One of the most influencial musicians ever, across any genre. Just by playing, he gave everyone permission to stretch out as far as their talents would take them. Miles invented new musical languages as he went along.
I play the piano, I'm brazilian, I love Jazz, I love Miles! Genius, Great, any words we can say about him will not be enought! Thanks Miles. Thanks!!!!!
Embouchure is the term used to describe using the lips and mouth to play brass and wind instruments. Originating from the French language, embouchure enables full musical tone without straining mouth muscles. Executed correctly, embouchure is activated by free-flowing release of breath. YAY BABY!!!
Thanks for posting this. I remember when this aired, I was a high school "jazzer". 6 years after this I was playing "Bye Bye Blackbird" and the security guard nearby asked who was "butchering" the tune and I told him it was Miles. The guard was a big guy in his 80's and said he was a retired NYC cop in the 40s, 50s and 60s. He said he knew Miles (and other musicians during those days) by reputation and said he was a "troublemaker". I had to laugh.
Sadly, those NYC cops treated Miles like shit and got away with it. I respect officers in general, but there's a special place for the people who assaulted Miles.
I dream original music a lot and wake up with it still in my head. It happens at least once a month. There are dozens of things I've hummed into my phone's voice recorder app immediately after waking. The style I'm hearing is usually classical, but sometimes it's like country rock (Eagles, Neil Young, etc.). 70/30. I wish there was a way to just download it from my brain. If I try to remember it later in the day it's gone.
Any interviewer ask some of the weirdest questions. A tragic situation against a family member and the interviewer ask surviving relative, 'how do you feel'.
Props to Reasoner, had balls to ask some difficult and uncomfortable questions. Miles was super decent in this interview. Major props brother, but no, not all white musicians lag behind the beat. Rest in peace and thank you much.
Heard his records in my house as a kid! My mother loved Miles Davis and said he was good as ever at his live concert so I went to a few of his last concerts!
I discovered "Bitches Brew" album a week ago or so and been listening to it in the car every single day on my way to work. Can't believe I've been oblivious to his music all my life, what a genius this man was! Once in a lifetime artist!
@@JazzVideoGuy I was so lucky seeing him on stage 4 times !!! I still not realise what happened to me😀 . The first time was in Brest Brittany France , it had been said he had asked for a Mercedes 280 SE to drive in the aera 😅 the very car I liked : what a feeling to share taste with this huge artist !!!
My mother was a close friend of his, having both grown up in East Saint Louis, Illinois and they would get together when he came to town. (Chicago) I saw him at the Regal in Chicago in April of "66".
I love his preference for the mute & its human voice-like tonality. Slide guitarists can also emulate it without the barriers of frets. Whether you personally like him or his music, the man was always trying to grow & expand his vocabulary & not rest on his laurels. 🇨🇦
Formidable, free mind, is this the real secret? I think that's the big part of it. Hear his thought is a constant way of inspiration to the life style everybody chases
Miles was from a wealthy family. When he says he went back to his parents place - "couple hundred acres" - to get clean, Harry just lets it slip by. Better to focus on the pain of being Black, even though Miles advises him that he's "never suffered and doesn't intend to." Also weird how much Miles looks like Bob Dylan when he's answering questions.
Miles certainly knew about being treated in a rude and condescending way, or even abused, by white people - concert promoters, cops etc. That he didn't want to talk about it in this particular interview doesn't make much of a point. I'm sure he would have recognized the truth of the famous scene between Rod Steiger and Sidney Poitier at the beginning of "In the Heat of the Night", where Steiger's Deep Southern police chief is telling the guy he thinks is a prime murder suspect that "A black man can't earn that kind of money in an honest way, now tell me, ehere did you EARN IT??" - only to get Mr Tibbs' (Poiter) deadpan reply "I'm a police officer!" and a good look at his service badge. :D
I remembered an interview with classical pianist Vladimir Horowitz in which his wife was present. At some point she blurted out: “Always the same stupid questions!“ Also here, a real shame for the wasted opportunities to ask Master Miles really interesting things.
Miles; smart, clever, talented. Interviewer; not so much. Who in the Sixty Minutes corporate office thought THAT guy was the right man for the job? That’s what the public receives from a corporate media; celebrity over actual human artist and at the latter part of Miles career, he deserved better. So do we.
The interview segments on the "Miles in Paris" dvd - spliced in between tracks - are very illuminating, sometimes even funny (the first thing he says is "The media have f***ed up everybody") - and they're from the same year as this conversation. But yes, the interviewer in Paris was of a different calibre I think. :)
Miles could pick and choose whatever interviews he wanted to do. He always chose these square, white interviews. That was his main market for his music. Imagine though if you could go back in time and advise Miles on which interviews he should have done and which ones he could skip? Wow. Miles would have really appreciated your insight.
