Which is not to say, Relaxin'....nor with his quintet.
On this day in 1969, Miles Davis released his first fusion album, In a Silent Way. He'd started to go electric the previous year, on initially on Miles in the Sky and more so on Filles de Kilimanjaro.
While it has some grooves and uptempo material, Silent Way is a fairly quiet album that doesn't feature any of the more jarring work that one finds on Bitches Brew, Live Evil, On the Corner or Get Up With It, nor does it rock like Jack Johnson.
Today's playlist features the mellow cuts from Miles during 1969-1975 his early fusion period. The complete sessions boxed sets (Silent Way, BB, JJ, Corner) from allow for the undoing of some of Teo Macero's edits. For instance, "Orange Lady", with its sitars and tablas can be disaggregated from "Great Expectations" off of Big Fun.
Likewise, the blues vamp from the middle of "Go Ahead John" can stand on its own, although it seems a violation to separate it from the complete track from Big Fun.
On this day in 1969, Miles Davis released his first fusion album, In a Silent Way. He'd started to go electric the previous year, on initially on Miles in the Sky and more so on Filles de Kilimanjaro.
While it has some grooves and uptempo material, Silent Way is a fairly quiet album that doesn't feature any of the more jarring work that one finds on Bitches Brew, Live Evil, On the Corner or Get Up With It, nor does it rock like Jack Johnson.
Today's playlist features the mellow cuts from Miles during 1969-1975 his early fusion period. The complete sessions boxed sets (Silent Way, BB, JJ, Corner) from allow for the undoing of some of Teo Macero's edits. For instance, "Orange Lady", with its sitars and tablas can be disaggregated from "Great Expectations" off of Big Fun.
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