Miles Davis's 20 greatest albums – ranked!

** Miles Davis's 20 greatest albums – ranked! **
https://www.theguardian.com/music/2019/aug/01/miles-daviss-20-greatest-albums-ranked
(2019年最新評選安券,僅供參考唧躲。)

20. Bags’ Groove (1957)
In the end, Miles Davis would fascinate jazz, rock and classical fans alike. But in the 1940s he had been a teenage trumpet hopeful partnering Charlie Parker and by 1954, when this session was recorded, he had an understatedly personal version of the revolutionary bebop sound. Alongside Sonny Rollins and Thelonious Monk, he reveals it here.

19. Miles In the Sky (1968)
A patchily intriguing set from the next decade, flagging the ever-changing Miles’ migration from free-swinging jazz to rock. The saxophonist Wayne Shorter broods, the embryonic soul-star George Benson plays terse guitar, Herbie Hancock debuts the formerly unjazzy Fender Rhodes and Tony Williams drums up a perfect storm.

18. The Man with the Horn (1981)
Miles comprehensively burned out in 1975, but while his comeback six years later was uncertain, his 1970s edginess was now softened by the rediscovery of his early lyricism. Good originals such as Back Seat Betty, with its wistful trumpet and hard-thumbed Marcus Miller bass hooks, entered the repertoire.

17. Amandla (1989)
Marcus Miller, Miles’s 1980s svengali, scored and glossily produced this late-career set dedicated to South Africa’s liberation from apartheid. It’s a bit lightweight for its subject, but the Jaco Pastorius tribute is both swinging and soulful, and the title ballad is bittersweet acoustic Miles at his most poignant.

16. Panthalassa: The Music of Miles Davis 1969-1974 (1998)
Audacious but sympathetic remixes by imaginative producer/player Bill Laswell, of music from Miles’s heavily experimental 1970s period, including In a Silent Way. While Laswell’s echoey, bass-pumping, beat-swelling treatments sometimes twist the originals way out of shape, their creator’s spirit runs through it all.

*15. L’Ascenseur Pour L’Echafaud (1958)
The director Louis Malle hired a Paris-loving, 31-year-old Miles and a French/US band including the bebop drummer Kenny Clarke to improvise a soundtrack for his noirish 1958 thriller L’Ascenseur Pour L’Echafaud (Lift to the Scaffold). Going only by the visuals, the trumpeter reflected the movie’s desolate romanticism perfectly.

14. On the Corner (1972)
Bill Laswell, Miles’s posthumous remixer, called 1972’s On the Corner “mutant hip-hop” – others have heard dub, pre-punk, drum’n’bass and more in its oceanic, thick-textured, harmony-purged turmoil of multiple keyboards, overdubs, saxes and percussion. Long ignored, the session is on its way to rehabilitation.

*13. Miles Davis: Vol 2 (1956)
Miles preferred patience, tension, release and expressiveness of tone to the torrents of notes that often characterised bebop. This classy 50s compilation, including the saxophonist Jackie McLean, pianist Horace Silver and drummer Art Blakey, features both his ballad elegance and some of his most surefooted improv over a bop groove.

12. Relaxin’ with the Miles Davis Quintet (1958)
Miles buffs refer to his “first and second great quintets”. The second was the 1960s group including Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter and Tony Williams. This, with saxophonist John Coltrane, is the dazzling first. The contrast between the reticent, incisive trumpeter and the unquenchable Coltrane is mesmerising.

11. Aura (1989)
In 1985, Denmark’s government awarded Miles Davis its normally classical Sonning prize, and Danish trumpeter Palle Mikkelborg wrote an orchestral suite for the star and – somehow – persuaded him to play on it. Superb solos from an engaged and attentive Miles, navigating Mikkelborg’s references to all kinds of 20th-century music.

10. You’re Under Arrest (1985)
Miles’s last session for Columbia Records, notably including beautiful interpretations of two pop songs – Cyndi Lauper’s Time After Time and Michael Jackson’s Human Nature. Also striking is guitar newcomer John Scofield’s fast and convoluted title-track blues, one of the great original compositions for a late-period Miles lineup.

