| 1. Porno Star |
| 2. Anything. Anything (Ill Give You |
| 3. Time Bomb (live) |
| 4. You (live) |
| 5. Place In The Sun (live) |
Editorial Reviews
Japanese exclusive five track EP for the L.A. based hard-rockers. Tracks 'Porno Star', 'Anything. Anything (I'll Give You)', 'Time Bomb'(live), 'You'(live) & 'Place In The Sun'(live).
Bitches & Money,Buckcherry,Universal/Polygram,Rock,Rock/Pop
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Bitches Brew
Miles Davis Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000J7SS Release Date: 1999-06-08 |
Tracks:
- Pharaoh's Dance
- Bitches Brew
Tracks:
- Spanish Key
- John McLaughlin
- Miles Runs The Voodoo Down
- Sanctuary
- Feio
Amazon.com essential recording
The revolution was recorded: in 1969 Bitches Brew sent a shiver through a country already quaking. It was a recording whose very sound, production methods, album-cover art, and two-LP length all signaled that jazz could never be the same. Over three days anger, confusion, and exhilaration had reigned in the studio, and the sonic themes, scraps, grooves, and sheer will and emotion that resulted were percolated and edited into an astonishingly organic work. This Miles Davis wasn't merely presenting a simple hybrid like jazz-rock, but a new way of thinking about improvisation and the studio. And with this two-CD reissue (actually, this set is a reissue of the original set plus one track, perfect for the fan who's not so overwhelmed as to need the four-CD Complete Bitches Brew box), the murk of the original recording is lifted. The instruments newly defined and brightened, the dark energy of the original comes through as if it were all fresh. Joe Zawinul and Bennie Maupin's roles in the mix have been especially clarified. With a bonus track of "Feio"--a Wayne Shorter composition recorded five months later that serves both as a warm-down for Bitches Brew and a promise of Weather Report to come--this is crucial listening. --John F. SzwedCustomer Reviews:
helpfull.......2007-06-08
Bitches Brew.......2007-05-30
Long held as one of if not the greatest jazz album of all time. This was released in a time of revolution, the civil rights movement was basicaly still in height and change was happening everywhere. Jimi Hendrix redifined guitar and a group of white boys from England named cream were making black music better then some of the blacks were making it at the time. Jazz was changing around the genius that is Miles Davis and had been for a while and he was ignoring it. That was until he sat down and realized how stubborn he was being and caught up. He had long since given up on Coltrane as many did only to later realize his later work was far superior to that of his early material, as did many others in the world.
Some will tell you that this album is outragious and nothing special and even tell you that it is Miles worst album, others will hail this as utter genius and concider this his all time best rivaling the amazing Kind Of Blue, or even Coltranes phenomonal A Love Supreme. Well nither the former or the latter are correct. While this is one of the most important and very best albums in all of jazz and all of music really this is far from Davis' best and far from rivaling the two for-mentiond albums.
What Miles did here was as previously stated give in to his own inhabitions and embrace what he had for so long wrote off as nothing moro then a mere joke. Miles went from classic form jazz right head first into electric and free from like it was nothing. And for someone of his stature it was nothing. In this genre of jazz this album fails in comparison to other albums of its kind, so then why is it so important and revolutionary then? Well it saved Miles career and showed his willingness and flexability to grow as a artist and musician.
The first disc of Bitches Brew containing 'Pharaohs Dance' and the title track 'Bitches Brew' are very simular in song structure, changes, mood, and even in tone. Being as this album was pieced together from several free form jazz jams it is possible that some of these are from the same jam. The first disc fails in direction and in excitment. The jams here are way to long for not having focus and can lose a new listener easily.
The second disc containing 'Spanish Key' 'John McLaughlin' 'Miles Runs The Voodoo Down' 'Sanctuary' and now 'Feio' s much stronger and much more focused. Aside from that disc two is much more interesting and is why this essential for all listeners. It is phenomonal with no other word possible for explaination. It must be heard to be fully appreciated. The playing by Miles and the rest on the album is stronger on this disc and is just all around better.
