Miles Davis
Bitches Brew

Columbia / Legacy    C2K 65774  (1969)

Jazz
CD, 2   Discs, 7   Tracks, 105:56  Length
Disc 1 47:05
01 Pharaoh's Dance Joe Zawinul 20:06
✷  Recording Date   1969  ✷ 
02 Bitches Brew Miles Davis 26:59
✷  Recording Date   1969  ✷ 

Disc 2

58:51
✷  Recorded August 19 - 21, 1969
20-Bit Digitally Remastered
Great new liner notes & rare photos

No jazz collection is complete without Bitches Brew, an influential set that was one of the first successful attempts to form a new music (soon termed fusion) by combining jazz solos with rock rhythms. "Miles Runs the Voodoo Down" is the most memorable of the six lengthy selections, featuring a fascinating ensemble with Davis's trumpet, Wayne Shorter's soprano, Bennie Maupin's bass clarinet, guitarist John McLaughlin, the keyboards of Chick Corea and Larry Young (Joe Zawinul is on some of the other selections), Dave Holland and Harvey Brooks on basses, drummers Jack DeJohnette, Charles Alias, and Lenny White, and percussionist Jim Riley. Not for the close-minded, this music brought many rock listeners into jazz and gave jazz musicians new possibilities to explore.

Keine Jazzansammlung ist ohne dieses Doppelte komplett CD. Dieser sehr einflußreiche Satz war einer der ersten erfolgreichen Versuche, eine neue Musik zu bilden, (soon termed fusion) indem er Jazzsoli mit Felsenrhythmen kombinierte. "Miles Runs the Voodoo Down" ist memorable der sechs langatmigen Vorwähleren und kennzeichnet von eines faszinierenden Ensembles mit Davis's Trompete, Wayne Shorter's von des soprano, Bennie Maupin's von des Baß-clarinet, von des guitarist John McLaughlin , von der Tastaturen Chick Corea und Larry Young (Joe Zawinul is on some of the other selections) Dave Holland und Harvey Brooks auf von der Bässe, von der Schlagzeuger Jack DeJohnette Charles Alias und Lenny White und von des percussionist Jim Riley . Nicht für schließen-gekümmert, holte diese Musik viele Felsenzuh50rer in Jazz und gab Jazzmusikern neue Möglichkeiten, um zu erforschen.  ✷
01 Spanish Key Miles Davis 17:34
✷  Recording Date   1999  ✷ 
02 John McLaughlin Miles Davis 04:25
✷  Recording Date   1999  ✷ 
03 Miles Runs The Voodoo Down Miles Davis 14:03
✷  Recording Date   1999  ✷ 
04 Sanctuary Wayne Shorter 11:00
✷  Recording Date   1999  ✷ 
05 Feio Wayne Shorter 11:49
✷  Recording Date   1999  ✷ 
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Jewel Case
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Trumpet Miles Davis
Saxophone Wayne Shorter
Clarinet Bennie Maupin
Keyboards Joe Zawinul
Keyboards Chick Corea
Guitar John McLaughlin
Bass Dave Holland
Bass Harvey Brooks
Drums Lenny White
Percussion Don Alias
Percussion Jumma Santos
Keyboards Larry Young
Drums Jack DeJohnette
Drums Billy Cobham
Percussion Airto Moreira
Producer Teo Macero
Cover by Mati Klarwein
Personal Details
Index # 840
Owner Dave
Tags Fusion
User Defined
Purchased New
Notes
Thought by many to be among the most revolutionary albums in jazz history, Miles Davis' Bitches Brew solidified the genre known as jazz-rock fusion. The original double LP included only six cuts and featured up to 12 musicians at any given time, some of whom were already established while others would become high-profile players later, Joe Zawinul, Wayne Shorter, Airto, John McLaughlin, Chick Corea, Jack DeJohnette, Dave Holland, Don Alias, Bennie Maupin, Larry Young, and Lenny White among them. Originally thought to be a series of long jams locked into grooves around keyboard, bass, or guitar vamps, Bitches Brew is actually a recording that producer Teo Macero assembled from various jams and takes by razor blade, splice to splice, section to section. "Pharaoh's Dance" opens the set with its slippery trumpet lines, McLaughlin's snaky guitar figures skirting the edge of the rhythm section and Don Alias' conga slipping through the middle. Corea and Zawinul's keyboards create a haunted, riffing modal groove, echoed and accented by the basses of Harvey Brooks and Holland. The title cut was originally composed as a five-part suite, though only three were used. Here the keyboards punch through the mix and big chords ring up distorted harmonics for Davis to solo rhythmically over, outside the mode. McLaughlin's comping creates a vamp, and the bass and drums carry the rest. It's a small taste of the deep voodoo funk to appear on Davis' later records. Side three opens with McLaughlin and Davis trading fours and eights over a lockstep hypnotic vamp on "Spanish Key." Zawinul's lyric sensibility provides a near chorus for Corea to flit around in; the congas and drummers juxtapose themselves against the basslines. It nearly segues into the brief "John McLaughlin," featuring an organ playing modes below arpeggiated blues guitar runs. The end of Bitches Brew, signified by the stellar "Miles Runs the Voodoo Down," reflects the influence of Jimi Hendrix with its chunky, slipped chords and Davis playing a ghostly melody through the funkiness of the rhythm section. It seemingly dances, becoming increasingly more chaotic until it nearly disintegrates before shimmering into a loose foggy nadir. The disc closes with "Sanctuary," completely redone here as a moody electric ballad that was reworked for this band while keeping enough of its integrity to be recognizable. Bitches Brew is so forward-thinking that it retains its freshness and mystery in the 21st century. -- Thom Jurek (allmusic.com)

If this historic set is about any one thing it's electric-meets-acoustic: the theme of the twenty-seven-minute title side, in which Miles's horn combines with an electric instrument for a two-note motif that's suddenly resolved after a dozen repetitions in a single echoed trumpet blat, says it all. But it's not about any one thing--it's a brilliant wash of ideas, so many ideas that it leaves an unfocused impression. That's probably why I don't return to it as I do to the quieter electric-meets-acoustic of In a Silent Way, although maybe it's just that this one rocks less--three different percussionists replace Tony Williams, whose steady pulse is put aside for the subtle shades of Latin and funk polyrhythm that never gather the requisite fervor. Enormously suggestive, and never less than enjoyable, but not quite compelling. Which is what rock is supposed to be. A- -- Robert Christgau