Listening to Miles got me thru college 1985-1997. Thought not a musician . I taught. Miles as an example of flawed genius in a racist country that would have preferred not to honor him .
Leave it to the idiots on Sixty Minutes to ask racial questions. 🙄 I’m a much bigger fan of earlier Miles, but that could be because his pop renditions were played endlessly when they first came out.
For some reason these famous musicians perceived as high IQ geniuses..in the end they are just simple people who are good at doodling on an instrument.
Musicianship is a pretty advanced mental game... And to be able to put bands together, arrange, compose, find talent, foster talent, reinvent oneself, experiment, collaborate and use music politically = all signs of high intelligence. Miles Davis was a special man with a special mind who made incredibly valuable contributions to the history of music.
Really racist coverage of Miles Davis. Not just this program. It was a pattern, I remember music students and other people I’ve known say he’s full of s, and that he’s “complicated”. He’s my fav
I think the reality is such questions needed to be asked enough times so that people begin to learn a little about people and culture. I'm not saying it's an intelligent question but that it's based in a stereotype that to the ignorant sounds logical. And for it to start to sound illogical they have to have the illogical question rebutted til they get the point.
They took the least cool and most boring already 2 feet in the coffin square to ask painfully ignorant questions meant to lure the complex artistic genius that is miles into an ad hominem race bait. Pathetic predictable and sad. Groundbreaking art isn't written from perfect lives with zero pain. Grow up. Real interviewers focus on the art and the process to glean gem like insights for an intelligent and artistically advanced audience. Leave the tawdry muck hunting for a cheap supermarket tabloid. Tldr: Cheap shot baited questions and nothing more. Miles handled the buffoonery well.
An old pic easy to find online show’s Miles with Shirley Horn. She is holding a Champagne glass looking onward and he is clearly caught focusing on her chest. I can’t blame him tho. HA
nice Post, I really loved that ensemble and their music.. especially Ricky Wellman and Kenny Garrett
I am crying.......miss him so much. I am 83.....never too late for joy.
precious upper lip
Right with you Brother, I'm 80...
I am 76,he is still one of my favorites.I was raised up on jazz. I love how it relaxes me and energizes me.
I'm just grateful to be living in the world and being able to hear his music!
"I learned something and can wait to apply it"....that's how genius remain great...increase of knowledge.
Absolutely!
and I was the 999th person to like this video. Respect Miles. Love and respect.
Pure genius. He was not like us.
🎯
One of the most influencial musicians ever, across any genre. Just by playing, he gave everyone permission to stretch out as far as their talents would take them. Miles invented new musical languages as he went along.
Well said.
I play the piano, I'm brazilian, I love Jazz, I love Miles! Genius, Great, any words we can say about him will not be enought!
Thanks Miles. Thanks!!!!!
" Thanks" works.
A powerfully mystical human. His gaze could cut through metal. The cadence of his words made them so heavy.
Embouchure is the term used to describe using the lips and mouth to play brass and wind instruments. Originating from the French language, embouchure enables full musical tone without straining mouth muscles. Executed correctly, embouchure is activated by free-flowing release of breath. YAY BABY!!!
I am honoured to own a copy of his greatest selling jazz album of all time Kind of Blue.
I sill play something of Miles everyday of my life - pure joy ! suntreader ( uk )
Real Talk... I learned how to play the trumpet with the mute like Miles, when I was in elementary school in the 70's.
Thanks for posting this. I remember when this aired, I was a high school "jazzer". 6 years after this I was playing "Bye Bye Blackbird" and the security guard nearby asked who was "butchering" the tune and I told him it was Miles. The guard was a big guy in his 80's and said he was a retired NYC cop in the 40s, 50s and 60s. He said he knew Miles (and other musicians during those days) by reputation and said he was a "troublemaker". I had to laugh.
Sadly, those NYC cops treated Miles like shit and got away with it. I respect officers in general, but there's a special place for the people who assaulted Miles.
Back then you had to bow to the shield and Miles, I'm sure, would have none of that.
I dream original music a lot and wake up with it still in my head. It happens at least once a month. There are dozens of things I've hummed into my phone's voice recorder app immediately after waking. The style I'm hearing is usually classical, but sometimes it's like country rock (Eagles, Neil Young, etc.). 70/30. I wish there was a way to just download it from my brain. If I try to remember it later in the day it's gone.
interviewer talks to one of the greatest trumpeters ever and isn't even sure what a mute is called
Any interviewer ask some of the weirdest questions. A tragic situation against a family member and the interviewer ask surviving relative, 'how do you feel'.
Props to Reasoner, had balls to ask some difficult and uncomfortable questions. Miles was super decent in this interview. Major props brother, but no, not all white musicians lag behind the beat. Rest in peace and thank you much.
