Search - Artist/Band: Miles Davis

Artist Info

  • Name: Miles Davis
  • Birthday: 05/26/1926
  • Birth Place: Alton, IL
  • Died: 09/28/1991
  • Decades Active: 1940,1950,1960,1970,1980,1990
  • Genre: Jazz
  • Styles: Bop, Cool, Fusion, Hard Bop, Jazz-Funk, Jazz-Rock, Modal Music, Post-Bop, Jazz Instrument, Trumpet Jazz
  • Moods: Ambitious, Atmospheric, Confident, Elaborate, Elegant, Intimate, Lush, Manic, Melancholy, Nocturnal, Reflective, Reserved, Restrained, Sophisticated, Bright, Cerebral, Complex, Poignant, Cathartic, Dreamy, Freewheeling, Meandering, Rebellious, Sparkling, Stylish, Uncompromising, Aggressive, Brooding, Detached, Fiery, Intense, Ominous, Provocative, Refined/Mannered, Sprawling, Visceral, Amiable/Good-Natured, Druggy, Hypnotic, Romantic, Soothing, Volatile

Albums

Green links represent an available CD.
Red links represent a CD that is not currently available.
Title Release
  • Groovin' High
  • 11/11/2009
  • The Music of Miles Davis
  • 09/29/2009
  • The Classic Prestige Sessions 1951-1956 W
  • 08/04/2009
  • Complete Recordings
  • 07/07/2009
  • Steamin'/The New Miles Davis Quintet
  • 06/02/2009
  • From the Heart
  • 01/20/2009
  • Jazz Giants: Super Best
  • 12/17/2008
  • Workin'/Relaxin'/Steamin' W
  • 09/29/2008
  • 'Round About Midnight/Milestones
  • 06/24/2008
  • Muted Miles W
  • 06/10/2008
  • Sketches of Spain/'Round About Midnight WA
  • 05/13/2008
  • Ahead of Midnight
  • 05/12/2008
  • Playlist
  • 04/29/2008
  • BD Jazz: Miles Davis, Vol. 2
  • 04/25/2008
  • Miles Ahead/Blue Moods
  • 02/18/2008
  • Beautiful Ballads & Love Songs
  • 01/15/2008
  • Complete Birth of the Cool [Jazz Track] WA
  • 2008
  • 3 in 1
  • 12/15/2007
  • Cool: The Best of Miles Davis
  • 11/26/2007
  • Radio Broadcasts 1958-1959
  • 11/19/2007
  • Platinum [Capitol]
  • 10/30/2007
  • Original Album Classics
  • 10/29/2007
  • Jazz Cafe Presents
  • 10/02/2007
  • Miles Davis [Madacy]
  • 09/18/2007
  • Best of Miles Davis [Direct Source]
  • 07/31/2007
  • Miles Better
  • 06/04/2007
  • Forever Gold: Miles Davis
  • 05/15/2007
  • Must-Have Miles: The First Quartet WA
  • 04/17/2007
  • The Essential Miles Davis
  • 04/03/2007
  • Anthology [Deja Vu]
  • 03/12/2007
  • Out of the Blue [Platinum]
  • 03/01/2007
  • Out of the Blue [Nouveau Range]
  • 02/19/2007
  • The Very Best of the Warner Bros. Sessions 1985-1991
  • 01/29/2007
  • The Essential Collection [West End]
  • 11/20/2006
  • Cool & Collected
  • 09/05/2006
  • Very Best of Miles Davis [Music Brokers]
  • 08/14/2006
  • Miles Davis Featuring John Coltrane
  • 08/11/2006
  • My Old Flame
  • 06/13/2006
  • Early Miles, Vol. 2
  • 06/06/2006
  • Solar
  • 05/30/2006
  • Out of Nowhere: The Rise of Miles Davis [Savoy]
  • 02/21/2006
  • Cool Miles
  • 02/14/2006
  • The Miles Davis Collection
  • 12/27/2005
  • 52nd Street/Embraceable You/Ornithology
  • 11/29/2005
  • Prestige Profiles, Vol. 1
  • 10/25/2005
