the single was released in February 1970 as part of the promotional set-up for the Bitches Brewfull album in April 1970.
When Wayne Shorter played his final dates with the group at the Fillmore East in March, it marked a turning point, as he went on to organize Weather Report, and Corea and Holland subsequently joined forces as Circle. Only DeJohnette stayed on with Miles (through the Jack Johnson and Live-Evil period).
Soon after the April release of Bitches Brew, while Holland and DeJohnette were still on board, Shorter was replaced by Gary Bartz on saxophone, Keith Jarrett joined as a second keyboardist (on organ, comple ment ing Corea’s electric piano), and Airto Moreira joined on percussion. “Their outstanding live Tanglewood performance from August 18, 1970, of four compositions from Bitches Brew” the producers note, “shows further development of the material due in large part to the added colors possible with the larger ensemble. In the hands of master improvisers, the constant evolution that a piece of music experiences is fascinating. The full story can only be told with the passage of time in live performance.”
Greg Tate explores a world of contexts in which to understand Bitches Brew both literally and figuratively. Miles’ fatherly instruction to Lenny White (some 25 years his junior) was “to literally think of all the assembling players as stewing in a big pot where they were all the bitches.” Tate then places the album “forthrightly within the pantheon of the period’s other goddess-muse inspired masterworks: Eric Clapton’sLayla, the Rolling Stones’ Exile On Main Street, Santana’s Abraxas, James Brown’s Original Funky Divas, and Funkadelic’s Maggot Brain andCosmic Slop.”
After Bitches Brew, Tate concludes, “Miles didn’t wait five years to radically switch up his game in the ’70s – for the next half decade he will steadily release edgy, rough-angled and prophetic music that sounds as contemporary today as any front runner we care to choose – OutKast, Björk, Radiohead, the Roots, Erykah Badu, bring ‘em on – Bitches possesses all their contemporaneity and stuff beyond their grasp too, the shape of jazz to come, still.”
Miles Davis – ‚Bitches Brew‘ (DELUXE BOX SET) (3 CD + 1 DVD + 2 Vinyl): this super-deluxe edition celebrates one of the most remarkable albums in Miles Davis‘ career and jazz history in general. Originally released in 1970, this anniversary 4-disc package offers three CDs (two CDs containing the original 94-plus minutes of music with six bonus tracks), plus a third CD with a previously unissued performance by Miles’ group with Keith Jarrett, Chick Corea, Dave Holland, Jack DeJohnette, Airto Moreira and Gary Bartz at Tanglewood, August 1970); A DVD of a previously unissued performance by Miles’ Quintet lineup with Wayne Shorter, Chick Corea, Dave Holland and Jack DeJohnette in Copenhagen, November 1969; Audiophile 180-gram vinyl double-LP gatefold replication of the original album mastered from the original 2-track analog masters for the first time in many years. The Collectors Edition takes full advantage of the LP-sized 12×12 box set format. It includes (in addition to the recordings and DVD) a lavish 48-page color book, memorabilia envelope (among the contents are a reproduction of a Miles Davis cover story originally published by Rolling Stone in 1969, and correspondences from the Teo Macero archives), and a fold-out poster of Miles in concert.
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