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Coventry University
Faculty of Arts & Humanities
School of Media and Performing Arts
What were the motivations, inspirations and external
influences that led to the creation of the album
‘In a Silent Way’?
Matthew Parker: 6519463
306CPA Dissertation
2016
i
Abstract
Recorded by jazz trumpeter Miles Davis on the 18th of February 1969 in one three-and-a-half
hour session, the album In a Silent Way was for its time a unique piece of work, not only in
jazz but in all musical genres. It was an album constructed almost entirely in post-production.
So vague were the instructions at the recording session that the musicians themselves were
unsure as to what they were working on, or even what had or had not been recorded.
The revolution in music it produced was arguably much greater than its noisier and more
famous sibling Bitches Brew, which was recorded only six months later. In a Silent Way
introduced the world to ambient music, and ushered in a new way of producing music
through cut and paste techniques which would eventually become the studio standard. Many
jazz critics hated it, accusing Miles of deliberately selling out. But what were the real
motivations, inspirations and external influences that led to the creation of In a Silent Way?
ii
Contents
Introduction 1
Chapter 1: The Critics 4
Chapter 2: Teo Macero 8
Chapter 3: The Unreleased Recordings 1965-68 16
Chapter 4: Miles Davis 21
Conclusion: 33
Reference List: 35
List of Figures
Figure 1: Miles Davis – In a Silent Way album cover (Friedlander 1969)
Figure 2: Lester Bangs (Bayley 1976)
Figure 3: Stanley Crouch (Anon. 1995)
Figure 4: Miles Davis and Teo Macero (Hassell 1969)
Figure 5: Edgard Varese listens to his Poème Electronique (The Bettmann Archive 1958)
Figure 6: Teo Macero and Miles Davis (Anon. 1972)
Figure 7: Shhh/Peaceful – composite version (Miles Ahead and Belden 2001)
Figure 8: Shhh/Peaceful - LP version (Miles Ahead and Belden 2001)
Figure 9: Circle in the Round - Stan Tonkel 1979 edit (Miles Ahead and Belden 2004)
Figure 10: Circle in the Round - Teo Macero 1968 edit (Miles Ahead and Belden 2004)
Figure 11: Miles Davis and Betty Mabry (Wolman 1969)
Figure 12: Jimi Hendrix (Persson 1970)
Figure 13: Joe Zawinul (Copi 1976)
Figure 14: Miles Davis and John McLaughlin (Persson 1980)
1
Introduction
Figure 1: Miles Davis - In a Silent Way (Friedlander 1969)
In a Silent Way
Columbia - CS 9875 - Released 30th July, 1969
Track list
A Shhh/Peaceful (17:58)
M. Davis
B1 In A Silent Way (4:11)
J. Zawinul
B2 It's About That Time (15:41)
M. Davis
2
Credits
Trumpet - Miles Davis
Tenor Saxophone - Wayne Shorter
Organ, Electric Piano - Josef Zawinul
Electric Piano - Chick Corea & Herbie Hancock
Guitar - John McLaughlin
Bass - Dave Holland
Drums - Tony Williams
Producer – Teo Macero
They say that jazz has become menopausal, and there is much truth in the statement.
Rock too seems to have suffered under a numbing plethora of standardized Sounds.
But I believe there is a new music in the air, a total art which knows no boundaries or
categories, a new school run by geniuses indifferent to fashion. And I also believe that
the ineluctable power and honesty of their music shall prevail. Miles Davis is one of
those geniuses. (Bangs. 1969)
3
Despite its status alongside the likes of The Beatles Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club
Band and The Beach Boys Pet Sounds as one of the most important late 20th century
recordings, researching the album was less straightforward than one might initially expect.
There is no single unified piece on it in either journal or book form. The closest thing to this
is the excellent book Miles Beyond: The Electric Explorations of Miles Davis, 1967-1991 by
Paul Tingen, which dedicates a chapter to the making of In a Silent Way. As a result, much of
the research for this dissertation came from biographies and websites of the various
protagonists, including the beautifully detailed website Miles Ahead
(http://www.plosin.com/milesahead), which contains the studio notes from almost all of
Davis’ recording sessions from 1945 to 1991. This site proved invaluable in piecing together
the methods developed by Davis and producer Teo Macero to create In a Silent Way.
Another priceless piece of research material was the Columbia Records box set The Complete
In a Silent Way Sessions, released in 2001. Despite the misleading title (most of the music
culled for the set was recorded in 1968, indeed only the tracks that appeared on the final
album were recorded at that session), it contains some revealing material including the
previously unreleased original Teo Macero composite edits of In a Silent Way. It also
includes some insightful comments and tables from jazz musician and writer Bob Belden in
the extensive liner notes.
Without these resources, this dissertation would have been infinitely harder to research and
compile, clearly demonstrating a need for a unified piece on such a landmark recording.
4
Chapter 1
The Critics
Read any review of In a Silent Way written in the 21st century and one would be forgiven for
thinking that it had always enjoyed unchallenged reverence as one of the most important
albums of all time. In fact, upon first release critics were greatly divided on the merits of the
album. As a general rule, rock critics loved it and jazz critics hated it, mostly for the same
reasons. The repetitive nature of the chord progressions, straight rock-like rhythms, electric
guitar, piano and bass were all elements that critics were either enthralled or repulsed by.
Lester Bangs for instance, writing for rock magazine Rolling Stone in 1969 showered Davis
with lavish praise:
The songs are long jams with a minimum of pre-planned
structure. That they are so cohesive and sustained is a
testament to the experience and sensitivity of the musicians
involved. Miles' lines are like shots of distilled passion, the
kind of evocative, liberating riffs that decades of strivers
build their styles on. Aside from Charles Mingus, there is
no other musician alive today who communicates such a
yearning, controlled intensity, the transformation of life's inchoate passions and
tensions into aural adventures that find a permanent place in your consciousness and
influence your basic definitions of music. (1969)
If Davis could incite an almost religious zeal amongst rock journalists like Bangs, he could
generate equal amounts of vitriol from the jazz community, most notably from infamous jazz
Figure 2: Lester Bangs
(Bayley 1976)
(Bayley 1976)
5
critic Stanley Crouch, who recognised none of the ‘controlled intensity’ or ‘distilled passion’
that so excited Bangs. Instead, Crouch wrote, ‘Beginning with the 1969 In a Silent Way,
Davis's sound was mostly lost among electronic instruments, inside a long, maudlin piece of
droning wallpaper music.’ (1997: 909)
Crouch’s views on Davis’ shift towards electronic instrumentation and modern rock
sensibilities were laid bare in a no-holds-barred article entitled ‘On The Corner: The Sellout
Of Miles Davis’ in which Crouch savaged Davis for betraying his loyal, long-standing fans.
Crouch appears to have taken Davis’ volte-face personally, as though he himself had been
stabbed in the back by Davis.
The contemporary Miles Davis, when one hears his
music or watches him perform, deserves the
description that Nietzsche gave of Wagner, "the
greatest example of self-violation in the history of
art." Davis made much fine music for the first half of
his professional life, and represented for many the
uncompromising Afro-American artist contemptuous
of uncle Tom but he has fallen from grace- and been celebrated for it. As usual, the
fall from grace has been a form of success. Desperate to maintain his position at the
forefront of modern music, to sustain his financial position, to be admired for the
hipness of his purported innovations, Davis turned butt to the beautiful in order to
genuflect before the commercial...Beyond the terrible performances and the terrible
recordings, Davis has also become the most remarkable licker of monied boots in the
music business, willing now to pimp himself as he once pimped women when he was
drug addict. (1997: 898)
Figure 3: Stanley Crouch
(Anon. 1995)
6
Miles was also alienating his peers with his new sound. Respected jazz tenor saxophonist
Jimmy Heath, born in the same year as Miles, was highly critical of what he perceived to be
Davis’ motivations for making the album, and for shirking his responsibility as a man who
enjoyed almost unequalled cultural and artistic status among black Americans.
Miles led the way for a lot of people because he was one of the ones who got through.
He had the fine clothes, the expensive cars, the big house, all the magazine articles
and the pretty girls chasing him. He seemed like he was on top of everything. Then
you had all of this rock getting all of the press and it was like Elvis Presley all over
again. Miles stepped out here and decided he was going to get himself some of that
money and a lot of musicians followed his lead. It was like if Miles had led the pack
for so long they didn't know how to stop following him, even if the music wasn't any
good. (Crouch 1997: 909)
Davis though, was seemingly unconcerned by the critical reception to his work. Here was a
man who liked to take risks, who was moving in unchartered territory. He clearly did not
expect everyone to understand, or want to understand, where his new direction was taking
him.
In a Silent Way began a great creative period for me from 1969. That record opened
up a lot of music in my head that just kept coming out for the next four years... But all
the music was different and this was causing a lot of critics a lot of problems. Critics
always like to pigeonhole everybody, put you in a certain place in their heads so they
can get to you. They don't like a lot of changing because that makes them have to
work to understand what you're doing. When I started changing so fast like that, a lot
of critics started putting me down because they didn't understand what I was doing.
7
But critics never did mean much to me, so I just kept on doing what I had been doing,
trying to grow as a musician. (Davis and Troupe 1990: 301)
8
Chapter 2
Teo Macero
Figure 4: Miles Davis and Teo Macero (Hassell 1969)
Producer Teo Macero played a pivotal role in the creation of In a Silent Way, and is perhaps
one of the most underrated musicians in 20th century music. As a student he majored in
classical conducting at Juilliard, and following an unsuccessful request to change his major to
composition, he took private composition lessons. In order to finance the lessons Macero
worked at the Juilliard sound labs, where he learnt to cut records and edit tape under the
supervision of musical pioneer Edgard Varèse, a leading exponent of Musique Concrète. In a
1996 interview with journalist Lara Lee, Macero spoke of their friendship, and of the
influence that Varèse had on him.
I started at Juilliard, studying and working in the engineering department for 50
cents an hour to try to pay my way through. But then I got interested in it because of
Edgard Varèse. He was like my second father…I mean, I was there when he was
doing the "Poème Electronique" in Paris. He would show me all the pieces, all of the
elements. But he was creating sounds from other sources other than electronic
9
sounds. He was making his own, which to me is very creative. Much more so than just
putting it through a filter. He created all kinds of things for that "Poème
Electronique" and I was fascinated by it. We used to see each other for lunch. We'd
talk on Saturdays and Sundays on the phone and he'd come to all the concerts that I
gave. He was like a second father, with a tremendous amount of knowledge. (1996)
Poème Electronique was composed and
recorded by Varèse in 1958 and was
commissioned by the Philips Corporation as
the soundtrack to the Brussels World fair of
the same year. At 8 minutes long, it was
constructed by Varèse at Philips sound
laboratory in Eindhoven, using three tracks
of tape (one stereo and one mono track).
Varèse combined recordings of multiple natural sound sources including human voices,
pianos, bells and organs with synthetically produced sounds such as oscillators and machine
noises. These recordings were then manipulated by a variety of methods including altering
the speed of the recording, reversing and/or looping the tape, filtering the sound through
electronic reverb units etc. Finally, the individual recordings were edited together into a
single piece, which Varèse mapped out prior to the recordings (Stephenson 2006: 58). This
was pioneering work, as Stephenson observed in his 2006 article, the recordings were
‘...combined electronically to create sounds that had never before been heard’. (2006: 58)
These techniques would become the cornerstone of Macero’s production style from the late
1960s onwards.
