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Miles Davis
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Miles Davis: Reinventing Jazz by Swapping Bebop's Speed for Cool Vibes
Miles Davis, a titanic figure in 20th-century music, remains influential for his ceaseless reinvention. He perceives evolution not as betrayal but as a necessary survival tactic for jazz.
Davis, at 18, moves to New York, initially drawn by Gillespie and Parker, yet opts for cool jazz's restraint over bebop's speed. By 1988, he's collaborating with Prince, appraising him as potential modern-day Duke Ellington.
Disdaining the limits imposed by the term "jazz," Davis allows music to evolve, merging funk, rock, African rhythms, and electronica into a continuously transforming sound.
Source: Music | The Guardian – Published on May 25, 2026
Miles Davis’ Quintet Goes Rogue in 1965 Club Sets, Now Boxed and Reissued
Miles Davis’ long-out-of-print Live at the Plugged Nickel 1965 resurfaces in a meticulous reissue, packaged either as a 10xLP or 8xCD set. The recordings capture Davis in mid-December 1965, flanked by Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter, and Tony Williams—the so-called Second Great Quintet, mid-flight and unsupervised.
The collection documents electric spontaneity across multiple sets played over two nights in a Chicago club—the kind of onstage risk that forgets the audience exists. A high-stakes conversation in real time, now boxed.
Source: Pitchfork – Published on October 6, 2025
Reservoir Media bags Miles Davis' catalog—just in time for the centennial merch
Reservoir Media acquires the publishing catalog of Miles Davis, staking a claim on the sonic legacy of one of jazz’s most shape-shifting figures. The timing lands just ahead of what would have marked Davis’ 100th birthday in 2026, an anniversary destined to come with curated reissues and renewed interest.
This deal ropes in rights to compositions like “Blue in Green” and “Freddie Freeloader,” compositions that linger in headphone moments and corner saxophone bars alike. Davis’ estate is represented by the Miles Davis Estate Phase Five trust and his former manager, Cheryl Davis.
Source: Pitchfork – Published on September 10, 2025





