He's not a musician. Miles is.
Yeah man.... there are not enough words. He lived the music.
I'm glad this musical giant was ABLE to live the high life.
I am down with life but Miles’ music picked me up.. thank you Miles
God will never reject a sincere prayer. Cry out to God and it will all get better brother
Heard his records in my house as a kid! My mother loved Miles Davis and said he was good as ever at his live concert so I went to a few of his last concerts!
Thanks so much.
I love you Miles
it's so sad to see him all tweeked out in his later years. he was arguably the best composer/arranger/performer back in the day. RIP Miles 😪
I discovered "Bitches Brew" album a week ago or so and been listening to it in the car every single day on my way to work. Can't believe I've been oblivious to his music all my life, what a genius this man was! Once in a lifetime artist!
Better late than never. Check out "In A Silent Way"
Will definitely do, thanks for the suggestion!
It's great to discover. I suggest On the Corner or Big Fun.
Check out "Tribute To Jack Johnson"
But anything with Mile's associated deserves listening, a unique genius
Miles is like Dylan . Don’t ask dumb questions . He does not fit into them .
He is beautiful!
only one Miles Davis
@@JazzVideoGuy I was so lucky seeing him on stage 4 times !!! I still not realise what happened to me😀 . The first time was in Brest Brittany France , it had been said he had asked for a Mercedes 280 SE to drive in the aera 😅 the very car I liked : what a feeling to share taste with this huge artist !!!
Now, for me that was the best example of a man's man. Now, read into that what you will. It's positive on my part. Good day to everyone reading this.
Amazing to hear Mr.Davis. Coincidentally there are “526” likes as in May 26 our birthday.
My mother was a close friend of his, having both grown up in East Saint Louis, Illinois and they would get together when he came to town. (Chicago) I saw him at the Regal in Chicago in April of "66".
What was he like?
I love his preference for the mute & its human voice-like tonality. Slide guitarists can also emulate it without the barriers of frets.
Whether you personally like him or his music, the man was always trying to grow & expand his vocabulary & not rest on his laurels.
🇨🇦
Miles! only one
A true American hero ❤
HUH???? Hero? He's a musician. Just stop it.
I remember watching this when it first aired
Great interview! One of the few interviews you’ll see him without his shades
Miles é um gênio, peça única! ❤ jogando ou vivendo
Some of the questions were bizarre.
Formidable, free mind, is this the real secret? I think that's the big part of it. Hear his thought is a constant way of inspiration to the life style everybody chases
Well said.
Miles was from a wealthy family. When he says he went back to his parents place - "couple hundred acres" - to get clean, Harry just lets it slip by. Better to focus on the pain of being Black, even though Miles advises him that he's "never suffered and doesn't intend to." Also weird how much Miles looks like Bob Dylan when he's answering questions.
Miles certainly knew about being treated in a rude and condescending way, or even abused, by white people - concert promoters, cops etc. That he didn't want to talk about it in this particular interview doesn't make much of a point.
I'm sure he would have recognized the truth of the famous scene between Rod Steiger and Sidney Poitier at the beginning of "In the Heat of the Night", where Steiger's Deep Southern police chief is telling the guy he thinks is a prime murder suspect that "A black man can't earn that kind of money in an honest way, now tell me, ehere did you EARN IT??" - only to get Mr Tibbs' (Poiter) deadpan reply "I'm a police officer!" and a good look at his service badge. :D
I noticed that. Identity politics and media involvement go way back.
"Pimpin, what's wrong with that?" Now, that is a BAMF!
63 in this video? Damn he had changed jazz a few times and played with the greats by this time. I'm 58 and need to get my act together.
Great video although the interviewer sometimes asked some stupid questions.
Sometimes? MOST of his questions were astonishingly stupid.
@@keithmorgan742He would've never asked white musicians some of these goofy questions.
I would've never hung out with Miles. Dude is TOO brilliant and woulda broke me down real quick. Very few humans as slick as Miles....
My Hero!
I was researching how he loss his voice. Now I'm going down a rabbit trail. ❤
The story is, had throat surgery, and was told to rest his voice for some time. But got angry at someone, before he was supposed to talk.
Full on man, full on. Africans do experience music differently, in my experience.
Genius!
Interviewer: are you anti-white?
Miles Davis: not all the time!!
Lol- I’d bet he didn’t see that one coming…….
It's a dumb question that gets nowhere. It's just drama.
Miles should've asked that white man if he's anti-Black.
@@skillet6870 "most of the time but not always"
Through Quincey Troupe
Old Harry, the interviewer, is woefully ignorant and painfully inadequate to talk to Miles.
I remembered an interview with classical pianist Vladimir Horowitz in which his wife was present. At some point she blurted out: “Always the same stupid questions!“
Also here, a real shame for the wasted opportunities to ask Master Miles really interesting things.