Figure 5: Edgard Varèse (The Bettmann Archive 1958)
10
In 1953, shortly after graduating from Juilliard with a Master’s degree, Macero received a
Guggenheim award for one of his compositions, following sponsorship from amongst others,
Leonard Bernstein and Aaron Copland. He was considered an extremely prodigious up-and-
coming talent by his peers, as celebrated music critic Harvey Pekar observed:
Teo was a great jazz musician - way ahead of his time, like on his first recordings
…he was doing startling things: using atonality, 12 and 9 tone rows, poly-tonality,
poly-metric effects, and more than one tempo at a time (he allowed improvisers to
play simultaneously, choosing their own tempos); employing collective improvisation,
in which each improviser plays a different chord sequence; and overdubbing and
altering tape speeds. The pieces Teo wrote weren’t just academic exercises; they were
alive, vibrant. (Mpls Underground Film Fest 2015)
Macero and Bernstein formed a lifelong friendship, working on a number of large
productions together. They shared an ethos of progressing serious music by utilising popular
culture, as expressed by Bernstein in an interview with the BBC during his 50th birthday
party in August 1968.
The only real avant-garde, serious music now is full of pop influences and vice-
versa...There are times, and this is one of them, when I find pop music more vital and
more nourishing, perhaps not so durable, but more interesting to follow, more
adventurous, fresher, more fun! Good lord, why should that word be excluded from
august musical circles? I mean, music should be fun.
(BBC 2015)
In 1957 Macero was hired as a music editor by Columbia records, becoming a producer two
years later. He worked on such legendary albums as Charles Mingus’ Mingus Ah-Um and
Dave Brubeck’s Take Five. Teo recognised that the recording process had distorted the
11
listener’s perception of jazz music. Performances that were essentially improvised, in a time
before recording technology could capture them, would have existed only in the moment they
were being produced. Now though, the listener could experience the same performance over
and over. With increased familiarity of the recording the performance gives the false
impression of being through composed rather than improvised. Teo exploited this aural
illusion in two main ways during his career. Firstly, in a double-bluff sense, some solo
instrumental parts (mostly lead-ins) would be pre-composed (or at the very least, sketched
out), and deliberately intended to sound improvised. For instance, Miles' opening solo on the
seminal So What from his 1959 album Kind of Blue bears more than a passing resemblance to
a solo he performed on his previous album Porgy and Bess. Given Teo's already extensive
experience in arranging and music editing, this solo was probably singled out by him for
future development and may have been the catalyst for the whole piece.
Miles would record his stuff, and then he’d just leave. He would sometimes say, ‘I like
this or that,’ and then I’d say: ‘I’ll listen to it and I’ll put it together. If you like it,
fine, if not, we’ll change it.’ So I was the one with the vision. Miles also had a vision,
but he wasn’t really a composer, he didn’t compose in an organized way. It was
happenstance. He played with these great musicians, and when they had played
enough, I was able to cut out the stuff that wasn’t good, and piece something together
from the rest. (Tingen 2001)
12
Figure 6: Teo Macero and Miles Davis (Anon. 1972)
By 1969 with the advancement of recording technology, Macero reversed this process to
create In a Silent Way, replicating the false 'through-composed' sensation of repeated
listening to improvised music by arranging a piece deliberately intended to sound composed,
when it was actually improvised. He repeated this technique on all of Miles' subsequent
albums until 1975. Below we can see two tables which are taken from Bob Belden’s liner
notes for The Complete In a Silent Way Sessions. The first table shows how Macero created
composite tracks, tracks that were already pre-edited together from (in this case) five distinct
sections, which he then used as a reference to compile the final edited track. It is not known
from which takes these five parts were originally gleaned (or how many takes there were in
total). However, the composite versions of the tracks which would eventually become In a
Silent Way still yield valuable information.
13
Figure 7: Shhh/Peaceful – composite version (Miles Ahead and Belden 2001)
The composites were probably necessary due to, like Circle in the Round before it (see
Chapter 3), the performances being conducted section by section. The composites would have
helped Macero hear the final arrangements in his head more clearly, and as he later remarked,
act like a literary editor, moving and removing sections as he saw fit to achieve the best
effect:
His stuff was mostly written down. I mean it was worked on in the studio. But I would
record from the time he got there, which was usually on time, until he left. I'd record
everything. And then when I'd go back to the editing room, I would edit everything. I
listened to everything back. Miles would say, "You remember that thing in the second
take?" I said "yeah." And I would maybe make a loop and create it. That's why those
records were so good. Maybe people will say it didn't sound authentic. It is authentic
because you're acting like a writer for a book, like an editor... I'm just there to make
sure that everything is in order. (Lee 1996)
14
Figure 8: Shhh/Peaceful - LP version (Miles Ahead and Belden 2001)
The original composite of Shhh/Peaceful (figure 6) gives a good demonstration of Macero’s
finely honed editing skills. Comparing the tables above it can be clearly seen that the theme
(also labelled ‘Part 1’) in the Shhh/Peaceful composite version, which accounts for nearly
four minutes of audio and is the harmonic structure around which the piece is based, was
completely sacrificed by Macero and Davis in the final edit (figure 7). The chordal
movements of the theme are deemed to be less interesting than the static pedal played in the
other sections. This is perhaps the most ground-breaking element of the whole process, that in
the final analysis of the piece which was probably originally structured like a more traditional
jazz arrangement with a theme at the beginning and end, they decided the main feature should
be the improvisation rather than the theme, and jettisoned the theme altogether.
During the 1996 interview with Lara Lee, Macero described in more detail the technical
processes employed to produce In a Silent Way. Both sides of the LP were arranged in
classical sonata form (exposition, development, recapitulation), using material at the end of
each track which was an exact audio duplicate of the beginning, to create the recapitulation.
Q. Talk about cutting and splicing in In a Silent Way.
Teo: That was one of the rare times that Miles came to the studio. I called Miles up
and I said, "Look, I mixed two stacks of tapes, about 15 or 20 reels each, I can make
the cuts, I can do the edit..." [As Miles] "I'll come down. I'll be there." So he came
15
down and we cut each side down to 8 1/2 minutes and I think the other side was 9 1/2
and he said he was leaving… and that would be his album. I said, "Look you really
can't do that. I mean CBS will fire you, suspend you, fire me. But give me a couple of
days, I'll think about it." And then a couple of days later I sent him up a tape and that
was it. What I did, I copied a lot of it. You wouldn't know where the splices are.
(1996)
16
Chapter 3
The Unreleased Recordings 1965-68
"Circle in the Round" marks a pivotal moment in Miles's musical development
because it introduced many of the ingredients that would inform Miles's music until
1975, in particular the musical influences of the '60s counterculture, his search for a
dense and complex bottom end, and the application of postproduction technology.
Examining these elements, one detects that - in addition to the electric guitar, played
by the then up-and-coming jazz guitarist Joe Beck - Miles also introduced other
textures new to his music on "Circle in the Round", such as celeste and chimes. Like
that of "Masqualero", the melody has a Spanish/Arabic quality. The feel is fairly
loose, and the folklike melody, the new acoustic textures, and Joe Beck's clean sound
and polite approach all indicate that the main musical influence of the music of the
60s counterculture on "Circle in the Round" came from folk, not rock.
(Tingen 2001: 41)
The harmonic and rhythmic qualities of Circle in the Round were not the only experimental
aspects of the piece. Crucially it marked the first known attempt by Davis and Macero to
create a single unified piece from a number of different takes, and to assemble an
arrangement and structure for the piece in post, rather than pre-production using tape editing.
One important element in the creation of Circle in the Round was the recent innovation of the
studio as a creative tool in its own right, rather than simply as a device for capturing sound.
The advancement of technology throughout the 1960s enabled producers to use the studio as
though it were another instrument, permanently altering the nature of recorded music. Tape
editing was one such development which had been around since the first tape recorders were
17
shipped to the US in 1946, technology developed by Germany during World War Two. As
Paul Tingen observed, up until the mid-sixties the studio had been:
...purely used as a means of creating an idealized performance through splicing
together the best sections of different recording takes. This approach was still based
on the paradigm of creating an approximation of reality. Around 1967 a shift
occurred in Western popular music culture towards looking at recordings as aural
fantasies that were only restrained by the imagination of the recording's creator and
the limitations of technology. (2001: 41)
In this sense Circle in the Round, rather than In a Silent Way is the more historically
important track. However, for a number of reasons it failed to be recognised as such. Circle
in the Round was withheld from release by Columbia until 1979 when it was issued as part of
a two disc retrospective of unreleased material. Perhaps in 1968 Columbia felt it was too
radical and too much of a stylistic jump from Davis’ back catalogue, perhaps Davis and
Macero themselves were dissatisfied with the results of the experiment. The piece itself is
long and repetitive, and lacks the clear structure of Shhh/Peaceful, for instance. Attempts to
re-edit the piece prior to its eventual release on the 1979 album of the same name, fared little
better in focussing the track, suggesting that the source material, rather than the editing, was
the main reason why this track was shelved for 11 years. According to Bob Belden’s liner
notes for the Columbia box set Miles Davis Quintet 1965-68,
That version (1979) was assembled by Stan Tonkel, who edited a 26:17 performance
together. While doing research for this box, a 33:32 version (assembled and edited by
Teo Macero in 1968) was found...This new version contains nearly all of the usable
material that was recorded during the session, including some that is clearly
rehearsal in nature (they recorded 35 sections or elements). (2004)
18
Figure 9: Circle in the Round - Stan Tonkel 1979 edit (Miles Ahead and Belden 2004)
It is apparent from this statement that rather than chopping up long jams into smaller sections,
Macero was doing the opposite, recording 35 short performances (some wholly improvised,
some through composed) then organising them as a single complete track, the same process
Edgard Varèse employed to create Poème Electronique excepting that Varèse used sound
effects rather than melodic patterns.
However, the experience undoubtedly proved invaluable to Davis and Macero, and the pair
must have felt there was enough merit in the process to attempt it again nine months later,
this time with the Joe Zawinul composition Ascent, which would also remain in the Columbia
vaults until 1981. According to the Columbia recording session notes, Ascent was recorded in
11 takes ranging from two to five minutes each. Four of these takes were incorporated into
the final 14 minute composite recording by Macero. Clearly Davis and Macero were waiting
for the right piece of music to fully exploit their new process. Three months later they
returned to this process for a third time, producing In a Silent Way.
19
Figure 10: Circle in the Round - Teo Macero 1968 edit (Miles Ahead and Belden 2004)
That critics and fans alike were denied access to most of Miles’ developmental work between
1965 and 1968 undoubtedly exacerbated a sense of disconnection that some felt towards In a
Silent Way. Although Miles had been slowly and deliberately realigning his sound with
popular black music over a period of three years, his album releases only hinted at this.
Combined with Columbia’s new sales policy of targeting young rock fans, the alienation
some jazz critics and longstanding Miles fans experienced is quite understandable.
Since Davis had first signed with Columbia Records in 1955, the company had
consistently and aggressively marketed his music almost exclusively to jazz listeners.