  • The Best of Miles Davis: Milestones WA
  • 10/25/2005
  • In a Soulful Mood
  • 10/10/2005
  • Denial [Membran]
  • 10/03/2005
  • In St Louis
  • 09/22/2005
  • Early Miles, Vol. 1
  • 09/13/2005
  • Milestones (Birth of the Cool)
  • 09/06/2005
  • I've Always Got the Blues
  • 07/12/2005
  • Colezo: Miles Davis
  • 06/27/2005
  • The Very Best
  • 05/24/2005
  • Movin' On
  • 04/25/2005
  • Morpheus [Quadromania]
  • 02/28/2005
  • Poetics of Sound: 1954-1959
  • 2005
  • Trios
  • 12/14/2004
  • Miles Davis, Vol. 1 [Platinum Disc]
  • 12/07/2004
  • Miles Davis, Vol. 2 [Platinum Disc]
  • 12/07/2004
  • Cool Boppin'
  • 11/16/2004
  • Four
  • 11/16/2004
  • Miles Davis vs. Thelonious Monk
  • 11/16/2004
  • Miles Davis [Platinum]
  • 09/28/2004
  • The Best of Miles Davis [Prestige] WA
  • 08/31/2004
  • Complete 1954 Master Takes
  • 08/03/2004
  • Enigma: The Complete 1952-1953 Blue Note Sessions WA
  • 07/20/2004
  • Jazz Biography Series
  • 07/13/2004
  • Mojo Presents... An Introduction to Miles Davis: 13 Classic Songs
  • 06/29/2004
  • Jazz Moods: Cool WA
  • 06/15/2004
  • Formative Years
  • 05/25/2004
  • Quintessence: 1945-1951
  • 05/13/2004
  • Blue Note Years, Vol. 5
  • 04/27/2004
  • A Proper Introduction to Miles Davis: Enigma
  • 04/06/2004
  • Birth of a Leader [Saga]
  • 01/12/2004
  • Complete 1951-1953 All Stars WA
  • 11/18/2003
  • Members Edition
  • 10/07/2003
  • Plays Classic Ballads [2003]
  • 10/06/2003
  • Jazz Collection: Ballads
  • 06/30/2003
  • Love Songs, Vol. 2
  • 06/10/2003
  • Miles Davis, Vol. 1 [Japan]
  • 04/22/2003
  • The Early Years, Vol. 2: 1947-1950
  • 04/07/2003
  • Jazz Masters [Delta]
  • 03/04/2003
  • The Best of the Miles Davis Quintet, 1965-1968 WA
  • 2003
  • The Giant of Jazz
  • 11/27/2002
  • The Best of Miles Davis [Columbia/Legacy]
  • 09/03/2002
  • Deja Vu Retro Gold
  • 08/12/2002
  • Highlights from Complete Miles Davis at Montreux
  • 07/30/2002
  • No More Blues WA
  • 07/23/2002
  • Out of Nowhere [ZYX]
  • 07/09/2002
  • Timeless
  • 06/04/2002
  • Blue Moods: Music for You
  • 05/07/2002
  • Bye Bye Blackbird
  • 03/09/2002
  • Boplicity [Recall] WA
  • 2002
  • Best
  • 11/27/2001
  • Complete: Miles Davis Allstars
  • 11/27/2001
  • Out of the Blue [Jazz Hour]
  • 10/30/2001
  • Abstract Impressions
  • 09/27/2001
  • More Cookin At The Plugged Nickel
  • 09/18/2001
  • Early Miles
  • 07/30/2001
  • Fabulous Fifties
  • 06/12/2001
  • Fat Time
  • 04/23/2001
  • Milestones: New York/Berlin/Tokyo
  • 04/23/2001
  • Super Hits
  • 04/17/2001
  • The Best of Miles Davis & John Coltrane: 1955-1961 WA
  • 04/17/2001
  • Ballads [Columbia]
  • 03/27/2001
  • The Legends Collection
  • 02/13/2001
  • Complete Vocalists Sessions
  • 01/02/2001
  • Gold
  • 01/01/2001
  • Trumpet Man
  • 01/01/2001
  • Boplicity [Proper] WA
  • 2001
  • Enter the Cool
  • 2001
  • Ken Burns Jazz
  • 11/07/2000
  • All Stars Recordings
  • 10/17/2000
