
Attribution
edited by Gerald EarlyPublication Details
BookMissouri Historical Society Press2001Availability
LOCATION CALL # STATUS (UPPER LEVEL) ML419.D39 M53 2001 AVAILABLE New Feature: Text this to your cellphone
View record in LOLA catalogSubject
Notes
- "Brash and brilliant, an icon of cool, Miles Davis (1926- 1991) was one of the twentieth century’s greatest artists. The East St. Louis trumpeter and bandleader had an enormous impact in jazz with such diverse and classic recordings as The Birth of the Cool, Kind of Blue, Sketches of Spain, and Bitches Brew. He inspired artists, writers, and other musicians with his musical daring and mysterious persona. His music provoked discussion of art versus commerce, the relationship of artist to audience, and the definition of jazz itself. Whether the topic is race, fashion, or gender relations, the cultural debate about Davis’s life remains a confluence." "Editor Gerald Early and the contributors to Miles Davis and American Culture place Davis in cultural context, from his beginnings along the Mississippi River to his final years as a world-renowned musician. In this collection of a dozen original essays, William Howland Kenney examines jazz in St. Louis during Davis’s formative years; Ingrid Monson analyzes Davis’s relationship to the civil rights movement; poet and Davis biographer Quincy Troupe reflects on Davis’s musical journey of the 1960s; and Farah Jasmine Griffin views Davis’s relationship to women."–BOOK JACKET
Contents
- The art of the muscle: Miles Davis as American knave / Gerald Early
- Just before Miles: jazz in St. Louis, 1926 -1944 / William Howland Kenney
- "I just adored that man" / an interview with Quincy Jones
- "So what"(?) … it’s "all blues" anyway: an anecdotal/jazzological tour of Milesville / Eugene B. Redmond
- "He’s Miles ahead" / an interview with George Avakian
- Miles and the jazz critics / John Gennari
- "Sensational pulse" / an interview with Ahmad Jamal
- Miles, politics, and image / Ingrid Monson
- "Any direction he chose" / an interview with Ron Carter
- Miles Davis and the 1960s avant-garde / Waldo E. Martin Jr.
- From Kind of blue to Bitches brew / Quincy Troupe
- "It’s about that time": the response to Miles Davis’s electric turn / Eric Porter
- Miles Davis and the double audience / Martha Bayless
- "Here’s God walking around" / an interview with Joey DeFrancesco
- Ladies sing Miles / Farah Jasmine Griffin
- Remembering Miles in St. Louis: a conclusion / Benjamin Cawthra
- Appendix 1. Playboy interview with Alex Haley
- Appendix 2. Chronology
ISBN
- 1883982383
- 1883982375
LCCN
Open Library ID
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