Beginning in 1967, however, as internal Columbia memos demonstrate, Davis’s
recent stylistic evolution helped motivate the company to begin considering how to
“broaden” Davis’s audience beyond traditional jazz fans. A part of this discussion
included the idea of placing advertisements in non-jazz magazines in order to “aim
Miles at the Rock audience.” Columbia opted to pursue this approach, and one
resulting ad in Rolling Stone—for the 1969 album Filles de Kilimanjaro—begins with
20
the headline, “You May Like Jazz, and Not Even Know It.” The copy then argues that
Filles shares much in common with the “psychedelic music” that the reader has
recently been “buying and digging.” (Smith 2010: 10)
21
Chapter 4
Miles Davis
Befitting his status as black aesthetic signifier in the flesh, Miles cannot merely be
read as a fascinating subject. He's also for many of us an objectified projection of our
blackest desires, a model for any black artist who wants to thoroughly interpenetrate
Western domains of power and knowledge with Africanizing authority. For those who
approach him as a generator of musical systems, metaphors, metaphysics, and gossip,
Miles was the premiere black romantic artist of this century. (Carner 1996: 234)
Betty Mabry
Davis’s second wife Betty Davis (nee Mabry) is widely regarded as the main catalyst in
Miles’ move towards electronic instrumentation and new recording ideas. She was a
singer/songwriter, a feminist, and had her finger on the pulse of 60s counterculture. Mabry
introduced Miles to the music of Jimi Hendrix and Sly and the Family Stone, and encouraged
him to dress in a much more flamboyant style. Mademoiselle Mabry from In a Silent Way’s
predecessor, Nefertiti (featuring a picture of Mabry on the front cover) was an homage to
Betty, acknowledging her significant role in Miles new direction, as it was constructed
around a chordal reharmonisation of the Jimi Hendrix track The Wind Cries Mary.
As 1969 dawned, Miles Davis’ young wife Betty was determined to hip him to the
counterculture and what was going on in soul and rock. Not that she had to try
hard—Miles was sick of jazz with its neat suits, empty clubs, dismal record sales, and
aging audience. He wanted to go where the action was. (Rollins and Wolff 2012: 143)
22
As jazz split into various sub-genres in the 1960s, much of it developed in an avant-garde
direction, moving away from rhythmically centred pieces to more abstract concepts, and in
the process lost a great deal of its black audience. As jazz singer Betty Carter commented in
an interview for Ebony magazine in 1990,
Some of the music turned off Black listeners, because it had no beat or pulse. But this
is what Black people love: to pat their feet and move their heads. I can't blame this
[the black movement away from jazz] on the audience. I blame it on the music, which
didn't have any Black rhythms. We had people thinking they had to be intellectuals to
understand the music.... (Baskerville 2003: 137)
It had not escaped Miles attention that Hendrix and Stone were now superstars selling
millions of records, playing to huge sold-out audiences and connecting with a young black
audience. Miles conversely, was playing to predominantly white, middle-class, middle-aged,
dwindling audiences in small, smoky clubs. His move away from the traditional aesthetic of
Figure 11: Miles Davis and Betty Mabry (Wolman 1969)
23
jazz can be at least partly attributed to this. The life of a jazz musician in the late 60s could
hardly be more starkly contrasting with that of Hendrix et al, as described by journalist Leo
Kofsky, in his 1970 piece entitled 'The Jazz Club’: An Adventure in Cockroach Capitalism.
The first thing that struck me was there was simply no place for the artist to go when
they weren't playing.... What this means in more precise terms is that the musician has
his choice of spending his between-set breaks in a variety of unsatisfactory ways: (1)
he can take a table and drink - if he doesn't mind having the drinks, at regular prices,
deducted from his wages; (2) he can amble about in back, either rubbing up against a
greasy stove in the kitchen or lounging on an equally dirty staircase while watching
the traffic in and out of the men's room; or finally, he can go sit in his car or, weather
permitting, wander outside. (1998: 146)
Davis was concerned with becoming an irrelevant museum piece like Louis Armstrong. He
also openly disliked white people, and racial issues were unarguably at the forefront of Miles’
thinking in 1968/69, something that also spurred him on to change direction and attempt to
attract a larger black audience. Contrary to Stanley Crouch’s assertion that Davis had ‘sold
out’ by moving away from jazz, in Miles’ opinion playing jazz, not rock, meant selling out to
the white man, and for little reward too. ‘Jazz is an Uncle Tom word. It's a white folks word.’
(DeMichael 1969)
His decision, in 1969, to court a younger audience by playing rock venues, adding
amplified instruments to his ensemble, and cranking up both the volume and the beat,
also amounted to a critique of modern jazz, which he felt had become tired and
inbred. (Carner 1996: 204 – 205)
24
Jimi Hendrix
The music I was really listening to in 1968 was James Brown, the great guitar player
Jimi Hendrix, and a new group who had just come out with the hit record, "Dance to
the Music," Sly and the Family Stone, led by Sly Stewart, from San Francisco… But it
was Jimi Hendrix that I first got into when Betty Mabry turned me on to it. (Davis and
Troupe 1990: 282)
Hendrix was arguably the musician exerting the greatest influence on Miles between 1967
and 1975. Miles talked often about his love of Hendrix’s music, and of the man himself with
whom Davis became a friend. Davis’ authorised biography is littered with references to
Hendrix, and he is quite open regarding the scope that Hendrix’s influence had on him, even
down to the clothes he was wearing and the hairdresser he was using:
I was changing my attitude about a lot of things, like the look of my wardrobe…
everyone was starting to dress a little looser at concerts, at least the rock musicians
were and that might have affected me. Everybody was into blackness, you know, the
black consciousness movement, and so a lot of African and Indian fabrics were being
worn. I started wearing African dashikis and robes and looser clothes plus a lot of
Indian tops by this guy named Hernando, who was from Argentina and who had a
place in Greenwich Village. That's where Jimi Hendrix bought most of his clothes. So
I started buying wraparound Indian shirts from him... I had moved away from the
cool Brooks Brothers look and into this other thing, which for me was more what was
happening with the times. (1990: 300)
25
Figure 12: Jimi Hendrix (Persson 1970)
It was at the hairdresser where Jimi first met legendary jazz musician Miles Davis.
Jimi had his hair done by James Finney and became one of his first showcase clients.
“Finney introduced the ‘Blowout’ through Jimi,” Taharqa Aleem recalled. “Prior to
that, it had been ‘the Afro,’ and before that ‘the Conk.” Miles liked Jimi’s hair and
also began to go to Finney. The two musicians would also occasionally double-date
with their girlfriends. (Cross 2005: 285 – 287)
Rumours of a Hendrix/Davis collaboration were rife in 1969, continuing until the guitarist’s
death in 1970. 25 years later the rumours were confirmed, when as reported by Rolling Stone
magazine, a telegram was unearthed in 1995 sent by Davis, Hendrix and Davis’ drummer
Tony Williams on the 21st October 1969 to Apple Records asking Paul McCartney to join
their supergroup.
"We are recording and LP together this weekend in NewYork [sic]," reads the note,
according to The Associated Press. "How about coming in to play bass stop call Alan
Douglas 212-5812212. Peace Jimi Hendrix Miles Davis Tony Williams."
(Cubarrubia 2013)
26
It is not known whether McCartney received, or indeed replied to the request. However, in
the Hendrix biography Room Full of Mirrors, author Christopher R. Cross suggests why a
collaboration between the artists failed to get off the ground.
Jimi had expressed a desire to record with Miles, and a session was planned pairing
them. Jimi’s usual approach was to jam first and worry about contracts, record
labels, and payments later. Davis, however, was frustrated by how little money he was
making in jazz and jealous of how much Jimi was earning. The day before the session,
he called Jimi’s manager and demanded payment in advance. Miles told Mike Jeffrey
he wanted fifty thousand dollars up front… Jeffrey refused the outrageous demands
and the session never occurred. (2005: 285 – 287)
From this statement it can clearly be observed that Davis felt bitterness about his financial
and social status compared with that of his younger, rock-playing contemporaries, and
although Hendrix was greatly admired by Davis, the same could not be said for Hendrix’s
backing musicians The Experience. Mitch Mitchell (drums) and Noel Redding (bass) were
both white and English, and this failed to impress Davis.
But Jimi was also close to hillbilly, country music played by them mountain white
people. That's why he had those two English guys in his band, because a lot of white
English musicians liked that American hillbilly music. The best he sounded to me was
when he had Buddy Miles on drums and Billy Cox on bass. Jimi was playing that
Indian kind of shit, or he'd play those funny little melodies he doubled up on his
guitar… He used to play 6/8 all the time when he was with them white English guys
and that's what made him sound like a hillbilly to me… But the record companies and
white people liked him better when he had the white guys in his band. Just like a lot of
white people like to talk about me when I was doing the ‘nonet thing’ - the Birth of the
27
Cool thing, or when I did those other albums with Gil Evans or Bill Evans because
they always like to see white people up in black shit, so that they can say they had
something to do with it. But Jimi Hendrix came from the blues, like me we understood
each other right away because of that. (Davis and Troupe 1990: 283)
This quote probably dispels Paul Tingen’s assertion that ‘the main musical influence of the
music of the 60s counterculture on "Circle in the Round" came from folk, not rock’ (2001:
41). Miles listening habits have been examined in many articles, books and journals over the
years, including an interview with jazz writer Leonard Feather for Down Beat magazine
which took place in June 1968, only eight months before the recording of In a Silent Way:
Recently, visiting Miles in his Hollywood hotel suite, I found strewn around the room
records or tape cartridges by James Brown, Dionne Warwick, Tony Bennett, the
Byrds, Aretha Franklin, and the Fifth Dimension. Not a single jazz instrumental.
(2001)
The lack of instrumental jazz in Davis’ music collection at that time clearly aggravated
Feather, who went on to write:
Miles Davis's hotel room was cluttered with pop vocal records. Why? There are
several explanations, but the simplest and most logical, it seems to me, is that when
you have reached the aesthetic mountaintop, there is no place to look but down.
(2001)
This article is interesting for two reasons. Firstly it demonstrates that many people found it
difficult to comprehend a jazz legend like Davis having little or no jazz in their collection,
and secondly it gives a window into his listening tastes just prior to recording In a Silent Way.
There is little evidence to suggest that Davis listened to folk music in any quantity. It seems
more probable that the ‘folklike’ (or ‘hillbilly’ as Davis refers to it) quality that Tingen
28
observed in Circle in the Round probably originated from Davis listening to the recordings of
the Jimi Hendrix Experience. Davis’s remark that Hendrix would often play in 6/8 also adds
weight to the notion that Circle in the Round was directly influenced by Hendrix, it too being
in 6/8. In fact, it seems that Hendrix in some way inspired almost everything Davis was
doing. Bob Belden observed in a 2001 interview with Bill Milkowski for Jazz Times that:
Jimi’s music—particularly the bass lines—directly influenced Miles Davis. If you
listen to “Inamorata” from Live/Evil, that’s the bass line to “Fire.” “Mademoiselle
Mabry” from Filles de Kilimanjaro is derived from Jimi’s “The Wind Cries Mary”;
“What I Say” from Live/Evil is basically “Message to Love” from Band of Gypsys,
and so on. (2001)
Joe Zawinul
Zawinul’s contribution to In a Silent Way is, like Teo Macero’s, often overlooked. This may
seem curious, given that he wrote the title track and had a major hand in the composition of
Shhh/Peaceful and It’s About That Time, however, there are a number of factors that have
caused this, not least Davis’ fervent self-promotion. In an interview with Paul Tingen,
Zawinul recalled how he came to work with Miles:
I met Miles for the first time in 1959, when I was playing with Dinah Washington. We
became good friends, and during the late 1960s I didn’t live far away, and we often
spent 2-3 hours fooling with music... he liked my music a lot at that time and he used
some of it. I had played him “In a Silent Way,” and he told me he wanted it on his
record… There was some conflict going on, because Cannonball wanted to record the
tune, but I said, ‘No, I gave my word to Miles that he could use it.’ One morning
Miles called me and asked me to come to the studio, and a few minutes later he called
me back and said, ‘Bring some music, and bring that nice tune.’ (2001)
29
Miles was first alerted to the notion of working with Zawinul after hearing Cannonball
Adderley’s hit single Mercy, Mercy, which was composed by Zawinul and played on the
electric piano. Adderley was a close friend of Davis, and a former bandmate. Like Hendrix,
Adderley and Davis shared a love of the blues, and an ethos of trying to propel the genre
forwards. Miles was not only impressed by the exciting new take on blues music that Zawinul
had created, he was equally impressed by the sales figures generated by the record. Here was
a sound that he felt had both authenticity and commercial potential. ‘Cannonball Adderley’s
funky soul-jazz hit the R&B charts and won a young black fan-base. This was a fan-base that
Miles constantly felt frustrated at his failure to reach.’ (Rollins and Wolff 2012: 143)
However, despite Zawinul’s sizeable input on the album, Miles was not about to let anyone
take the credit for what he saw ultimately as his own creative decisions, and particularly if it
happened to be a white man.