  • Complete Savoy and Dial Recordings WA
  • 10/17/2000
  • Millennium Collection
  • 09/05/2000
  • Early Davis: The Birth of the Cool Trumpet
  • 07/18/2000
  • From Be-Bop to Cool
  • 07/18/2000
  • From Bebop to Cool: 1947-1949 WA
  • 05/16/2000
  • Bird of Paradise [Delta]
  • 04/04/2000
  • Miles to Go
  • 04/04/2000
  • Les Incontournables
  • 03/28/2000
  • Story of Jazz
  • 2000
  • Ballads & More
  • 11/20/1999
  • Perfect Way [Delta Mid]
  • 11/18/1999
  • Milestones [Drive]
  • 11/16/1999
  • Birth of Bop
  • 11/15/1999
  • Panthalassa: The Remixes
  • 05/25/1999
  • Out of the Blue [Hallmark]
  • 04/27/1999
  • Miles Davis, Vol. 2: Young Miles 1946
  • 03/23/1999
  • Classic Ballads
  • 02/23/1999
  • Love Songs WA
  • 02/02/1999
  • The Early Years, Vol. 1: 1945-1947
  • 11/24/1998
  • Mute
  • 09/23/1998
  • Wonderful Music of Miles Davis
  • 09/02/1998
  • The Very Best of Miles Davis [Australia]
  • 08/25/1998
  • Jazz Showcase WA
  • 06/09/1998
  • Selection of Miles Davis
  • 05/19/1998
  • The Complete Birth of the Cool [Blue Note] WA
  • 05/19/1998
  • This Is Jazz, Vol. 38: Electric
  • 04/28/1998
  • Jazz Profile
  • 03/24/1998
  • Panthalassa: The Music of Miles Davis 1969-1974 WA
  • 02/16/1998
  • 1945-1946, Vol. 1
  • 01/28/1998
  • Greatest Hits [Columbia 1997 #1]
  • 12/09/1997
  • Sketches of Spain/In a Silent Way WA
  • 07/01/1997
  • This Is Jazz, Vol. 22: Miles Davis Plays Ballads
  • 05/05/1997
  • The Best of Miles Davis & Gil Evans
  • 03/25/1997
  • Bluing: Miles Davis Plays the Blues
  • 12/03/1996
  • Gemini WA
  • 09/25/1996
  • This Is Jazz, Vol. 8: Miles Davis Acoustic
  • 04/30/1996
  • Ballads and Blues WA
  • 03/19/1996
  • So What WA
  • 03/19/1996
  • Birdland Sessions
  • 01/04/1996
  • Call It What It Is
  • 10/03/1995
  • Four Play
  • 10/03/1995
  • Last Bebop Session
  • 10/03/1995
  • Festival de Juan Pins
  • 08/29/1995
  • Jazz Portrait
  • 08/29/1995
  • This Is Miles, Vol. 1
  • 08/29/1995
  • This Is Miles, Vol. 2
  • 08/29/1995
  • Cookin'/Relaxin'
  • 06/05/1995
  • Voodoo Down
  • 04/25/1995
  • Round Midnight
  • 04/16/1995
  • Jean Pierre
  • 08/19/1994
  • Miles Davis Selection
  • 08/19/1994
  • Super Horns WA
  • 07/27/1994
  • 1969 Miles
  • 06/02/1994
  • Le Meilleur de Miles Davis
  • 1994
  • Milestones/Kind of Blue WA
  • 1994
  • Time After Time [Jazz Door Single Disc]
  • 1994
  • Workin' & Steamin' WA
  • 06/18/1993
  • Doo-Bop WA
  • 06/30/1992
  • The Ballad Artistry Of Miles Davis (EMI)
  • 1992
  • The I Like Jazz: The Essence of Miles Davis
  • 11/21/1991
  • 58 Sessions Featuring Stella by Starlight WA
  • 07/23/1991
  • Miles & Quincy Live at Montreux WA
  • 07/08/1991
  • The Jazz Giants
  • 07/01/1991
  • Miles Davis [Verve]
  • 01/21/1991
  • The Miles Davis Story [DVD]
  • 1991
  • First Miles
  • 07/12/1990
  • Dingo
  • 03/1990
  • No Blues
  • 1990
  • Plays Classic Ballads [1992]
  • 1990
  • Amandla
  • 1989
  • Aura WA
  • 1989
