media.bandthewest
» » Miles Davis - Right Off

Miles Davis - Right Off flac album

Miles Davis - Right Off flac album
  • Performer Miles Davis
  • Title Right Off
  • Date of release 1971
  • Country US
  • Style Jazz-Funk
  • Other formats AU MIDI AUD MP1 DTS VOX MP3
  • Genre Jazz
  • Size MP3 1167 mb
  • Size FLAC 1576 mb
  • Rating: 4.9
  • Votes: 842

Jack Johnson (also known as A Tribute to Jack Johnson on reissues) is a studio album and soundtrack by American jazz trumpeter, composer, and bandleader Miles Davis. It was released on February 24, 1971, by Columbia Records. The album was conceived by Davis for Bill Cayton's documentary of the same name, on the life of boxer Jack Johnson. Its two 25-minute-plus tracks were produced from recordings made on February 18 and April 7, 1970, at 30th Street Studio in New York City

Directions is a compilation album by American jazz musician Miles Davis, released in 1981 by Columbia Records. It collects previously unreleased outtakes that Davis recorded between 1960 and 1970. Directions was the last of a series of compilation albums - mostly consisting of, at that time, previously unreleased music - that Columbia released to bridge Davis' recording hiatus that ended with The Man with the Horn in July 1981.

Jack Johnson is a tremendous album, and in its particular concentration of biting, staccato rock (if this is rock/jazz fusion, rock is winning), it's unique in Miles' body of work. If it was meant to break through to rock audiences, it failed, and of course it did: while this is loud, amplified, improvisational music, it's too harsh and perhaps too black-sounding for fans of the Grateful Dead or the Charles Lloyd Quartet.

Miles Davis's profile including the latest music, albums, songs, music videos and more updates. Pharaoh's Dance (Album Version). Miles at The Fillmore: Miles Davis 1970: The Bootleg Series, Vol. 3. 11:56. Bitches Brew (Album Version).

Miles - The Perfect Miles Davis Collection. Collection Box. Miles Davis. Seven Steps: The Complete Columbia Recordings of Miles Davis 1963-1964. This DVD represents the only video of this Miles Davis Quintet lineup ever to be officially commercially released. Along with the discs comes a generous 250-page book whose centerpiece is an 11,000 word biographical essay by Fr‚d‚ric Goaty, the most in-depth liner notes ever included in any Miles Davis package.

Miles Davis: 'Coltrane was a very greedy man. Bird was, too. He was a big hog' – a classic interview from the vaults. Touring Europe had a profound effect on Davis. In France, he felt respected as an artist without question or caveat: this had never been the case in his racially segregated homeland. Certainly, he was sure he would never have been approached by a movie director during a US nightclub residency and asked to compose music for a film. Yet in the first half of 1970, Davis finally made a rock album. A Tribute to Jack Johnson was released in a muddle and failed to replicate the impact of Bitches Brew – partly, its maker intimated, because it was the soundtrack to a film about the controversial black heavyweight boxing champion and was suppressed by those who still felt threatened by the thought of black success in a white-dominated world.

Miles Davis- In a Silent Way (1969) In a Silent Way is a studio album by American jazz trumpeter, composer, and bandleader Miles Davis, released on July 30, 1969, on Columbia Records. Produced by Teo Macero, the album was recorded in one session date on February 18, 1969, at CBS 30th Street Studio in New York City.

Tracklist

A Right Off (Part I) 3:27
B Right Off (Part II) 2:49

Credits

  • Producer – Teo Macero
  • Written-By – M. Davis*

Notes

From the Columbia soundtrack recording "Jack Johnson" S 30455.

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
4-45350 Miles Davis Right Off ‎(7") Columbia 4-45350 US 1971
4-45350 Miles Davis Right Off ‎(7") Columbia 4-45350 Canada 1971

Talk about Miles Davis - Right Off


Ger
enjoyable edits that work quite well supposedly Jeff Beck heard this single on the radio while fixing his car and rethought his musical direction "John Mclaughlin was kicking my arse!" Macero did a good job of including as many of the highlights of the 27 minute original as could be fit on a 7" singleside 2 is harder rocking and more "out there"my copy was WKSC (a chicago radio station) written on it - so it must have got some US airplay despite not being promoted as much as Miles At Fillmore