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MILES DAVIS - Paul's Mall, Boston, MA September 14th, 1972
$12.00 -
The double live album Dark Magus was recorded on March 30, 1974, at Carnegie Hall in New York City.
$39.00 -
"Miles’ touted “Fillmore Band” didn’t sound much like a band to me. In an area of music where individual virtuosity is the rule rather than the exception, give-and-take between players becomes all important.
$39.00 -
5CD budget set (some bonus tracks!) from Miles' electric period:
A Tribute To Jack Johnson
On The Corner
Big Fun (disc 1)
Big Fun (disc 2)
Water Babies$25.00 -
"None of Miles Davis' recordings has been more shrouded in mystery than Jack Johnson, yet none has better fulfilled Davis' promise that he could form the "greatest rock band you ever heard." Containing only two tracks, the album was assembled out of no less than four recording sessions between F
$7.50 -
"The classic interpretation of Gershwin by Miles Davis (performing with a large ensemble) and Gil Evans (arranger and conductor).
$7.50 -
"Along with its sister recording, Pangaea, Agharta was recorded live in February of 1975 at the Osaka Festival Hall in Japan.
$41.00 -
"Along with Kind of Blue, In a Silent Way, and Round About Midnight, Sketches of Spain is one of Miles Davis' most enduring and innovative achievements.
$7.50 -
""In 1963, Miles Davis was at a transitional point in his career, without a regular group and wondering what his future musical direction would be.
$7.50 -
"Sorcerer, the third album by the second Miles Davis Quintet, is in a sense a transitional album, a quiet, subdued affair that rarely blows hot, choosing to explore cerebral tonal colorings.
$7.50 -
"Nefertiti, the fourth album by Miles Davis' second classic quintet, continues the forward motion of Sorcerer, as the group settles into a low-key, exploratory groove, offering music with recognizable themes -- but themes that were deliberately dissonant, slightly unsettling even as they burrowe
$7.50 -
"Kind of Blue isn't merely an artistic highlight for Miles Davis, it's an album that towers above its peers, a record generally considered as the definitive jazz album. To be reductive, it's the Citizen Kane of jazz -- an accepted work of greatness that's innovative and entertaining.
$7.50 -
"What is immedately noticeable upon listening to Miles Davis' classic first -- and only -- album with his original sextet is how deep the blues presence is on it.
$7.50 -
Considered by many to be the first fusion album.
$8.00 -
"After both John Coltrane and Cannonball Adderley left Miles Davis' quintet, he was caught in the web of seeking suitable replacements. It was a period of trial and error for him that nonetheless yielded some legendary recordings (Sketches of Spain, for one).
$7.50 -
"Miles Davis' concert of February 12, 1964, was divided into two LPs, with all of the ballads put on My Funny Valentine.
$7.50