9. Bitches Brew (1969)
The dense, dark, Latin-fusion epic Bitches Brew was a landmark of production as well as musicianship from a superb band including Wayne Shorter, John McLaughlin, Chick Corea and Jack DeJohnette. The players improvised for hours; the producer, Teo Macero, and Miles cut-and-pasted the results into distinct tracks later.

8. Milestones (1958)
Along with Kind of Blue, Milestones is a masterpiece from the 1950s quintet including John Coltrane – expanded to a sextet here by gospel-y alto saxophonist Julian “Cannonball” Adderley. The springy, airborne title track is a standout, as is the leader’s incisive improv on Thelonious Monk’s Straight, No Chaser.

7. Sketches of Spain (1960)
Most at ease in small groups, Miles Davis was also a poetic soloist in concerto-like roles with a big band. His long and fruitful relationship with the Canadian composer/arranger Gil Evans gets a spectacular airing on Spanish themes including the smouldering Concierto de Aranjuez, and the quietly conversational Solea.

*6. The Complete Live at the Plugged Nickel (1965)
Maybe the best-ever representation of “the second great quintet” at work. Superbly recorded live at Chicago’s Plugged Nickel club, the set finds Miles, Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter and Tony Williams reinventing small-band jazz with an all-but-psychic flexibility of timing and on-the-fly harmonising.

5. Birth of the Cool (1957)
The young Miles wanted to play bebop’s revolutionary conceptions in a more ethereal, less impatient way than its first pioneers. With likeminded souls including saxophonist Gerry Mulligan and Lee Konitz, and the composer/arranger Gil Evans, he formed this delicately groundbreaking chamber ensemble, an influence on the jazz sound still.

4. Porgy and Bess (1959)
A beautiful makeover of the Gershwin opera – give or take a little shaky section playing in the under-rehearsed band – with Miles’s trumpet soaring over a Gil Evans-arranged orchestra. His exhortations over the shouts of the band on Prayer, and his supple, gliding solo on Summertime are standouts.

3. A Tribute to Jack Johnson (1970)
From a film-score assignment about boxing legend Jack Johnson, Miles launched a new band (hiring Stevie Wonder bassist Michael Henderson among others) and built a thrillingly hard-rocking sound out of long studio jams and radical editing. The seeds of his next five years are in this uncompromising music.

2. In a Silent Way (1969)
Time stands still on this 1969 Davis classic. Electric sounds and textures (notably from new guitarist John McLaughlin and keyboardist Joe Zawinul) make clear breaks from the trumpeter’s acoustic bands – but Miles’s horn and Wayne Shorter’s keening soprano sax sketch passages of an exquisite, irresistible tranquillity.

1. Kind of Blue (1959)
Revered by pundits and fans, radiating an enduringly contemporary sound, and with un-jazz-like sales of 4 million plus at the last count, Kind of Blue – the 1959 session recorded in just a few hours and with minimal rehearsal – changed the way listeners and practitioners everywhere heard and made music. The Milestones band, with John Coltrane and Cannonball Adderley on saxes, was the core, with the graceful pianist Bill Evans added, and the use of modes rather than song chords throughout gave the music an ethereal, free-associative spaciousness that draws new audiences to jazz to this day.

Happy listening, Good Luck !