So is this an essential album for jazz and for Miles Davis, yes, but is this as revolutionary as has been made to seem, certainly not, but that is not to take away from the sheer greatness of this album. You may be wondering why if this album is "sheer greatness" it would only recieve four stars from me well because as great as it is the legend that is Miles Davis could have done much better and did do much better. Essentail!
Censors Going Wild..........2007-04-26
I know that there is currently dispute about the use of "the B word" in song lyrics. But there are ABSOLUTELY NO LYRICS in or on this album so I hardly see how the prohibition has any relevance. I do not see how anyone who is not mentally ill could be offended in any way.
I pointed out that there were still albums on the shelf by white artists that contained the word. They said the problem with B******s Brew was the combination of the word with what they called a "partially nude black woman" on the cover, which was a violation of their new policy. I do see this on the cover, so I must not have the same type of imagination.
There are plenty of albums with partially clad women still on the shelves, so obviously the policy violation happens because of the color of the woman's skin. I offered to redo the cover art in photoshop to lighten the lady's skin, so they could continue to make this interesting music available to the public. They did not think that was even slightly funny.
Word is that the record company is in the process of re-issuing this with additional tracks under the title "Miles' Brew". I suggest they keep the title, and replace the cover with beautiful collie dog, puppies, and a beer.
Finally, what about the music? I think it is very interesting, but far from the best thing that Miles has done. It is an important album in the history of jazz, and I hope it can remain available in it's original form, with the beautiful cover art intact.
Not sure I like it!.......2007-03-08
jazz classic........2007-02-11
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Complete Bitches Brew Sessions (August 1969-February 1970)
Miles Davis Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0002199HC Release Date: 2004-05-11 |
Tracks:
- Pharaoh's Dance
- Bitches Brew
- Spanish Key
- John McLaughlin
Tracks:
- Miles Run The Voodoo Down
- Sanctuary
- Great Expectations
- Orange Lady
- Yaphet
- Corrado
Tracks:
- Trevere
- The Big Green Serpent
- The Little Blue Frog (Alt)
- The Little Blue Frog (Mst)
- Lonely Fire
- Guinnevere
Tracks:
- Feio
- Double Image
- Recollections
- Take It Or Leave It
- Double Image
Amazon.com
These historic sessions, recorded between 1969 and 1970 and originally released as a 90-minute double LP, merged jazz and rock into the hybrid genre known as fusion. They remain Miles Davis's most controversial recordings. Davis, along with pianists Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea, and Joe Zawinul; bassist Dave Holland; soprano saxophonist Wayne Shorter; bass clarinetist Benny Maupin; drummers Jack DeJohnette, Billy Cobham, and Lenny White; and percussionist Airto Moreira, went electric with rock rhythms, and the rest, as they say, is history, or as some feel, the end of jazz history.Now, all of the sessions' 265 minutes are contained on this four-CD set, compiled from alternate takes, nine unreleased tracks, and selections from previously released LPs. The superb remastering reveals the spectral power of Davis's amplified, muted, and open trumpet painting on a swirling harmonic canvas created by Hancock, Corea, and Zawinul, especially on Zawinul's impressionistic "Pharoah's Dance," Shorter's elliptical "Sanctuary," and Davis's rocking "John McLaughlin."
The previously unreleased tracks, including "Yaphet," "Corrado," "Tevere," "The Big Green Serpent," and Zawinul's "Double Image," contain some interesting East Indian motifs and inventive arrangements but will probably not change anyone's mind about this well-debated period of Miles Davis's career. --Eugene Holley Jr.
Customer Reviews:
So much untapped potential..........2007-07-11
Okay, so sure, some of the best songs are issued on Big Fun, which nine times of ten will be less expensive than this: I speak, of course, of Great Expectations (what a song!), Yaphet, Trevere (what a bad song! But it's the only loser out of the outtakes, along with Feio!), The Little Blue Frog, Lonely Fire (top notch!), and Recollections (Beautiful!). So I'd guide you to Big Fun whether or not you inteded to buy this album.