  • Compact Jazz: Miles Davis
  • 1989
  • Bopping the Blues
  • 03/1988
  • Evolution of a Genius
  • 1988
  • Miles Davis: The Columbia Years 1955-1985 WA
  • 1988
  • Music from Siesta
  • 1987
  • A Night in Tunisia [Star Jazz] WA
  • 1986
  • Tutu WA
  • 1986
  • Mellow Miles
  • 1985
  • You're Under Arrest
  • 1985
  • Decoy
  • 1983
  • Star People WA
  • 1983
  • The Man with the Horn WA
  • 1981
  • Directions
  • 1980
  • Circle in the Round
  • 1979
  • Water Babies WA
  • 1977
  • Blue Miles
  • 1976
  • Miles Davis & John Coltrane
  • 1976
  • Big Fun WA
  • 1974
  • Get Up with It WA
  • 1974
  • The Essential Miles Davis [CBS/Tristar]
  • 1973
  • On the Corner WA
  • 1972
  • A Tribute to Jack Johnson WA
  • 04/07/1970
  • Bitches Brew WA
  • 1970
  • In a Silent Way WA
  • 02/18/1969
  • Filles de Kilimanjaro WA
  • 1968
  • Miles in the Sky
  • 1968
  • Nefertiti WA
  • 1967
  • Sorcerer WA
  • 1967
  • Collectors' Items
  • 1966
  • Miles Smiles WA
  • 1966
  • E.S.P.
  • 1965
  • Davisiana
  • 10/08/1964
  • Quiet Nights WA
  • 1963
  • Seven Steps to Heaven WA
  • 1963
  • Someday My Prince Will Come WA
  • 1961
  • Steamin' WA
  • 1961
  • Sketches of Spain WA
  • 1960
  • Kind of Blue WA
  • 1959
  • Workin' WA
  • 1959
  • Jazz Track
  • 05/26/1958
  • 1958 Miles
  • 1958
  • Ascenseur Pour l'Échafaud WA
  • 1958
  • Milestones WA
  • 1958
  • Porgy and Bess
  • 1958
  • Bags' Groove WA
  • 1957
  • Miles Ahead WA
  • 1957
  • Relaxin' WA
  • 1957
  • 'Round About Midnight WA
  • 1956
  • Birth of the Cool WA
  • 1956
  • The New Miles Davis Quintet WA
  • 11/16/1955
  • Quintet & Sextet
  • 08/05/1955
  • Blue Moods WA
  • 07/09/1955
  • The Musings of Miles
  • 06/07/1955
  • Miles Davis and Horns 51-53
  • 1955
  • Miles Davis, Vol. 1
  • 1955
  • Miles Davis and the Modern Jazz Giants
  • 12/24/1954
  • Miles Davis Quintet [Prestige 185]
  • 06/29/1954
  • Walkin' WA
  • 04/03/1954
  • Blue Haze WA
  • 1954
  • Miles Davis, Vol. 2 [Blue Note]
  • 04/20/1953
  • Conception WA
  • 10/05/1951
  • Dig
  • 10/05/1951
  • Bird of Paradise [Trace]
  • Miles Davis [PolyGram]
  • Miscellaneous Miles Davis 1955-1957
  • Individual Bio

    Throughout a professional career lasting 50 years, Miles Davis played the trumpet in a lyrical, introspective, and melodic style, often employing a stemless Harmon mute to make his sound more personal and intimate. But if his approach to his instrument was constant, his approach to jazz was dazzlingly protean. To examine his career is to examine the history of jazz from the mid-'40s to the early '90s, since he was in the thick of almost every important innovation and stylistic development in the music during that period, and he often led the way in those changes, both with his own performances and recordings and by choosing sidemen and collaborators who forged new directions. It can even be argued that jazz stopped evolving when Davis wasn't there to push it forward.

