On The Corner
Miles Davis Lyrics


Instrumental


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Most interesting comments from YouTube:

Jon Effemey

There are many stages in the development of Miles Davis music. He started off in bebop, playing along side Charlie Parker. Miles was not the same technical genius as Dizzy Gillespie in terms of speed and phrases. His brilliance was in the quality of the sound and the phrasing. He moved onto Cool Jazz. For me there were two schools, West Coast Cool and Miles Davis Cool. In 1958 he produced one of his classic numbers Miles Stones in 1958, then Porgy and Bess and Sketches of Spain, the latter he worked closing with Gil Evans, producing this brilliant re interpretation of a classic Joaquín Rodrigo number. His trumpet playing was really soulful in this number. Also in 1959 came his real master piece Kind of Blue.
Miles never closed his ears.
I feel he absorbed what was going on at the time. Throughout the 60s he produced some really good work culminating in In a Silent Way.
I am 64, I lived through the late 60s and early 70s. As a so called "baby boomer" I am supposed to like the music of this period. The "hippie 60s" started folding in on itself. Yes, this was the seeds of a lot of stuff we have now. "Free jazz"was very much the thing then Only John Coltrane could properly handle that I feel. But I personally felt things were pretty raggard and rough, plus over indulgent, during that phase. You hear it here in On the Corner and also in Bitches Brew. there is a funk free feel, but it is pretty rough at times.
In the 1980s there were three amazing albums. Tutu Amadla and Aura. Miles had absorbed funk, George Duke and Marcus Miller were involved. Marcus Miller had a lot to do with the production. Miles was also brilliant at bringing in new talent, Herbie Hancock , Chick Corea, with Amandla it was Kenny Garrett and many more.
Aura was a fusion of modern classical and jazz. This was a collaboration with Palle Mikkelborg, a Danish Composer. There are some really beautiful passages in this piece .Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen and John McLaughlin, were also featured along with the great Danish Radio Big Band. This was 1989.
Miles always sounded like Miles. He was a genius as a musician and a genius in the way he could work collaboratively with other musicians, arrangers and composers.
I do have a bit of a downer on the 60s/70s junction. This number is pretty typical of that period.
Again Miles always kept his ears open, jazz, rock, funk, classical. He also predicted that mixing was to be the way forward, digital plus instrumentation. He rated Jimi Hendrix and Prince and thought Prince could be the next Duke Ellington...may be?
Sorry for the length, but Miles produced so much over such a long period. He was a unique musician in any genre.



ROB-IN-PHILLY

LOL...Check the personnel on this album...A virtual Who's who in jazz and fusion...:)

Miles Davis – electric trumpet
Dave Liebman – soprano saxophone (A1)
Carlos Garnett – soprano and tenor saxophone (B1, B2)
Chick Corea – electric piano
Herbie Hancock – electric piano, synthesizer
Harold I. Williams – organ, synthesizer
David Creamer (A2, B1, B2), John McLaughlin (A1) – electric guitar
Michael Henderson – electric bass
Collin Walcott (A1, B1, B2), Khalil Balakrishna (A2) - electric sitar
Bennie Maupin – bass clarinet (B1)
Badal Roy – tabla
Jack DeJohnette– drums
Jabali Billy Hart – drums, bongos
James "Mtume" Foreman, Don Alias – percussion
Paul Buckmaster – cello, arrangements
Robert Honablue - engineer



All comments from YouTube:

Randy Slonaker

I have to respect Miles. The man just did his thing, whether anyone else understood it or not. Decades later, the rest of the world caught up.

Andy Butler

I feel Allan Holdsworth and Miles and Jaco Pastorius should have played together

kxiae

Lol the world hasn't catch up.

Herbert Gabriel

Not soon ,so! sorry for that!

Herbert Gabriel

Oh,man you are soon right!

Chairman Bunker

@MilkTrafficker These beats are absolutely hypnotic. I don't see what there is to "get" its simply brilliant

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UnitedElectric

Miles was last century's Beethoven. His stuff is so diverse, so revolutionary, so influential it will only be fully understood over the next few millennia.

LEX37

Ok... no one has said who Keith Jarrett is.

Mountain Man

@eNeNe I couldn‘t be more biased, but isn‘t this a reharmonised jazz form - without the bebop - and all the more powerful for it?:
https://youtu.be/qh32sanojSk
Just should you be interested, but open declaration: I am totally skewed to all things Holdsworth and this may cloud my judgement :)

eNeNe

@Mountain Man You might very well be right. :)

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