The most comprehensive book on the artist to date,
offering an insightful look into the legendary musician
and his enormous impact on the development of jazz.
Miles Davis explores the life and art of one of the
greatest visionaries in jazz history--through
photographs, handwritten musical scores, album covers,
posters, and more--cementing his reputation as the
embodiment of cool, both on- and offstage. To examine
his extraordinary career is also to examine the history
of jazz from the mid-1940s through the early 1990s, as
Davis was crucial in almost every important innovation
and stylistic development during that time. His genius
paved the way for these changes, both with his own
performances and recordings, and by choosing
collaborators with whom he forged new directions. Miles
Davis--trumpeter, bandleader, and composer--was one of
the most important figures in jazz history. He was born
in a well-to-do family in St. Louis in 1926 and died in
a Los Angeles hospital in 1991. He was at the forefront
of several major developments in jazz music, including
cool jazz, hard bop, free jazz, and fusion. Davis worked
with many of the greatest jazz musicians of all time,
including Ron Carter, John Coltrane, Chick Corea, Herbie
Hancock, Quincy Jones, Charlie Parker, and Max Roach,
among numerous others.
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