    Davis was the son of a dental surgeon, Dr. Miles Dewey Davis, Jr., and a music teacher, Cleota Mae (Henry) Davis, and thus grew up in the black middle class of east St. Louis after the family moved there shortly after his birth. He became interested in music during his childhood and by the age of 12 began taking trumpet lessons. While still in high school, he started to get jobs playing in local bars and at 16 was playing gigs out of town on weekends. At 17, he joined Eddie Randle's Blue Devils, a territory band based in St. Louis. He enjoyed a personal apotheosis in 1944, just after graduating from high school, when he saw and was allowed to sit in with Billy Eckstine's big band, who was playing in St. Louis. The band featured trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie and saxophonist Charlie Parker, the architects of the emerging bebop style of jazz, which was characterized by fast, inventive soloing and dynamic rhythm variations. It is striking that Davis fell so completely under Gillespie and Parker's spell, since his own slower and less flashy style never really compared to theirs. But bebop was the new sound of the day, and the young trumpeter was bound to follow it. He did so by leaving the Midwest to attend the Institute of Musical Art in New York City (renamed Juilliard) in September 1944. Shortly after his arrival in Manhattan, he was playing in clubs with Parker, and by 1945 he had abandoned his academic studies for a full-time career as a jazz musician, initially joining Benny Carter's band and making his first recordings as a sideman. He played with Eckstine in 1946-1947 and was a member of Parker's group in 1947-1948, making his recording debut as a leader on a 1947 session that featured Parker, pianist John Lewis, bassist Nelson Boyd, and drummer Max Roach. This was an isolated date, however, and Davis spent most of his time playing and recording behind Parker. But in the summer of 1948, he organized a nine-piece band with an unusual horn section. In addition to himself, it featured an alto saxophone, a baritone saxophone, a trombone, a French horn, and a tuba. This nonet, employing arrangements by Gil Evans and others, played for two weeks at the Royal Roost in New York in September. Earning a contract with Capitol Records, the band went into the studio in January 1949 for the first of three sessions which produced 12 tracks that attracted little attention at first. The band's relaxed sound, however, affected the musicians who played it, among them Kai Winding, Lee Konitz, Gerry Mulligan, John Lewis, J.J. Johnson, and Kenny Clarke, and it had a profound influence on the development of the cool jazz style on the West Coast. In February 1957, Capitol finally issued the tracks together on an LP called Birth of the Cool. Davis, meanwhile, had moved on to co-leading a band with pianist Tadd Dameron in 1949, and the group took him out of the country for an appearance at the Paris Jazz Festival in May. But the trumpeter's progress was impeded by an addiction to heroin that plagued him in the early '50s. His performances and recordings became more haphazard, but in January 1951 he began a long series of recordings for the Prestige label that became his main recording outlet for the next several years. He managed to kick his habit by the middle of the decade, and he made a strong impression playing "'Round Midnight" at the Newport Jazz Festival in July 1955, a performance that led the major label Columbia Records to sign him. The prestigious contract allowed him to put together a permanent band, and he organized a quintet featuring saxophonist John Coltrane, pianist Red Garland, bassist Paul Chambers, and drummer Philly Joe Jones who began recording his Columbia debut, 'Round About Midnight, in October. As it happened, however, he had a remaining five albums on his Prestige contract, and over the next year he was forced to alternate his Columbia sessions with sessions for Prestige to fulfill this previous commitment. The latter resulted in the Prestige albums The New Miles Davis Quintet, Cookin', Workin', Relaxin', and Steamin', making Davis' first quintet one of his better-documented outfits. In May 1957, just three months after Capitol released the Birth of the Cool LP, Davis again teamed with arranger Gil Evans for his second Columbia LP, Miles Ahead. Playing flügelhorn, Davis fronted a big band on music that extended the Birth of the Cool concept and even had classical overtones. Released in 1958, the album was later inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame, intended