Miles Davis & Sonny Stitt, "But not for me", Live in Amsterdam, 1960
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- Опубликовано: 10 фев 2025
- Miles Davis & Sonny Stitt, "But not for me", Live in Amsterdam, 1960
Miles Davis, trumpet
Wynton Kelly, piano
Paul Chambers, bass
Jimmy Cobb, drums
Sonny Stitt, tenor saxophone, alto saxophone
1) But Not for Me (G. Gershwin-I. Gershwin)
2) Walkin' (R. Carpenter)
3) All of You (C. Porter)
4) So What (M. Davis) - The theme (M. Davis)
5) Whisper Not (B. Golson)
6) Ease It (P. Chambers)
7) Stardust (H. Carmichael-M. Parish)
8) Old Folks (D.L. Hill-W. Robison)
9) All Blues (M. Davis)/ The Theme (M. Davis)
October 15, 1960
Concertgebouw, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
This Miles guy sounds pretty good, I think he might have a future in music
What a welcome session--one I didn't know existed. This was during Miles tour of Europe immediately following Trane's departure. Miles was determined to play modal or free. Sonny stuck to bebop melodic ideas and played rhythmically with the bar lines in mind. Musically, Miles and Stitt had grown far apart since their days in the Billy Eckstine Band. It made for an endlessly fascinatingcontrast between Stitt's mainstream bebop and Miles' more experimental modal, even free, jazz.
This is Miles, this is jazz!!!
Forever. The best
Lovely!
Shit! At this time Miles had a (another)! great rythm section, Wynton Kelly, Paul Chambers and Jimmy Cobb,
8:20 rhapsody in blue
🌱😃💙🌺
179 to Ilford Hanauilt Street
👍
187 to Finchley Road O2 Centre
Sounds like Stitt is playing soprano sax.
Alto
9:50
Torch My Talking Tom 2
Sonny Stitt performed with more sense of language than Miles ...but the band didn't find a way to swing, anyway! It seems that it's an european band.
It wasn't it was his usual section
what about the rhythm section?
they literally introduce the band at the beginning lmao
That bans swings it ass off !
Holy Schmitt! I don't know what you're talking about. The credits are right on the link and the announcer introduces all the players by name and instrument right before the first tune. Also, that aside, I can identify everyone of the players by their playing. It's a dead giveaway. And the day Wynton Kelly or Paul C and Jimmy Cobb couldn't swing had never occurred. Three of the swingin'est cat's ever! Jus' sayin'.