Max legend status achieved
♥
Miles; smart, clever, talented. Interviewer; not so much. Who in the Sixty Minutes corporate office thought THAT guy was the right man for the job? That’s what the public receives from a corporate media; celebrity over actual human artist and at the latter part of Miles career, he deserved better. So do we.
The interview segments on the "Miles in Paris" dvd - spliced in between tracks - are very illuminating, sometimes even funny (the first thing he says is "The media have f***ed up everybody") - and they're from the same year as this conversation. But yes, the interviewer in Paris was of a different calibre I think. :)
Miles could pick and choose whatever interviews he wanted to do. He always chose these square, white interviews. That was his main market for his music.
Imagine though if you could go back in time and advise Miles on which interviews he should have done and which ones he could skip?
Wow. Miles would have really appreciated your insight.
I think Ed Bradley interviewed him on the same program a couple years later.
They sent the squarest most conservative guy, lol
Not smart enough to stay off the smack.
Tick tick tick...
This interview is pretty rough, on both sides of the table.
I'm headed back to the music...
This is why you have a musician interview another musician. Sigh.
It shows you that the exploited people are never respected
For sure
Why do they always ask us about are money?
OUR; not ARE
WTF was the ending...!?
Listening to Miles got me thru college 1985-1997. Thought not a musician . I taught. Miles as an example of flawed genius in a racist country that would have preferred not to honor him .
well said
Unfortunately he doesn’t talk about his insane coke addiction.
Leave it to the idiots on Sixty Minutes to ask racial questions. 🙄 I’m a much bigger fan of earlier Miles, but that could be because his pop renditions were played endlessly when they first came out.
So wrote a book, but he has no idea what is in the book? He didn't write a damn word of that book.
Quincy Troupe wrote it.
Worst interviewer of all time lol
Benny Goodman…Bix Beiderbecke? Pa-lezzeee. Whoever wrote the copy for this piece was completely out of touch with who Miles Davis was as an artist.
well said
This is a brutal narrow minded interview
Morley Safer is a dunderhead ...
Interesting. He wasn't in this video. You just don't like Morley?
For some reason these famous musicians perceived as high IQ geniuses..in the end they are just simple people who are good at doodling on an instrument.
Well said.
Musicianship is a pretty advanced mental game...
And to be able to put bands together, arrange, compose, find talent, foster talent, reinvent oneself, experiment, collaborate and use music politically = all signs of high intelligence.
Miles Davis was a special man with a special mind who made incredibly valuable contributions to the history of music.
Really racist coverage of Miles Davis. Not just this program. It was a pattern, I remember music students and other people I’ve known say he’s full of s, and that he’s “complicated”. He’s my fav
Sad but true, America has no shortage of racism. Always.
Harry Reasoner. 👎
Really stupid and at times degrading questions from the interviewer!
I love Miles Davis' music in all its forms, but these types of documentaries are so lame... sorry.
It was a tv show, not a doc.
This is the worse interviewer ever.,it’s clear that the hidden racism of the interviewer isn’t hidden
I don’t think it’s racism, just ignorance.
This interviewer is terrible. "Are black musicians better because of slavery?" --WTF?
sadly, yes, they should have had Ed Bradley do the interview
I think the reality is such questions needed to be asked enough times so that people begin to learn a little about people and culture. I'm not saying it's an intelligent question but that it's based in a stereotype that to the ignorant sounds logical. And for it to start to sound illogical they have to have the illogical question rebutted til they get the point.
Identity politics is not new. It's amplified now, but it's not new.
They took the least cool and most boring already 2 feet in the coffin square to ask painfully ignorant questions meant to lure the complex artistic genius that is miles into an ad hominem race bait. Pathetic predictable and sad.
Groundbreaking art isn't written from perfect lives with zero pain. Grow up.
Real interviewers focus on the art and the process to glean gem like insights for an intelligent and artistically advanced audience.
Leave the tawdry muck hunting for a cheap supermarket tabloid.
Tldr: Cheap shot baited questions and nothing more. Miles handled the buffoonery well.
It’s too bad that Ed Bradley, who was working at 60 minutes at the time and a real jazz lover, didn’t do the interview.
A messed up guy being interviewed by a guy pretending to be a journalist.
I don’t believe him about cicely lol he has a bad reputation w/ women.. not keeping his hands to himself.. I’m sure she didn’t play with him
An old pic easy to find online show’s Miles with Shirley Horn. She is holding a Champagne glass looking onward and he is clearly caught focusing on her chest. I can’t blame him tho. HA
Oh please. MD told the truth
Great musician. Crappy human.
Mixed reviews for Mr. Davis, the man.
So much insight!!!
another source of our confusion of today..besides all his art. period.