Freedom Jazz Dance: The Bootleg Series Vol. 5, by the Miles Davis Quintet, 2016. |
Miles Davis with Herbie Hancock and Wayne Shorter. |
Freedom Jazz Dance presents
the listener with the full session tapes from the two days in October of 1966
that produced the seminal album Miles
Smiles. Davis’ group in 1966, now called the “Second Classic Quintet,” is
considered one of the greatest in jazz history. It featured Wayne Shorter on
tenor saxophone, Herbie Hancock on piano, Ron Carter on bass, and Tony Williams
on drums. Hancock, Carter, and Williams had joined Davis in 1963, with Shorter
joining the ensemble towards the end of 1964. Davis had suffered from a number
of health issues in the mid 1960’s, and in 1965 he underwent a hip replacement.
The Quintet had only recorded one studio album together, 1965’s excellent E.S.P., before the sessions for Miles Smiles.
The box set opens with the longest track, the 23-minute long
session reel for Eddie Harris’ song “Freedom Jazz Dance.” You get to hear the
band working out the introduction to the song, and trying to figure out how to approach
the song. As the liner notes warn, you’ll want to listen to this on headphones,
and with the transcriptions of the studio chatter close at hand, so you can
follow along. Since this was a song that the members of the group hadn’t
performed live before, they were learning it in the studio, and so you get to hear
them figure out the song. Throughout the 23 minutes the group attempts numerous
times to get the introduction the way they want it, but they don’t perform a
complete take—the first complete take was the master issued on Miles Smiles. Depending on how big a fan
you are of the Second Classic Quintet, this will either be a fascinating and
revelatory listen, or it will be mind-numbingly boring. Of course, if you’re
not a huge fan of the Second Classic Quintet, you’re probably not going to be
buying Freedom Jazz Dance in the
first place.
Of perhaps greater interest is an alternate take of the
great ballad “Circle,” which is a treat to hear. While I appreciate having
these session reels available, as it sheds interesting light on the creative
process, how many times am I really going to listen to the studio chatter and
breakdowns as the group perfects the intro? The answer: probably not more than
once or twice.
After the Miles Smiles
sessions, Freedom Jazz Dance then
gives us some other session reels and alternate takes from other albums the
quintet made. We get a nice alternate take of “Masqualero,” from the album Sorcerer, and a very interesting session
reel for “Nefertiti,” in which Davis and the group figure out the idea behind
the song—that
Davis and Shorter will play a theme the entire way through the song, and the
rhythm section will take solos. The third disc features the session reel for “Fall,”
released on the Nefertiti album, and “Water
Babies,” recorded in 1967, but unreleased until the 1976 album of the same
name, a random collection of late 1960’s material that sat in the vaults until
Miles’ retirement from music, which lasted from 1975-1980. There’s also a
rhythm section rehearsal for “Country Son,” a track from Miles in the Sky, and “Blues in F (My Ding)” an informal tape
recorded in Davis’ apartment that features him playing piano and chatting with
Wayne Shorter.
As I wrote above, Freedom
Jazz Dance is definitely for the hard-core Miles Davis fan. If you’re
coming to the music his Second Classic Quintet created for the first time, you’ll
want to start with the studio albums themselves, which are all amazing, or
perhaps the superb 1967 live recordings featured in 2011’s Bootleg Series Vol. 1. If you’re a serious fan of Davis’ music, you’ll
find Freedom Jazz Dance very
interesting.
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