Figure 13: Joe Zawinul (Copi 1976)
30
Q: What about the influences your musicians have on you. Joe Zawinul, for
instance, is credited with being responsible for some of your recent directions,
beginning with In a Silent Way.
A (Miles): Let them [the critics] say it. I don't care what they say. As long as I been
playing they never say I done anything. They always say that some white guy did it. I
just let 'em say it. Shit, whenever Joe or somebody would bring in something that
they wrote, I'd have to cut it all up because these guys get so hung up on what they
write. They think it’s complete the way they write it. Like the way he wanted that In
a Silent Way was completely different. I put it in a mode, no chords or anything. I
don't know what he was looking for when he wrote that tune, but it wasn't gonna be
on my record. So now they all play the tune the way I had it. Even Joe's own group
[Weather Report]. Shit, a little melody like that, why make it so important? It's just a
little sound - let it go. (Carner 1996)
31
Miles’ studio directions
Figure 14: Miles Davis and John McLaughlin (Persson 1980)
Miles’ instructions to his musicians in the studio were the final essential ingredient in the
making of the album. His zen-like statements, which produced more questions than answers,
were deliberately aimed at unnerving the musician and forcing them to think outside of the
box rather than simply turning up and playing whatever they were practising that week. Miles
hated practice, insisting that it stymied creativity (Tingen 2001). One example of this
involved British guitarist John McLaughlin, who had flown into New York from London the
previous day, only meeting Miles for the first time at the session. In 1969 McLaughlin was
considered by many to be the best jazz guitarist in the world, so he was somewhat taken
aback when upon meeting Miles, he was instructed to ‘Play like you don’t know how to play
the guitar’ (Tingen 2001: 58), and as Paul Tingen expands,
The other surprise was Miles direction to McLaughlin to play Zawinul's In a Silent
Way theme on electric guitar over a pedal E. McLaughlin played through the score
32
searchingly and hesitantly, thinking it was a try-out. To his astonishment, and
probably the amazement of the other musicians as well, it ended up being the master
take. McLaughlin's searching playing had exactly the unhurried, fragile, and timeless
feel Miles was looking for. (2001: 58)
In hindsight, McLaughlin understood the reasoning behind Miles’ oblique system,
recognising that it was an effective tool in the creative process. He later recalled that,
Miles in the studio directed very closely, but with very obscure statements. He was
like a Zen master. He would give you very strange directions that were very difficult
to understand…. But I think that was his intention, as it is with a Zen master. They
will say something to you and your mind will not be able to deal with it on a rational
level. And so he made you act in a subconscious way, which was the best way.
(Tingen 2001: 17)
33
Conclusion
No art is made in a vacuum
In attempting to answer the question What were the motivations, inspirations and external
influences that led to the creation of In a Silent Way? it has become clear that the album was
born from the melding of a number of different strands of the arts, including rock music, jazz,
soul and 20th century avant-garde classical music, combined with 1960s socio-political
movements such as Black Consciousness and the advancement of studio technology. It can
truly be said to be a zeitgeist work.
But as to which of the reviewers in Chapter 1 was closer to the truth is harder to say. It can be
argued that both Lester Bangs and Stanley Crouch had valid points to make. In Crouch’s
defence, Davis undoubtedly wanted to generate more money. He felt an injustice that young,
white (and in Miles’ opinion, inferior) musicians should be earning more than him and this
was a major factor in his change of direction. But as discussed in Chapter 4, Davis considered
playing ‘jazz’ to be selling out, working as a slave for white people like his forefathers had.
He also (justifiably) felt that rock’n’roll was black music, so why should he not play it? In
Miles’ view making money did not equate to selling out, a point missed by Crouch.
Lester Bang’s article, on the other hand, whilst succeeding in vividly describing the sonic
qualities of the record, failed to recognise the socio-political statement that Davis was
making. He also failed to spot the duplication of audio at the end of both sides of the record,
or for that matter, any of the editing by Macero. Bang’s description of the album as ‘…long
jams with a minimum of pre-planned structure’ (1969) could not have been further from the
truth, being as they were actually short recordings deliberately ordered to create a sonata
34
form. This demonstrates that even those who enjoyed the record did not fully comprehend the
scale of the work that Davis and Macero had produced.
Finally, a story of Miles which perfectly encapsulates In a Silent Way, as recounted by his
manager of 12 years, Mark Rothbaum:
There was this musician once who came up to Miles and said: "Miles, you're my man!
But that new shit you´re into, I just can´t get with it." And Miles answered:
"Should I wait for you?" (Tingen 2001)
35
Reference List
Bangs, L. (1969) Miles Davis in A silent way album review [online] available from
<http://www.rollingstone.com/music/albumreviews/in-a-silent-way-19691115> [27
December 2015]
Baskerville, J. D. (2003) The impact of black nationalist ideology on American jazz music of
the 1960s and 1970s (black studies, 20). United States: Mellen, Edwin Press, The
Carner, G. (1996) The Miles Davis companion: Four decades of commentary (companion).
ed. by Carner. New York: Schirmer Books [u.a.]
Cross, C. R. (2005) Room full of mirrors. New York: Hyperion Books
Crouch, S. (1997) Reading jazz: A gathering of autobiography, reportage and criticism from
1919 to now. ed. by Gottlieb, R. United Kingdom: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Cubarrubia, R. (2013) Jimi Hendrix sought Paul McCartney for Supergroup with Miles Davis
[online] available from <http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/jimi-hendrix-sought-paul-
mccartney-for-supergroup-with-miles-davis-20130510> [6 January 2016]
Davis, M. and Troupe, Q. (1990) Miles: The autobiography (Picador books). London:
Picador
DeMichael, D. (1969) A rolling stone interview with Miles Davis [online] available from
<http://www.forghieri.net/jazz/MilesDavisRSInterview.html> [6 January 2016]
Feather, L. (2001) Miles Davis interviews [online] available from
<http://www.forghieri.net/jazz/blind/Davis_4.html> [28 January 2016]
36
Glasser, B. (2001) In a silent way: A portrait of Joe Zawinul. Second. London: Sanctuary
Publishing
Kofsky, F. (1998) John Coltrane and the jazz revolution of the 1960’s: Black nationalism and
the revolution in music. 2nd edn. New York: Pathfinder Press
Lee, L. (1996) Teo Macero interview [online] available from
<http://www.furious.com/perfect/teomacero.html> [28 October 2015]
Leonard Bernstein at the BBC (2015) [TV] BBC
Milkowski, B. (2001) Jimi Hendrix: Modern jazz axis [online] available from
<http://jazztimes.com/articles/20150-jimi-hendrix-modern-jazz-axis> [9 January 2016]
Mpls Underground Film Fest (2015) 'HARVEY PEKAR’S TEO MACERO'. in YouTube
[online] YouTube. available from <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ybkSAjaFz_U> [27
October 2015]
Rollins, S. and Wolff, F. (2012) Miles Davis: The complete illustrated history. Minneapolis,
MN: Voyageur Press
Smith, J. A. (2010) '‘Sell it Black’: Race and marketing in Miles Davis’s early fusion jazz'.
Jazz Perspectives 4 (1), 7–33
Stephenson, T. (2006) 'Poeme electronique by Edgard Varese: Authenticity, reproduction and
mediatization'. International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media 2 (1)
Tingen, P. (2001) MILES BEYOND | the making of in A silent way & bitches brew | an ear
witness account [online] available from <http://www.miles-
beyond.com/iaswbitchesbrew.htm> [28 October 2015]
37
Tingen, P. (2001) Miles beyond: The electric explorations of Miles Davis, 1967-1991. 1st
edn. New York: Billboard Books,U.S.
Figures
Anon. (1972) Teo Macero and Miles Davis outside Columbia Records. available from
<https://jazzinphoto.files.wordpress.com/2011/11/3-photos-culture-musique-miles-davis-
miles-davis-et-le-producteur-teo-macero-devant-les-studios-de-columbia-
1971_galleryphoto_paysage_std1.jpg> [3 February 2016]
Anon. (1995) Stanley Crouch. available from
<http://www2.wlu.edu/images/news_spots/crouch_spot.jpg> [3 February 2016]
Bayley, R. (1976) Leslie Conway ‘Lester’ Bangs (December 13, 1948 – April 30, 1982),
American music journalist, author and musician. available from
<https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/8/80/Lester_Bangs.jpg> [3 February 2016]
Copi, T. (1976) Pianist Joe Zawinul of the band ‘Weather Report’ performs onstage at the
Berkeley Jazz Festival in 1976 in Berkeley, California. January 01, 1976. available from
<https://i.ytimg.com/vi/38RxFGWJo24/hqdefault.jpg> [3 February 2016]
Friedlander, L. (1969) Miles Davis - In a Silent Way album cover. available from
<https://cdn.smehost.net/milesdaviscom-uslegacyprod/wp-content/uploads/1969/07/32-
InASilentWay.jpg> [4 February 2016]
Hassell, J. (1969) Miles Davis and Teo Macero. available from
<http://www.johncoulthart.com/feuilleton/wp-content/uploads/2008/02/miles_teo.jpg> [3
February 2016]
38
Miles Ahead and Belden, B. (2001) Session details: Columbia studio B (February 18, 1969)
[online] available from <http://www.plosin.com/milesahead/Sessions.aspx?s=690218> [3
February 2016]
Miles Ahead and Belden, B. (2004) Session details: Columbia 30th street studio (December
4, 1967) [online] available from
<http://www.plosin.com/milesahead/Sessions.aspx?s=671204> [2 February 2016]
Persson, J. (1970) Jimi Hendrix performs in Copenhagen on Sept. 3, 1970, just days before he
died in London. available from
<http://assets.nydailynews.com/polopoly_fs/1.2364497.1442513843!/img/httpImage/image.j
pg_gen/derivatives/article_635/jan017-jimi-hendrix.jpg> [3 February 2016]
Persson, J. (1980) Miles Davis & John McLaughlin at Easy Sound Studio Copenhagen
January 1985 recording ‘Aura’. available from
<http://www.janperssoncollection.dk/musicians/def/davismiles/davismilesaura8485_files/war
ehouse_ef5780470cf5b7e1e81846fc8af2fd3f/images/davis-miles-aura-1985-13.jpg> [3
February 2016]
The Bettmann Archive (1958) Edgard Varèse. available from
<http://cdn.quotationof.com/images/edgard-vareses-quotes-5.jpg> [3 February 2016]
Wolman, B. (1969) Miles and Betty Davis at home in New York City. available from
<http://s8.postimg.org/wvnmmknc5/image.jpg> [2 February 2016]
39
Audio
Jimi Hendrix (1967) 'The wind cries Mary'. Are You Experienced
Miles Davis (2001) 'Ascent - new mix'. The Complete In A Silent Way Sessions
Miles Davis (2004) 'Circle in the round'. The Complete Columbia Studio Recordings Of The
Miles Davis Quintet January 1965 To June 1968
Miles Davis (2001) 'In a Silent Way - LP mix'. The Complete In a Silent Way Sessions
Davis, M. (2001) 'It’s About That Time'. The Complete In a Silent Way Sessions
Miles Davis (1968) 'Mademoiselle Mabry (Miss Mabry)'. Filles De Kilimanjaro
Miles Davis (2001) 'Shhh / peaceful - LP mix'. The Complete In a Silent Way Sessions
Miles Davis (2001) 'Shhh / peaceful - new mix'. The Complete In A Silent Way Sessions
Miles Davis (1959) 'So what'. Kind Of Blue

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InaSilentWayDissertationfinaldraft

  • 1. Coventry University Faculty of Arts & Humanities School of Media and Performing Arts What were the motivations, inspirations and external influences that led to the creation of the album ‘In a Silent Way’? Matthew Parker: 6519463 306CPA Dissertation 2016
  • 2. i Abstract Recorded by jazz trumpeter Miles Davis on the 18th of February 1969 in one three-and-a-half hour session, the album In a Silent Way was for its time a unique piece of work, not only in jazz but in all musical genres. It was an album constructed almost entirely in post-production. So vague were the instructions at the recording session that the musicians themselves were unsure as to what they were working on, or even what had or had not been recorded. The revolution in music it produced was arguably much greater than its noisier and more famous sibling Bitches Brew, which was recorded only six months later. In a Silent Way introduced the world to ambient music, and ushered in a new way of producing music through cut and paste techniques which would eventually become the studio standard. Many jazz critics hated it, accusing Miles of deliberately selling out. But what were the real motivations, inspirations and external influences that led to the creation of In a Silent Way?