to honor recordings made before the Grammy Awards were instituted in 1959. In December 1957, Davis returned to Paris, where he improvised the background music for the film L'Ascenseur pour l'Echafaud (Escalator to the Gallows). Jazz Track, an album containing this music, earned him a 1960 Grammy nomination for Best Jazz Performance, Solo, or Small Group. He added saxophonist Cannonball Adderley to his group, creating the Miles Davis Sextet, who recorded the album Milestones in April 1958. Shortly after this recording, Red Garland was replaced on piano by Bill Evans and Jimmy Cobb took over for Philly Joe Jones on drums. In July, Davis again collaborated with Gil Evans and an orchestra on an album of music from Porgy and Bess. Back in the sextet, Davis began to experiment with modal playing, basing his improvisations on scales rather than chord changes. This led to his next band recording, Kind of Blue, in March and April 1959, an album that became a landmark in modern jazz and the most popular disc of Davis' career, eventually selling over two million copies, a phenomenal success for a jazz record. In sessions held in November 1959 and March 1960, Davis again followed his pattern of alternating band releases and collaborations with Gil Evans, recording Sketches of Spain, containing traditional Spanish music and original compositions in that style. The album earned Davis and Evans Grammy nominations in 1960 for Best Jazz Performance, Large Group, and Best Jazz Composition, More Than 5 minutes; they won in the latter category.

    By the time Davis returned to the studio to make his next band album in March 1961, Adderley had departed, Wynton Kelly had replaced Bill Evans at the piano, and John Coltrane had left to begin his successful solo career, being replaced by saxophonist Hank Mobley (following the brief tenure of Sonny Stitt). Nevertheless, Coltrane guested on a couple of tracks of the album, called Someday My Prince Will Come. The record made the pop charts in March 1962, but it was preceded into the bestseller lists by the Davis quintet's next recording, the two-LP set Miles Davis in Person (Friday & Saturday Nights at the Blackhawk, San Francisco), recorded in April. The following month, Davis recorded another live show, as he and his band were joined by an orchestra led by Gil Evans at Carnegie Hall in May. The resulting Miles Davis at Carnegie Hall was his third LP to reach the pop charts, and it earned Davis and Evans a 1962 Grammy nomination for Best Jazz Performance by a Large Group, Instrumental. Davis and Evans teamed up again in 1962 for what became their final collaboration, Quiet Nights. The album was not issued until 1964, when it reached the charts and earned a Grammy nomination for Best Instrumental Jazz Performance by a Large Group or Soloist with Large Group. In 1996, Columbia Records released a six-CD box set, Miles Davis & Gil Evans: The Complete Columbia Studio Recordings, that won the Grammy for Best Historical Album. Quiet Nights was preceded into the marketplace by Davis' next band effort, Seven Steps to Heaven, recorded in the spring of 1963 with an entirely new lineup consisting of saxophonist George Coleman, pianist Victor Feldman, bassist Ron Carter, and drummer Frank Butler. During the sessions, Feldman was replaced by Herbie Hancock and Butler by Tony Williams. The album found Davis making a transition to his next great group, of which Carter, Hancock, and Williams would be members. It was another pop chart entry that earned 1963 Grammy nominations for both Best Instrumental Jazz Performance by a Soloist or Small Group and Best Instrumental Jazz Performance by a Large Group. The quintet followed with two live albums, Miles Davis in Europe, recorded in July 1963, which made the pop charts and earned a 1964 Grammy nomination for Best Instrumental Jazz Performance by a Small Group or Soloist with Small Group, and My Funny Valentine, recorded in February 1964 and released in 1965, when it reached the pop charts. By September 1964, the final member of the classic Miles Davis Quintet of the 1960s was in place with the addition of saxophonist Wayne Shorter to the team of Davis, Carter, Hancock, and Williams. While continuing to play standards in concert, this unit embarked on a series of albums of original compositions contributed by the band members, starting in January 1965 with E.S.P., followed by Miles Smiles (1967 Grammy nomination for Best Instrumental Jazz Performance by a Small Group or Soloist with Small Group [7 or