?著作權(quán)歸作者所有,轉(zhuǎn)載或內(nèi)容合作請聯(lián)系作者
  • 序言:七十年代末鼻忠,一起剝皮案震驚了整個濱河市,隨后出現(xiàn)的幾起案子,更是在濱河造成了極大的恐慌乾忱,老刑警劉巖消玄,帶你破解...
    沈念sama閱讀 217,084評論 6 503
  • 序言:濱河連續(xù)發(fā)生了三起死亡事件脚翘,死亡現(xiàn)場離奇詭異贪绘,居然都是意外死亡,警方通過查閱死者的電腦和手機(jī)练对,發(fā)現(xiàn)死者居然都...
    沈念sama閱讀 92,623評論 3 392
  • 文/潘曉璐 我一進(jìn)店門遍蟋,熙熙樓的掌柜王于貴愁眉苦臉地迎上來,“玉大人螟凭,你說我怎么就攤上這事虚青。” “怎么了螺男?”我有些...
    開封第一講書人閱讀 163,450評論 0 353
  • 文/不壞的土叔 我叫張陵棒厘,是天一觀的道長。 經(jīng)常有香客問我烟号,道長绊谭,這世上最難降的妖魔是什么? 我笑而不...
    開封第一講書人閱讀 58,322評論 1 293
  • 正文 為了忘掉前任汪拥,我火速辦了婚禮,結(jié)果婚禮上篙耗,老公的妹妹穿的比我還像新娘迫筑。我一直安慰自己,他們只是感情好宗弯,可當(dāng)我...
    茶點(diǎn)故事閱讀 67,370評論 6 390
  • 文/花漫 我一把揭開白布脯燃。 她就那樣靜靜地躺著,像睡著了一般蒙保。 火紅的嫁衣襯著肌膚如雪辕棚。 梳的紋絲不亂的頭發(fā)上,一...
    開封第一講書人閱讀 51,274評論 1 300
  • 那天,我揣著相機(jī)與錄音逝嚎,去河邊找鬼扁瓢。 笑死,一個胖子當(dāng)著我的面吹牛补君,可吹牛的內(nèi)容都是我干的引几。 我是一名探鬼主播,決...
    沈念sama閱讀 40,126評論 3 418
  • 文/蒼蘭香墨 我猛地睜開眼挽铁,長吁一口氣:“原來是場噩夢啊……” “哼伟桅!你這毒婦竟也來了?” 一聲冷哼從身側(cè)響起叽掘,我...
    開封第一講書人閱讀 38,980評論 0 275
  • 序言:老撾萬榮一對情侶失蹤楣铁,失蹤者是張志新(化名)和其女友劉穎,沒想到半個月后更扁,有當(dāng)?shù)厝嗽跇淞掷锇l(fā)現(xiàn)了一具尸體民褂,經(jīng)...
    沈念sama閱讀 45,414評論 1 313
  • 正文 獨(dú)居荒郊野嶺守林人離奇死亡,尸身上長有42處帶血的膿包…… 初始之章·張勛 以下內(nèi)容為張勛視角 年9月15日...
    茶點(diǎn)故事閱讀 37,599評論 3 334
  • 正文 我和宋清朗相戀三年疯潭,在試婚紗的時候發(fā)現(xiàn)自己被綠了赊堪。 大學(xué)時的朋友給我發(fā)了我未婚夫和他白月光在一起吃飯的照片。...
    茶點(diǎn)故事閱讀 39,773評論 1 348
  • 序言:一個原本活蹦亂跳的男人離奇死亡竖哩,死狀恐怖哭廉,靈堂內(nèi)的尸體忽然破棺而出,到底是詐尸還是另有隱情相叁,我是刑警寧澤遵绰,帶...
    沈念sama閱讀 35,470評論 5 344
  • 正文 年R本政府宣布,位于F島的核電站增淹,受9級特大地震影響椿访,放射性物質(zhì)發(fā)生泄漏。R本人自食惡果不足惜虑润,卻給世界環(huán)境...
    茶點(diǎn)故事閱讀 41,080評論 3 327
  • 文/蒙蒙 一成玫、第九天 我趴在偏房一處隱蔽的房頂上張望。 院中可真熱鬧拳喻,春花似錦哭当、人聲如沸。這莊子的主人今日做“春日...
    開封第一講書人閱讀 31,713評論 0 22
  • 文/蒼蘭香墨 我抬頭看了看天上的太陽。三九已至亚亲,卻和暖如春彻采,著一層夾襖步出監(jiān)牢的瞬間腐缤,已是汗流浹背。 一陣腳步聲響...
    開封第一講書人閱讀 32,852評論 1 269
  • 我被黑心中介騙來泰國打工肛响, 沒想到剛下飛機(jī)就差點(diǎn)兒被人妖公主榨干…… 1. 我叫王不留岭粤,地道東北人。 一個月前我還...
    沈念sama閱讀 47,865評論 2 370
  • 正文 我出身青樓终惑,卻偏偏與公主長得像绍在,于是被迫代替她去往敵國和親。 傳聞我的和親對象是個殘疾皇子雹有,可洞房花燭夜當(dāng)晚...
    茶點(diǎn)故事閱讀 44,689評論 2 354

推薦閱讀更多精彩內(nèi)容