  • 3. ii Contents Introduction 1 Chapter 1: The Critics 4 Chapter 2: Teo Macero 8 Chapter 3: The Unreleased Recordings 1965-68 16 Chapter 4: Miles Davis 21 Conclusion: 33 Reference List: 35 List of Figures Figure 1: Miles Davis – In a Silent Way album cover (Friedlander 1969) Figure 2: Lester Bangs (Bayley 1976) Figure 3: Stanley Crouch (Anon. 1995) Figure 4: Miles Davis and Teo Macero (Hassell 1969) Figure 5: Edgard Varese listens to his Poème Electronique (The Bettmann Archive 1958) Figure 6: Teo Macero and Miles Davis (Anon. 1972) Figure 7: Shhh/Peaceful – composite version (Miles Ahead and Belden 2001) Figure 8: Shhh/Peaceful - LP version (Miles Ahead and Belden 2001) Figure 9: Circle in the Round - Stan Tonkel 1979 edit (Miles Ahead and Belden 2004) Figure 10: Circle in the Round - Teo Macero 1968 edit (Miles Ahead and Belden 2004) Figure 11: Miles Davis and Betty Mabry (Wolman 1969) Figure 12: Jimi Hendrix (Persson 1970) Figure 13: Joe Zawinul (Copi 1976) Figure 14: Miles Davis and John McLaughlin (Persson 1980)
  • 4. 1 Introduction Figure 1: Miles Davis - In a Silent Way (Friedlander 1969) In a Silent Way Columbia - CS 9875 - Released 30th July, 1969 Track list A Shhh/Peaceful (17:58) M. Davis B1 In A Silent Way (4:11) J. Zawinul B2 It's About That Time (15:41) M. Davis
  • 5. 2 Credits Trumpet - Miles Davis Tenor Saxophone - Wayne Shorter Organ, Electric Piano - Josef Zawinul Electric Piano - Chick Corea & Herbie Hancock Guitar - John McLaughlin Bass - Dave Holland Drums - Tony Williams Producer – Teo Macero They say that jazz has become menopausal, and there is much truth in the statement. Rock too seems to have suffered under a numbing plethora of standardized Sounds. But I believe there is a new music in the air, a total art which knows no boundaries or categories, a new school run by geniuses indifferent to fashion. And I also believe that the ineluctable power and honesty of their music shall prevail. Miles Davis is one of those geniuses. (Bangs. 1969)
  • 6. 3 Despite its status alongside the likes of The Beatles Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band and The Beach Boys Pet Sounds as one of the most important late 20th century recordings, researching the album was less straightforward than one might initially expect. There is no single unified piece on it in either journal or book form. The closest thing to this is the excellent book Miles Beyond: The Electric Explorations of Miles Davis, 1967-1991 by Paul Tingen, which dedicates a chapter to the making of In a Silent Way. As a result, much of the research for this dissertation came from biographies and websites of the various protagonists, including the beautifully detailed website Miles Ahead (http://www.plosin.com/milesahead), which contains the studio notes from almost all of Davis’ recording sessions from 1945 to 1991. This site proved invaluable in piecing together the methods developed by Davis and producer Teo Macero to create In a Silent Way. Another priceless piece of research material was the Columbia Records box set The Complete In a Silent Way Sessions, released in 2001. Despite the misleading title (most of the music culled for the set was recorded in 1968, indeed only the tracks that appeared on the final album were recorded at that session), it contains some revealing material including the previously unreleased original Teo Macero composite edits of In a Silent Way. It also includes some insightful comments and tables from jazz musician and writer Bob Belden in the extensive liner notes. Without these resources, this dissertation would have been infinitely harder to research and compile, clearly demonstrating a need for a unified piece on such a landmark recording.
  • 7. 4 Chapter 1 The Critics Read any review of In a Silent Way written in the 21st century and one would be forgiven for thinking that it had always enjoyed unchallenged reverence as one of the most important albums of all time. In fact, upon first release critics were greatly divided on the merits of the album. As a general rule, rock critics loved it and jazz critics hated it, mostly for the same reasons. The repetitive nature of the chord progressions, straight rock-like rhythms, electric guitar, piano and bass were all elements that critics were either enthralled or repulsed by. Lester Bangs for instance, writing for rock magazine Rolling Stone in 1969 showered Davis with lavish praise: The songs are long jams with a minimum of pre-planned structure. That they are so cohesive and sustained is a testament to the experience and sensitivity of the musicians involved. Miles' lines are like shots of distilled passion, the kind of evocative, liberating riffs that decades of strivers build their styles on. Aside from Charles Mingus, there is no other musician alive today who communicates such a yearning, controlled intensity, the transformation of life's inchoate passions and tensions into aural adventures that find a permanent place in your consciousness and influence your basic definitions of music. (1969) If Davis could incite an almost religious zeal amongst rock journalists like Bangs, he could generate equal amounts of vitriol from the jazz community, most notably from infamous jazz Figure 2: Lester Bangs (Bayley 1976) (Bayley 1976)
  • 8. 5 critic Stanley Crouch, who recognised none of the ‘controlled intensity’ or ‘distilled passion’ that so excited Bangs. Instead, Crouch wrote, ‘Beginning with the 1969 In a Silent Way, Davis's sound was mostly lost among electronic instruments, inside a long, maudlin piece of droning wallpaper music.’ (1997: 909) Crouch’s views on Davis’ shift towards electronic instrumentation and modern rock sensibilities were laid bare in a no-holds-barred article entitled ‘On The Corner: The Sellout Of Miles Davis’ in which Crouch savaged Davis for betraying his loyal, long-standing fans. Crouch appears to have taken Davis’ volte-face personally, as though he himself had been stabbed in the back by Davis. The contemporary Miles Davis, when one hears his music or watches him perform, deserves the description that Nietzsche gave of Wagner, "the greatest example of self-violation in the history of art." Davis made much fine music for the first half of his professional life, and represented for many the uncompromising Afro-American artist contemptuous of uncle Tom but he has fallen from grace- and been celebrated for it. As usual, the fall from grace has been a form of success. Desperate to maintain his position at the forefront of modern music, to sustain his financial position, to be admired for the hipness of his purported innovations, Davis turned butt to the beautiful in order to genuflect before the commercial...Beyond the terrible performances and the terrible recordings, Davis has also become the most remarkable licker of monied boots in the music business, willing now to pimp himself as he once pimped women when he was drug addict. (1997: 898) Figure 3: Stanley Crouch (Anon. 1995)
  • 9. 6 Miles was also alienating his peers with his new sound. Respected jazz tenor saxophonist Jimmy Heath, born in the same year as Miles, was highly critical of what he perceived to be Davis’ motivations for making the album, and for shirking his responsibility as a man who enjoyed almost unequalled cultural and artistic status among black Americans. Miles led the way for a lot of people because he was one of the ones who got through. He had the fine clothes, the expensive cars, the big house, all the magazine articles and the pretty girls chasing him. He seemed like he was on top of everything. Then you had all of this rock getting all of the press and it was like Elvis Presley all over again. Miles stepped out here and decided he was going to get himself some of that money and a lot of musicians followed his lead. It was like if Miles had led the pack for so long they didn't know how to stop following him, even if the music wasn't any good. (Crouch 1997: 909) Davis though, was seemingly unconcerned by the critical reception to his work. Here was a man who liked to take risks, who was moving in unchartered territory. He clearly did not expect everyone to understand, or want to understand, where his new direction was taking him. In a Silent Way began a great creative period for me from 1969. That record opened up a lot of music in my head that just kept coming out for the next four years... But all the music was different and this was causing a lot of critics a lot of problems. Critics always like to pigeonhole everybody, put you in a certain place in their heads so they can get to you. They don't like a lot of changing because that makes them have to work to understand what you're doing. When I started changing so fast like that, a lot of critics started putting me down because they didn't understand what I was doing.