Fewer]), Sorcerer, Nefertiti, Miles in the Sky (1968 Grammy nomination for Best Instrumental Jazz Performance by a Small Group or Soloist with Small Group), and Filles de Kilimanjaro. By the time of Miles in the Sky, the group had begun to turn to electric instruments, presaging Davis' next stylistic turn. By the final sessions for Filles de Kilimanjaro in September 1968, Hancock had been replaced by Chick Corea and Carter by Dave Holland. But Hancock, along with pianist Joe Zawinul and guitarist John McLaughlin, participated on Davis' next album, In a Silent Way (1969), which returned the trumpeter to the pop charts for the first time in four years and earned him another small-group jazz performance Grammy nomination. With his next album, Bitches Brew, Davis turned more overtly to a jazz-rock style. Though certainly not conventional rock music, Davis' electrified sound attracted a young, non-jazz audience while putting off traditional jazz fans. Bitches Brew, released in March 1970, reached the pop Top 40 and became Davis' first album to be certified gold. It also earned a Grammy nomination for Best Instrumental Arrangement and won the Grammy for large-group jazz performance. He followed it with such similar efforts as Miles Davis at Fillmore East (1971 Grammy nomination for Best Jazz Performance by a Group), A Tribute to Jack Johnson, Live-Evil, On the Corner, and In Concert, all of which reached the pop charts. Meanwhile, Davis' former sidemen became his disciples in a series of fusion groups: Corea formed Return to Forever, Shorter and Zawinul led Weather Report, and McLaughlin and former Davis drummer Billy Cobham organized the Mahavishnu Orchestra. Starting in October 1972, when he broke his ankles in a car accident, Davis became less active in the early '70s, and in 1975 he gave up recording entirely due to illness, undergoing surgery for hip replacement later in the year. Five years passed before he returned to action by recording The Man With the Horn in 1980 and going back to touring in 1981. By now, he was an elder statesman of jazz, and his innovations had been incorporated into the music, at least by those who supported his eclectic approach. He was also a celebrity whose appeal extended far beyond the basic jazz audience. He performed on the worldwide jazz festival circuit and recorded a series of albums that made the pop charts, including We Want Miles (1982 Grammy Award for Best Jazz Instrumental Performance by a Soloist), Star People, Decoy, and You're Under Arrest. In 1986, after 30 years with Columbia, he switched to Warner Bros. Records and released Tutu, which won him his fourth Grammy for Best Jazz Instrumental Performance. Aura, an album he had recorded in 1984, was released by Columbia in 1989 and brought him his fifth Grammy for Best Jazz Instrumental Performance by a Soloist (on a Jazz Recording). Davis surprised jazz fans when, on July 8, 1991, he joined an orchestra led by Quincy Jones at the Montreux Jazz Festival to perform some of the arrangements written for him in the late '50s by Gil Evans; he had never previously looked back at an aspect of his career. He died of pneumonia, respiratory failure, and a stroke within months. Doo-Bop, his last studio album, appeared in 1992. It was a collaboration with rapper Easy Mo Bee, and it won a Grammy for Best Rhythm & Blues Instrumental Performance, with the track "Fantasy" nominated for Best Jazz Instrumental Solo. Released in 1993, Miles & Quincy Live at Montreux won Davis his seventh Grammy for Best Large Jazz Ensemble Performance.

    Miles Davis took an all-inclusive, constantly restless approach to jazz that had begun to fall out of favor by the time of his death, even as it earned him controversy during his lifetime. It was hard to recognize the bebop acolyte of Charlie Parker in the flamboyantly dressed leader with the hair extensions who seemed to keep one foot on a wah-wah pedal and one hand on an electric keyboard in his later years. But he did much to popularize jazz, reversing the trend away from commercial appeal that bebop began. And whatever the fripperies and explorations, he retained an ability to play moving solos that endeared him to audiences and demonstrated his affinity with tradition. At a time when jazz is inclining toward academia and repertory orchestras rather than moving forward, he is a reminder of the music's essential quality of boundless invention, using all available means. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide

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