If you didn't, here's one reason to: Guinevere. If you're familiar with the Crosby, Stills & Nash original, I can tell you right now you'll never hear it the same way again when you've heard the long (twenty minutes), trippy "fusion-odyssey" version this one presents. It renders the song near-unrecognizable. You may love it (I do!!), you may hate it, but you can't deny Miles really puts his own stamp on it. A very well-made, intricately arranged cover.
Another great song is the intense Corrado. Miles and the group really rock out on this one. Him backing up his claim that he could make the best damn rock band you ever heard (or something to that effect).
Plus Double Image is a pretty good song too! I mean, not as good as Guinevere, but still a nice song. So are the two standard-length tracks, The Big Green Serpent and Take It or Leave it.
I'm surprised Miles shelved so much of this. He could've easily gotten another very good album out of this material, even when we include the songs not released on Big Fun. Guinevere, Corrado, Double Image, Take it or Leave it and the Big Green Serpent... could've been great. And he'd have to call the album Corrado, because the word sounds cool.
Yes, like all of Miles' other boxed sets, this one just screams "for fans only". But if you're a fan, you can't go wrong, really.
Bitches Brew rocks.......2007-03-09
Fascinating groove.......2007-02-25
Simply Miles...........2007-01-12
Very nice..........2006-12-04
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Bitches Brew
Miles Davis Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000002696 Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
Tracks:
- Pharaoh's Dance
- Bitches Brew
Tracks:
- Spanish Key
- John McLaughlin
- Miles Runs The Voodoo Down
- Sanctuary
Amazon.com
Bitches Brew was a shot across the bow of jazz insularity, and, much like the Beatles' Sgt. Pepper before it, it drew upon elements both inside and outside the mainstream to fashion an avant-garde, yet extremely influential, take on popular music's relation to modernism, and vice versa. As such, Miles Davis became a lightning rod for jazz's transformation (or corruption as some diehards insist), and by mixing the fundamental elements of collective improvisation with fulminating dance rhythms, psychedelic electric textures, polytonal harmonies and a freely inflected brand of blues phrasing (as reflected in his own Kind of Blue-brand of modalism and the parallel directions of Hendrix, Cream, Sly Stone, James Brown, and Marvin Gaye), Davis signaled a sea-change in jazz. However, producer Teo Macero's spooky, compressed mix tends to suck all the air out of the room, emphasizing the often static nature of Harvey Brooks's bedrock Fender bass heartbeats, while obscuring the complex polytonal/polyrhythmic web of volatile harmonies, colliding cross-rhythms and contrasting melodic lines. Bitches Brew is a modern jazz masterpiece screaming for a critical reassessment (and a re-mix), but nothing can obscure the crafty tension and release of Davis's turn over a "Sex Machine"-styled ostinato on "Spanish Key," nor the spatial collective "&mysterioso" and epic breadth of the title tune. --Chip SternCustomer Reviews:
EH-lectric.......2006-04-18
Miles Davis turns electric. Jazz fusion is born.......2004-11-16
An incredible and essential cd.......2003-04-15
Don't buy this CD........2003-03-13
Eccentric Miles..........2002-06-08
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Bitches
Mindless Self Indulgence Manufacturer: Elektra / Ada ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00004SGTY Release Date: 2000-04-04 |
Tracks:
- Bitches (Michael Patterson's Subbass Club Mix)
- Bitches (Kid Rock's Cock Rock Remix)
- Bitches (Mu-Ziq Mix)
- Bitches (DJ Cam Mix)
- Bitches (Rhys Fulber Mix)
- Bitches (State Of Bengal Mix)
- Bitches (777-Bitches)
- Molly (Original 'Tight' Version)
- Molly (Pull's Khz Mix)
- Molly (Madgroove's Circusjungle Mix)
- Molly (Side 3's Industrial Dub Mix)
Customer Reviews:
better than most singles out there.......2001-12-10
the last 4 tracks (...) are actually remixes of a song called "molly" for their independent release "tight". [this is the real reason to get the single, assuming you don't have a copy of "tight".]
to sum it up, it's a solid single, but it can get a bit old listening to 7 versions of the same song. nothing something you should expect to listen to everyday, but it's good to pull out from your collection every now and then to rock out to.