  • 10. 7 But critics never did mean much to me, so I just kept on doing what I had been doing, trying to grow as a musician. (Davis and Troupe 1990: 301)
  • 11. 8 Chapter 2 Teo Macero Figure 4: Miles Davis and Teo Macero (Hassell 1969) Producer Teo Macero played a pivotal role in the creation of In a Silent Way, and is perhaps one of the most underrated musicians in 20th century music. As a student he majored in classical conducting at Juilliard, and following an unsuccessful request to change his major to composition, he took private composition lessons. In order to finance the lessons Macero worked at the Juilliard sound labs, where he learnt to cut records and edit tape under the supervision of musical pioneer Edgard Varèse, a leading exponent of Musique Concrète. In a 1996 interview with journalist Lara Lee, Macero spoke of their friendship, and of the influence that Varèse had on him. I started at Juilliard, studying and working in the engineering department for 50 cents an hour to try to pay my way through. But then I got interested in it because of Edgard Varèse. He was like my second father…I mean, I was there when he was doing the "Poème Electronique" in Paris. He would show me all the pieces, all of the elements. But he was creating sounds from other sources other than electronic
  • 12. 9 sounds. He was making his own, which to me is very creative. Much more so than just putting it through a filter. He created all kinds of things for that "Poème Electronique" and I was fascinated by it. We used to see each other for lunch. We'd talk on Saturdays and Sundays on the phone and he'd come to all the concerts that I gave. He was like a second father, with a tremendous amount of knowledge. (1996) Poème Electronique was composed and recorded by Varèse in 1958 and was commissioned by the Philips Corporation as the soundtrack to the Brussels World fair of the same year. At 8 minutes long, it was constructed by Varèse at Philips sound laboratory in Eindhoven, using three tracks of tape (one stereo and one mono track). Varèse combined recordings of multiple natural sound sources including human voices, pianos, bells and organs with synthetically produced sounds such as oscillators and machine noises. These recordings were then manipulated by a variety of methods including altering the speed of the recording, reversing and/or looping the tape, filtering the sound through electronic reverb units etc. Finally, the individual recordings were edited together into a single piece, which Varèse mapped out prior to the recordings (Stephenson 2006: 58). This was pioneering work, as Stephenson observed in his 2006 article, the recordings were ‘...combined electronically to create sounds that had never before been heard’. (2006: 58) These techniques would become the cornerstone of Macero’s production style from the late 1960s onwards. Figure 5: Edgard Varèse (The Bettmann Archive 1958)
  • 13. 10 In 1953, shortly after graduating from Juilliard with a Master’s degree, Macero received a Guggenheim award for one of his compositions, following sponsorship from amongst others, Leonard Bernstein and Aaron Copland. He was considered an extremely prodigious up-and- coming talent by his peers, as celebrated music critic Harvey Pekar observed: Teo was a great jazz musician - way ahead of his time, like on his first recordings …he was doing startling things: using atonality, 12 and 9 tone rows, poly-tonality, poly-metric effects, and more than one tempo at a time (he allowed improvisers to play simultaneously, choosing their own tempos); employing collective improvisation, in which each improviser plays a different chord sequence; and overdubbing and altering tape speeds. The pieces Teo wrote weren’t just academic exercises; they were alive, vibrant. (Mpls Underground Film Fest 2015) Macero and Bernstein formed a lifelong friendship, working on a number of large productions together. They shared an ethos of progressing serious music by utilising popular culture, as expressed by Bernstein in an interview with the BBC during his 50th birthday party in August 1968. The only real avant-garde, serious music now is full of pop influences and vice- versa...There are times, and this is one of them, when I find pop music more vital and more nourishing, perhaps not so durable, but more interesting to follow, more adventurous, fresher, more fun! Good lord, why should that word be excluded from august musical circles? I mean, music should be fun. (BBC 2015) In 1957 Macero was hired as a music editor by Columbia records, becoming a producer two years later. He worked on such legendary albums as Charles Mingus’ Mingus Ah-Um and Dave Brubeck’s Take Five. Teo recognised that the recording process had distorted the
  • 14. 11 listener’s perception of jazz music. Performances that were essentially improvised, in a time before recording technology could capture them, would have existed only in the moment they were being produced. Now though, the listener could experience the same performance over and over. With increased familiarity of the recording the performance gives the false impression of being through composed rather than improvised. Teo exploited this aural illusion in two main ways during his career. Firstly, in a double-bluff sense, some solo instrumental parts (mostly lead-ins) would be pre-composed (or at the very least, sketched out), and deliberately intended to sound improvised. For instance, Miles' opening solo on the seminal So What from his 1959 album Kind of Blue bears more than a passing resemblance to a solo he performed on his previous album Porgy and Bess. Given Teo's already extensive experience in arranging and music editing, this solo was probably singled out by him for future development and may have been the catalyst for the whole piece. Miles would record his stuff, and then he’d just leave. He would sometimes say, ‘I like this or that,’ and then I’d say: ‘I’ll listen to it and I’ll put it together. If you like it, fine, if not, we’ll change it.’ So I was the one with the vision. Miles also had a vision, but he wasn’t really a composer, he didn’t compose in an organized way. It was happenstance. He played with these great musicians, and when they had played enough, I was able to cut out the stuff that wasn’t good, and piece something together from the rest. (Tingen 2001)
  • 15. 12 Figure 6: Teo Macero and Miles Davis (Anon. 1972) By 1969 with the advancement of recording technology, Macero reversed this process to create In a Silent Way, replicating the false 'through-composed' sensation of repeated listening to improvised music by arranging a piece deliberately intended to sound composed, when it was actually improvised. He repeated this technique on all of Miles' subsequent albums until 1975. Below we can see two tables which are taken from Bob Belden’s liner notes for The Complete In a Silent Way Sessions. The first table shows how Macero created composite tracks, tracks that were already pre-edited together from (in this case) five distinct sections, which he then used as a reference to compile the final edited track. It is not known from which takes these five parts were originally gleaned (or how many takes there were in total). However, the composite versions of the tracks which would eventually become In a Silent Way still yield valuable information.
  • 16. 13 Figure 7: Shhh/Peaceful – composite version (Miles Ahead and Belden 2001) The composites were probably necessary due to, like Circle in the Round before it (see Chapter 3), the performances being conducted section by section. The composites would have helped Macero hear the final arrangements in his head more clearly, and as he later remarked, act like a literary editor, moving and removing sections as he saw fit to achieve the best effect: His stuff was mostly written down. I mean it was worked on in the studio. But I would record from the time he got there, which was usually on time, until he left. I'd record everything. And then when I'd go back to the editing room, I would edit everything. I listened to everything back. Miles would say, "You remember that thing in the second take?" I said "yeah." And I would maybe make a loop and create it. That's why those records were so good. Maybe people will say it didn't sound authentic. It is authentic because you're acting like a writer for a book, like an editor... I'm just there to make sure that everything is in order. (Lee 1996)
  • 17. 14 Figure 8: Shhh/Peaceful - LP version (Miles Ahead and Belden 2001) The original composite of Shhh/Peaceful (figure 6) gives a good demonstration of Macero’s finely honed editing skills. Comparing the tables above it can be clearly seen that the theme (also labelled ‘Part 1’) in the Shhh/Peaceful composite version, which accounts for nearly four minutes of audio and is the harmonic structure around which the piece is based, was completely sacrificed by Macero and Davis in the final edit (figure 7). The chordal movements of the theme are deemed to be less interesting than the static pedal played in the other sections. This is perhaps the most ground-breaking element of the whole process, that in the final analysis of the piece which was probably originally structured like a more traditional jazz arrangement with a theme at the beginning and end, they decided the main feature should be the improvisation rather than the theme, and jettisoned the theme altogether. During the 1996 interview with Lara Lee, Macero described in more detail the technical processes employed to produce In a Silent Way. Both sides of the LP were arranged in classical sonata form (exposition, development, recapitulation), using material at the end of each track which was an exact audio duplicate of the beginning, to create the recapitulation. Q. Talk about cutting and splicing in In a Silent Way. Teo: That was one of the rare times that Miles came to the studio. I called Miles up and I said, "Look, I mixed two stacks of tapes, about 15 or 20 reels each, I can make the cuts, I can do the edit..." [As Miles] "I'll come down. I'll be there." So he came
  • 18. 15 down and we cut each side down to 8 1/2 minutes and I think the other side was 9 1/2 and he said he was leaving… and that would be his album. I said, "Look you really can't do that. I mean CBS will fire you, suspend you, fire me. But give me a couple of days, I'll think about it." And then a couple of days later I sent him up a tape and that was it. What I did, I copied a lot of it. You wouldn't know where the splices are. (1996)
  • 19. 16 Chapter 3 The Unreleased Recordings 1965-68 "Circle in the Round" marks a pivotal moment in Miles's musical development because it introduced many of the ingredients that would inform Miles's music until 1975, in particular the musical influences of the '60s counterculture, his search for a dense and complex bottom end, and the application of postproduction technology. Examining these elements, one detects that - in addition to the electric guitar, played by the then up-and-coming jazz guitarist Joe Beck - Miles also introduced other textures new to his music on "Circle in the Round", such as celeste and chimes. Like that of "Masqualero", the melody has a Spanish/Arabic quality. The feel is fairly loose, and the folklike melody, the new acoustic textures, and Joe Beck's clean sound and polite approach all indicate that the main musical influence of the music of the 60s counterculture on "Circle in the Round" came from folk, not rock. (Tingen 2001: 41) The harmonic and rhythmic qualities of Circle in the Round were not the only experimental aspects of the piece. Crucially it marked the first known attempt by Davis and Macero to create a single unified piece from a number of different takes, and to assemble an arrangement and structure for the piece in post, rather than pre-production using tape editing. One important element in the creation of Circle in the Round was the recent innovation of the studio as a creative tool in its own right, rather than simply as a device for capturing sound. The advancement of technology throughout the 1960s enabled producers to use the studio as though it were another instrument, permanently altering the nature of recorded music. Tape editing was one such development which had been around since the first tape recorders were
  • 20. 17 shipped to the US in 1946, technology developed by Germany during World War Two. As Paul Tingen observed, up until the mid-sixties the studio had been: ...purely used as a means of creating an idealized performance through splicing together the best sections of different recording takes. This approach was still based on the paradigm of creating an approximation of reality. Around 1967 a shift occurred in Western popular music culture towards looking at recordings as aural fantasies that were only restrained by the imagination of the recording's creator and the limitations of technology. (2001: 41) In this sense Circle in the Round, rather than In a Silent Way is the more historically important track. However, for a number of reasons it failed to be recognised as such. Circle in the Round was withheld from release by Columbia until 1979 when it was issued as part of a two disc retrospective of unreleased material. Perhaps in 1968 Columbia felt it was too radical and too much of a stylistic jump from Davis’ back catalogue, perhaps Davis and Macero themselves were dissatisfied with the results of the experiment. The piece itself is long and repetitive, and lacks the clear structure of Shhh/Peaceful, for instance. Attempts to re-edit the piece prior to its eventual release on the 1979 album of the same name, fared little better in focussing the track, suggesting that the source material, rather than the editing, was the main reason why this track was shelved for 11 years. According to Bob Belden’s liner notes for the Columbia box set Miles Davis Quintet 1965-68, That version (1979) was assembled by Stan Tonkel, who edited a 26:17 performance together. While doing research for this box, a 33:32 version (assembled and edited by Teo Macero in 1968) was found...This new version contains nearly all of the usable material that was recorded during the session, including some that is clearly rehearsal in nature (they recorded 35 sections or elements). (2004)
  • 21. 18 Figure 9: Circle in the Round - Stan Tonkel 1979 edit (Miles Ahead and Belden 2004) It is apparent from this statement that rather than chopping up long jams into smaller sections, Macero was doing the opposite, recording 35 short performances (some wholly improvised, some through composed) then organising them as a single complete track, the same process Edgard Varèse employed to create Poème Electronique excepting that Varèse used sound effects rather than melodic patterns. However, the experience undoubtedly proved invaluable to Davis and Macero, and the pair must have felt there was enough merit in the process to attempt it again nine months later, this time with the Joe Zawinul composition Ascent, which would also remain in the Columbia vaults until 1981. According to the Columbia recording session notes, Ascent was recorded in 11 takes ranging from two to five minutes each. Four of these takes were incorporated into the final 14 minute composite recording by Macero. Clearly Davis and Macero were waiting for the right piece of music to fully exploit their new process. Three months later they returned to this process for a third time, producing In a Silent Way.
  • 22. 19 Figure 10: Circle in the Round - Teo Macero 1968 edit (Miles Ahead and Belden 2004) That critics and fans alike were denied access to most of Miles’ developmental work between 1965 and 1968 undoubtedly exacerbated a sense of disconnection that some felt towards In a Silent Way. Although Miles had been slowly and deliberately realigning his sound with popular black music over a period of three years, his album releases only hinted at this. Combined with Columbia’s new sales policy of targeting young rock fans, the alienation some jazz critics and longstanding Miles fans experienced is quite understandable. Since Davis had first signed with Columbia Records in 1955, the company had consistently and aggressively marketed his music almost exclusively to jazz listeners. Beginning in 1967, however, as internal Columbia memos demonstrate, Davis’s recent stylistic evolution helped motivate the company to begin considering how to “broaden” Davis’s audience beyond traditional jazz fans. A part of this discussion included the idea of placing advertisements in non-jazz magazines in order to “aim Miles at the Rock audience.” Columbia opted to pursue this approach, and one resulting ad in Rolling Stone—for the 1969 album Filles de Kilimanjaro—begins with
  • 23. 20 the headline, “You May Like Jazz, and Not Even Know It.” The copy then argues that Filles shares much in common with the “psychedelic music” that the reader has recently been “buying and digging.” (Smith 2010: 10)
  • 24. 21 Chapter 4 Miles Davis Befitting his status as black aesthetic signifier in the flesh, Miles cannot merely be read as a fascinating subject. He's also for many of us an objectified projection of our blackest desires, a model for any black artist who wants to thoroughly interpenetrate Western domains of power and knowledge with Africanizing authority. For those who approach him as a generator of musical systems, metaphors, metaphysics, and gossip, Miles was the premiere black romantic artist of this century. (Carner 1996: 234) Betty Mabry Davis’s second wife Betty Davis (nee Mabry) is widely regarded as the main catalyst in Miles’ move towards electronic instrumentation and new recording ideas. She was a singer/songwriter, a feminist, and had her finger on the pulse of 60s counterculture. Mabry introduced Miles to the music of Jimi Hendrix and Sly and the Family Stone, and encouraged him to dress in a much more flamboyant style. Mademoiselle Mabry from In a Silent Way’s predecessor, Nefertiti (featuring a picture of Mabry on the front cover) was an homage to Betty, acknowledging her significant role in Miles new direction, as it was constructed around a chordal reharmonisation of the Jimi Hendrix track The Wind Cries Mary. As 1969 dawned, Miles Davis’ young wife Betty was determined to hip him to the counterculture and what was going on in soul and rock. Not that she had to try hard—Miles was sick of jazz with its neat suits, empty clubs, dismal record sales, and aging audience. He wanted to go where the action was. (Rollins and Wolff 2012: 143)
  • 25. 22 As jazz split into various sub-genres in the 1960s, much of it developed in an avant-garde direction, moving away from rhythmically centred pieces to more abstract concepts, and in the process lost a great deal of its black audience. As jazz singer Betty Carter commented in an interview for Ebony magazine in 1990, Some of the music turned off Black listeners, because it had no beat or pulse. But this is what Black people love: to pat their feet and move their heads. I can't blame this [the black movement away from jazz] on the audience. I blame it on the music, which didn't have any Black rhythms. We had people thinking they had to be intellectuals to understand the music.... (Baskerville 2003: 137) It had not escaped Miles attention that Hendrix and Stone were now superstars selling millions of records, playing to huge sold-out audiences and connecting with a young black audience. Miles conversely, was playing to predominantly white, middle-class, middle-aged, dwindling audiences in small, smoky clubs. His move away from the traditional aesthetic of Figure 11: Miles Davis and Betty Mabry (Wolman 1969)
  • 26. 23 jazz can be at least partly attributed to this. The life of a jazz musician in the late 60s could hardly be more starkly contrasting with that of Hendrix et al, as described by journalist Leo Kofsky, in his 1970 piece entitled 'The Jazz Club’: An Adventure in Cockroach Capitalism. The first thing that struck me was there was simply no place for the artist to go when they weren't playing.... What this means in more precise terms is that the musician has his choice of spending his between-set breaks in a variety of unsatisfactory ways: (1) he can take a table and drink - if he doesn't mind having the drinks, at regular prices, deducted from his wages; (2) he can amble about in back, either rubbing up against a greasy stove in the kitchen or lounging on an equally dirty staircase while watching the traffic in and out of the men's room; or finally, he can go sit in his car or, weather permitting, wander outside. (1998: 146) Davis was concerned with becoming an irrelevant museum piece like Louis Armstrong. He also openly disliked white people, and racial issues were unarguably at the forefront of Miles’ thinking in 1968/69, something that also spurred him on to change direction and attempt to attract a larger black audience. Contrary to Stanley Crouch’s assertion that Davis had ‘sold out’ by moving away from jazz, in Miles’ opinion playing jazz, not rock, meant selling out to the white man, and for little reward too. ‘Jazz is an Uncle Tom word. It's a white folks word.’ (DeMichael 1969) His decision, in 1969, to court a younger audience by playing rock venues, adding amplified instruments to his ensemble, and cranking up both the volume and the beat, also amounted to a critique of modern jazz, which he felt had become tired and inbred. (Carner 1996: 204 – 205)
  • 27. 24 Jimi Hendrix The music I was really listening to in 1968 was James Brown, the great guitar player Jimi Hendrix, and a new group who had just come out with the hit record, "Dance to the Music," Sly and the Family Stone, led by Sly Stewart, from San Francisco… But it was Jimi Hendrix that I first got into when Betty Mabry turned me on to it. (Davis and Troupe 1990: 282) Hendrix was arguably the musician exerting the greatest influence on Miles between 1967 and 1975. Miles talked often about his love of Hendrix’s music, and of the man himself with whom Davis became a friend. Davis’ authorised biography is littered with references to Hendrix, and he is quite open regarding the scope that Hendrix’s influence had on him, even down to the clothes he was wearing and the hairdresser he was using: I was changing my attitude about a lot of things, like the look of my wardrobe… everyone was starting to dress a little looser at concerts, at least the rock musicians were and that might have affected me. Everybody was into blackness, you know, the black consciousness movement, and so a lot of African and Indian fabrics were being worn. I started wearing African dashikis and robes and looser clothes plus a lot of Indian tops by this guy named Hernando, who was from Argentina and who had a place in Greenwich Village. That's where Jimi Hendrix bought most of his clothes. So I started buying wraparound Indian shirts from him... I had moved away from the cool Brooks Brothers look and into this other thing, which for me was more what was happening with the times. (1990: 300)
  • 28. 25 Figure 12: Jimi Hendrix (Persson 1970) It was at the hairdresser where Jimi first met legendary jazz musician Miles Davis. Jimi had his hair done by James Finney and became one of his first showcase clients. “Finney introduced the ‘Blowout’ through Jimi,” Taharqa Aleem recalled. “Prior to that, it had been ‘the Afro,’ and before that ‘the Conk.” Miles liked Jimi’s hair and also began to go to Finney. The two musicians would also occasionally double-date with their girlfriends. (Cross 2005: 285 – 287) Rumours of a Hendrix/Davis collaboration were rife in 1969, continuing until the guitarist’s death in 1970. 25 years later the rumours were confirmed, when as reported by Rolling Stone magazine, a telegram was unearthed in 1995 sent by Davis, Hendrix and Davis’ drummer Tony Williams on the 21st October 1969 to Apple Records asking Paul McCartney to join their supergroup. "We are recording and LP together this weekend in NewYork [sic]," reads the note, according to The Associated Press. "How about coming in to play bass stop call Alan Douglas 212-5812212. Peace Jimi Hendrix Miles Davis Tony Williams." (Cubarrubia 2013)
  • 29. 26 It is not known whether McCartney received, or indeed replied to the request. However, in the Hendrix biography Room Full of Mirrors, author Christopher R. Cross suggests why a collaboration between the artists failed to get off the ground. Jimi had expressed a desire to record with Miles, and a session was planned pairing them. Jimi’s usual approach was to jam first and worry about contracts, record labels, and payments later. Davis, however, was frustrated by how little money he was making in jazz and jealous of how much Jimi was earning. The day before the session, he called Jimi’s manager and demanded payment in advance. Miles told Mike Jeffrey he wanted fifty thousand dollars up front… Jeffrey refused the outrageous demands and the session never occurred. (2005: 285 – 287) From this statement it can clearly be observed that Davis felt bitterness about his financial and social status compared with that of his younger, rock-playing contemporaries, and although Hendrix was greatly admired by Davis, the same could not be said for Hendrix’s backing musicians The Experience. Mitch Mitchell (drums) and Noel Redding (bass) were both white and English, and this failed to impress Davis. But Jimi was also close to hillbilly, country music played by them mountain white people. That's why he had those two English guys in his band, because a lot of white English musicians liked that American hillbilly music. The best he sounded to me was when he had Buddy Miles on drums and Billy Cox on bass. Jimi was playing that Indian kind of shit, or he'd play those funny little melodies he doubled up on his guitar… He used to play 6/8 all the time when he was with them white English guys and that's what made him sound like a hillbilly to me… But the record companies and white people liked him better when he had the white guys in his band. Just like a lot of white people like to talk about me when I was doing the ‘nonet thing’ - the Birth of the
  • 30. 27 Cool thing, or when I did those other albums with Gil Evans or Bill Evans because they always like to see white people up in black shit, so that they can say they had something to do with it. But Jimi Hendrix came from the blues, like me we understood each other right away because of that. (Davis and Troupe 1990: 283) This quote probably dispels Paul Tingen’s assertion that ‘the main musical influence of the music of the 60s counterculture on "Circle in the Round" came from folk, not rock’ (2001: 41). Miles listening habits have been examined in many articles, books and journals over the years, including an interview with jazz writer Leonard Feather for Down Beat magazine which took place in June 1968, only eight months before the recording of In a Silent Way: Recently, visiting Miles in his Hollywood hotel suite, I found strewn around the room records or tape cartridges by James Brown, Dionne Warwick, Tony Bennett, the Byrds, Aretha Franklin, and the Fifth Dimension. Not a single jazz instrumental. (2001) The lack of instrumental jazz in Davis’ music collection at that time clearly aggravated Feather, who went on to write: Miles Davis's hotel room was cluttered with pop vocal records. Why? There are several explanations, but the simplest and most logical, it seems to me, is that when you have reached the aesthetic mountaintop, there is no place to look but down. (2001) This article is interesting for two reasons. Firstly it demonstrates that many people found it difficult to comprehend a jazz legend like Davis having little or no jazz in their collection, and secondly it gives a window into his listening tastes just prior to recording In a Silent Way. There is little evidence to suggest that Davis listened to folk music in any quantity. It seems more probable that the ‘folklike’ (or ‘hillbilly’ as Davis refers to it) quality that Tingen
  • 31. 28 observed in Circle in the Round probably originated from Davis listening to the recordings of the Jimi Hendrix Experience. Davis’s remark that Hendrix would often play in 6/8 also adds weight to the notion that Circle in the Round was directly influenced by Hendrix, it too being in 6/8. In fact, it seems that Hendrix in some way inspired almost everything Davis was doing. Bob Belden observed in a 2001 interview with Bill Milkowski for Jazz Times that: Jimi’s music—particularly the bass lines—directly influenced Miles Davis. If you listen to “Inamorata” from Live/Evil, that’s the bass line to “Fire.” “Mademoiselle Mabry” from Filles de Kilimanjaro is derived from Jimi’s “The Wind Cries Mary”; “What I Say” from Live/Evil is basically “Message to Love” from Band of Gypsys, and so on. (2001) Joe Zawinul Zawinul’s contribution to In a Silent Way is, like Teo Macero’s, often overlooked. This may seem curious, given that he wrote the title track and had a major hand in the composition of Shhh/Peaceful and It’s About That Time, however, there are a number of factors that have caused this, not least Davis’ fervent self-promotion. In an interview with Paul Tingen, Zawinul recalled how he came to work with Miles: I met Miles for the first time in 1959, when I was playing with Dinah Washington. We became good friends, and during the late 1960s I didn’t live far away, and we often spent 2-3 hours fooling with music... he liked my music a lot at that time and he used some of it. I had played him “In a Silent Way,” and he told me he wanted it on his record… There was some conflict going on, because Cannonball wanted to record the tune, but I said, ‘No, I gave my word to Miles that he could use it.’ One morning Miles called me and asked me to come to the studio, and a few minutes later he called me back and said, ‘Bring some music, and bring that nice tune.’ (2001)
  • 32. 29 Miles was first alerted to the notion of working with Zawinul after hearing Cannonball Adderley’s hit single Mercy, Mercy, which was composed by Zawinul and played on the electric piano. Adderley was a close friend of Davis, and a former bandmate. Like Hendrix, Adderley and Davis shared a love of the blues, and an ethos of trying to propel the genre forwards. Miles was not only impressed by the exciting new take on blues music that Zawinul had created, he was equally impressed by the sales figures generated by the record. Here was a sound that he felt had both authenticity and commercial potential. ‘Cannonball Adderley’s funky soul-jazz hit the R&B charts and won a young black fan-base. This was a fan-base that Miles constantly felt frustrated at his failure to reach.’ (Rollins and Wolff 2012: 143) However, despite Zawinul’s sizeable input on the album, Miles was not about to let anyone take the credit for what he saw ultimately as his own creative decisions, and particularly if it happened to be a white man. Figure 13: Joe Zawinul (Copi 1976)
  • 33. 30 Q: What about the influences your musicians have on you. Joe Zawinul, for instance, is credited with being responsible for some of your recent directions, beginning with In a Silent Way. A (Miles): Let them [the critics] say it. I don't care what they say. As long as I been playing they never say I done anything. They always say that some white guy did it. I just let 'em say it. Shit, whenever Joe or somebody would bring in something that they wrote, I'd have to cut it all up because these guys get so hung up on what they write. They think it’s complete the way they write it. Like the way he wanted that In a Silent Way was completely different. I put it in a mode, no chords or anything. I don't know what he was looking for when he wrote that tune, but it wasn't gonna be on my record. So now they all play the tune the way I had it. Even Joe's own group [Weather Report]. Shit, a little melody like that, why make it so important? It's just a little sound - let it go. (Carner 1996)
  • 34. 31 Miles’ studio directions Figure 14: Miles Davis and John McLaughlin (Persson 1980) Miles’ instructions to his musicians in the studio were the final essential ingredient in the making of the album. His zen-like statements, which produced more questions than answers, were deliberately aimed at unnerving the musician and forcing them to think outside of the box rather than simply turning up and playing whatever they were practising that week. Miles hated practice, insisting that it stymied creativity (Tingen 2001). One example of this involved British guitarist John McLaughlin, who had flown into New York from London the previous day, only meeting Miles for the first time at the session. In 1969 McLaughlin was considered by many to be the best jazz guitarist in the world, so he was somewhat taken aback when upon meeting Miles, he was instructed to ‘Play like you don’t know how to play the guitar’ (Tingen 2001: 58), and as Paul Tingen expands, The other surprise was Miles direction to McLaughlin to play Zawinul's In a Silent Way theme on electric guitar over a pedal E. McLaughlin played through the score
  • 35. 32 searchingly and hesitantly, thinking it was a try-out. To his astonishment, and probably the amazement of the other musicians as well, it ended up being the master take. McLaughlin's searching playing had exactly the unhurried, fragile, and timeless feel Miles was looking for. (2001: 58) In hindsight, McLaughlin understood the reasoning behind Miles’ oblique system, recognising that it was an effective tool in the creative process. He later recalled that, Miles in the studio directed very closely, but with very obscure statements. He was like a Zen master. He would give you very strange directions that were very difficult to understand…. But I think that was his intention, as it is with a Zen master. They will say something to you and your mind will not be able to deal with it on a rational level. And so he made you act in a subconscious way, which was the best way. (Tingen 2001: 17)
  • 36. 33 Conclusion No art is made in a vacuum In attempting to answer the question What were the motivations, inspirations and external influences that led to the creation of In a Silent Way? it has become clear that the album was born from the melding of a number of different strands of the arts, including rock music, jazz, soul and 20th century avant-garde classical music, combined with 1960s socio-political movements such as Black Consciousness and the advancement of studio technology. It can truly be said to be a zeitgeist work. But as to which of the reviewers in Chapter 1 was closer to the truth is harder to say. It can be argued that both Lester Bangs and Stanley Crouch had valid points to make. In Crouch’s defence, Davis undoubtedly wanted to generate more money. He felt an injustice that young, white (and in Miles’ opinion, inferior) musicians should be earning more than him and this was a major factor in his change of direction. But as discussed in Chapter 4, Davis considered playing ‘jazz’ to be selling out, working as a slave for white people like his forefathers had. He also (justifiably) felt that rock’n’roll was black music, so why should he not play it? In Miles’ view making money did not equate to selling out, a point missed by Crouch. Lester Bang’s article, on the other hand, whilst succeeding in vividly describing the sonic qualities of the record, failed to recognise the socio-political statement that Davis was making. He also failed to spot the duplication of audio at the end of both sides of the record, or for that matter, any of the editing by Macero. Bang’s description of the album as ‘…long jams with a minimum of pre-planned structure’ (1969) could not have been further from the truth, being as they were actually short recordings deliberately ordered to create a sonata
  • 37. 34 form. This demonstrates that even those who enjoyed the record did not fully comprehend the scale of the work that Davis and Macero had produced. Finally, a story of Miles which perfectly encapsulates In a Silent Way, as recounted by his manager of 12 years, Mark Rothbaum: There was this musician once who came up to Miles and said: "Miles, you're my man! But that new shit you´re into, I just can´t get with it." And Miles answered: "Should I wait for you?" (Tingen 2001)
  • 38. 35 Reference List Bangs, L. (1969) Miles Davis in A silent way album review [online] available from <http://www.rollingstone.com/music/albumreviews/in-a-silent-way-19691115> [27 December 2015] Baskerville, J. D. (2003) The impact of black nationalist ideology on American jazz music of the 1960s and 1970s (black studies, 20). United States: Mellen, Edwin Press, The Carner, G. (1996) The Miles Davis companion: Four decades of commentary (companion). ed. by Carner. New York: Schirmer Books [u.a.] Cross, C. R. (2005) Room full of mirrors. New York: Hyperion Books Crouch, S. (1997) Reading jazz: A gathering of autobiography, reportage and criticism from 1919 to now. ed. by Gottlieb, R. United Kingdom: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Cubarrubia, R. (2013) Jimi Hendrix sought Paul McCartney for Supergroup with Miles Davis [online] available from <http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/jimi-hendrix-sought-paul- mccartney-for-supergroup-with-miles-davis-20130510> [6 January 2016] Davis, M. and Troupe, Q. (1990) Miles: The autobiography (Picador books). London: Picador DeMichael, D. (1969) A rolling stone interview with Miles Davis [online] available from <http://www.forghieri.net/jazz/MilesDavisRSInterview.html> [6 January 2016] Feather, L. (2001) Miles Davis interviews [online] available from <http://www.forghieri.net/jazz/blind/Davis_4.html> [28 January 2016]
  • 39. 36 Glasser, B. (2001) In a silent way: A portrait of Joe Zawinul. Second. London: Sanctuary Publishing Kofsky, F. (1998) John Coltrane and the jazz revolution of the 1960’s: Black nationalism and the revolution in music. 2nd edn. New York: Pathfinder Press Lee, L. (1996) Teo Macero interview [online] available from <http://www.furious.com/perfect/teomacero.html> [28 October 2015] Leonard Bernstein at the BBC (2015) [TV] BBC Milkowski, B. (2001) Jimi Hendrix: Modern jazz axis [online] available from <http://jazztimes.com/articles/20150-jimi-hendrix-modern-jazz-axis> [9 January 2016] Mpls Underground Film Fest (2015) 'HARVEY PEKAR’S TEO MACERO'. in YouTube [online] YouTube. available from <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ybkSAjaFz_U> [27 October 2015] Rollins, S. and Wolff, F. (2012) Miles Davis: The complete illustrated history. Minneapolis, MN: Voyageur Press Smith, J. A. (2010) '‘Sell it Black’: Race and marketing in Miles Davis’s early fusion jazz'. Jazz Perspectives 4 (1), 7–33 Stephenson, T. (2006) 'Poeme electronique by Edgard Varese: Authenticity, reproduction and mediatization'. International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media 2 (1) Tingen, P. (2001) MILES BEYOND | the making of in A silent way & bitches brew | an ear witness account [online] available from <http://www.miles- beyond.com/iaswbitchesbrew.htm> [28 October 2015]
  • 40. 37 Tingen, P. (2001) Miles beyond: The electric explorations of Miles Davis, 1967-1991. 1st edn. New York: Billboard Books,U.S. Figures Anon. (1972) Teo Macero and Miles Davis outside Columbia Records. available from <https://jazzinphoto.files.wordpress.com/2011/11/3-photos-culture-musique-miles-davis- miles-davis-et-le-producteur-teo-macero-devant-les-studios-de-columbia- 1971_galleryphoto_paysage_std1.jpg> [3 February 2016] Anon. (1995) Stanley Crouch. available from <http://www2.wlu.edu/images/news_spots/crouch_spot.jpg> [3 February 2016] Bayley, R. (1976) Leslie Conway ‘Lester’ Bangs (December 13, 1948 – April 30, 1982), American music journalist, author and musician. available from <https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/8/80/Lester_Bangs.jpg> [3 February 2016] Copi, T. (1976) Pianist Joe Zawinul of the band ‘Weather Report’ performs onstage at the Berkeley Jazz Festival in 1976 in Berkeley, California. January 01, 1976. available from <https://i.ytimg.com/vi/38RxFGWJo24/hqdefault.jpg> [3 February 2016] Friedlander, L. (1969) Miles Davis - In a Silent Way album cover. available from <https://cdn.smehost.net/milesdaviscom-uslegacyprod/wp-content/uploads/1969/07/32- InASilentWay.jpg> [4 February 2016] Hassell, J. (1969) Miles Davis and Teo Macero. available from <http://www.johncoulthart.com/feuilleton/wp-content/uploads/2008/02/miles_teo.jpg> [3 February 2016]
  • 41. 38 Miles Ahead and Belden, B. (2001) Session details: Columbia studio B (February 18, 1969) [online] available from <http://www.plosin.com/milesahead/Sessions.aspx?s=690218> [3 February 2016] Miles Ahead and Belden, B. (2004) Session details: Columbia 30th street studio (December 4, 1967) [online] available from <http://www.plosin.com/milesahead/Sessions.aspx?s=671204> [2 February 2016] Persson, J. (1970) Jimi Hendrix performs in Copenhagen on Sept. 3, 1970, just days before he died in London. available from <http://assets.nydailynews.com/polopoly_fs/1.2364497.1442513843!/img/httpImage/image.j pg_gen/derivatives/article_635/jan017-jimi-hendrix.jpg> [3 February 2016] Persson, J. (1980) Miles Davis & John McLaughlin at Easy Sound Studio Copenhagen January 1985 recording ‘Aura’. available from <http://www.janperssoncollection.dk/musicians/def/davismiles/davismilesaura8485_files/war ehouse_ef5780470cf5b7e1e81846fc8af2fd3f/images/davis-miles-aura-1985-13.jpg> [3 February 2016] The Bettmann Archive (1958) Edgard Varèse. available from <http://cdn.quotationof.com/images/edgard-vareses-quotes-5.jpg> [3 February 2016] Wolman, B. (1969) Miles and Betty Davis at home in New York City. available from <http://s8.postimg.org/wvnmmknc5/image.jpg> [2 February 2016]
  • 42. 39 Audio Jimi Hendrix (1967) 'The wind cries Mary'. Are You Experienced Miles Davis (2001) 'Ascent - new mix'. The Complete In A Silent Way Sessions Miles Davis (2004) 'Circle in the round'. The Complete Columbia Studio Recordings Of The Miles Davis Quintet January 1965 To June 1968 Miles Davis (2001) 'In a Silent Way - LP mix'. The Complete In a Silent Way Sessions Davis, M. (2001) 'It’s About That Time'. The Complete In a Silent Way Sessions Miles Davis (1968) 'Mademoiselle Mabry (Miss Mabry)'. Filles De Kilimanjaro Miles Davis (2001) 'Shhh / peaceful - LP mix'. The Complete In a Silent Way Sessions Miles Davis (2001) 'Shhh / peaceful - new mix'. The Complete In A Silent Way Sessions Miles Davis (1959) 'So what'. Kind Of Blue