MSI Beat Us Again With A Killer Single.......2000-07-27
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Money Over Bitches
Fed-X , and Rydah J. Klyde Manufacturer: Sumo ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000O77UV6 Release Date: 2007-05-29 |
Tracks:
- Intro M.O.B.
- M.O.B.
- Getting Money
- All Night Long
- Front Of My Jects
- U Wouldn't Belive
- Neva B the Same
- Money In the Air
- Pinkslips N Mortgages
- C-U-N tha Streets
- I Like It
- Ohhh
- Hustle Don't Stop
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Sacred System, Chapter 2
Bill Laswell Manufacturer: Roir ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000001Q43 Release Date: 1997-09-16 |
Tracks:
- Thunupa
- Anubis
- Purana
- Akapana
Album Description
Immediately after remixing Bob Marley for Island / Tuff Gong / Axiom for a "new" dub electronic release (Sept. 26, 1997) and performing a similar task on Miles Davis for Sony / Columbia for a dub-oriented instrumental release (Winter '98), Laswell went into his new Orange, NJ studio to produce "Sacred System: Chapter Two," his 2nd release for ROIR. With the sounds of Marley and Miles still ringing in his ears, he brought jazz cornetist Graham Haynes, master guitarist Nicky Skopelitis, ace world percussionist Bill Buchen and Jamaican drumming legend Style Scott into the studio to create a new Laswell World Sound - a mixture of Arabic, Indian and Bitches Brew jazz - but Laswell NEW.Album Details
More innovative Laswell dub with an all-star line-up. This release features Graham Haynes on cornet, Nicky Skopelitis on sitar & guitars, Bill Buchen on tablas & percussion Jamaican Style Scott, & of course Bill Laswell.Customer Reviews:
Add a dash of...something.......2005-12-09
But, as alluded to in other reviews, a bit homogenous for Laswell. He has a killer formula, but it's still a formula.
Slick, Stylish, Ambitious.......2005-04-01
Given that this is new music, I am able to judge it on its own merits and not in relation to the greatest recordings of recent history (whereas I judge "Panthalassa" to be a waste of money). There's a lot to like here. The beats and bass are sublime. As a collection of rhythm tracks, this is up there with "Ekstasis" as a master work. Structurally though, the pieces drift too much (they're too static, they go nowhere over too long a time). Less than much modern electronic music, but too much for this to be called great.
It's pretty smooth and pretty interesting, though.
Just good........2001-06-14
If this is dub, I love dub.......2000-06-05
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Konichwa Bitches
Robyn Manufacturer: Universal ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000NPO8ZU Release Date: 2007-04-02 |
Tracks:
- Album Version
- Menta Mix
- Trentemoller Remix
- Oscar The Punk Remix
- Clean Mix
Album Description
2007 CD single from Robyn, the pint-sized atom bomb dosed on electric and dispensing wisdom in three-minute modernist Pop bulletins on the post-adolescent condition. Taken from her self-titled album, 'Konichiwa Bitches' is Robyn's signature tune, on which over pixellated Hip Pop beats, she unloads like a manga Missy Elliott! Konichiwa.
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Bitches Is Lord
Adrian Orange Manufacturer: Marriage Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000GEIRL4 Release Date: 2006-08-08 |
Tracks:
- While You Live
- Bitches Is Lord
- Blushing
- Strange World
- No More Wild
- The Real Wild World
- Don't Cry
- You're Free
- Freedom
- Save The World
- A Real Dream
- I Don't Know
- Don't Get Used To It
- Flags Of The World Made In To Sky
- In Your Sky Of Thoughts What The Clouds Are
Album Description
"Phil Elverum-approved nineteen-year-old troubadour Adrian Orange (a.k.a. Thanksgiving) has long played the precocious `gifted kid' of the Northwestern nature-boy set, pumping out lo-fi tunes that reached for the sublime heights of the Microphones and Little Wing while often fluttering just below pale imitation. On his triple-LP opus Thanksgiving, however, all bets are off. Obviously tour-refined, Orange has summoned an effortless crop of melodies and, moreover, an adult's surefootedness to buoy his journeyman musings." - CMJ"Orange is capable of making mopey, indie folk-pop that's downright fucking transcendent." - PORTLAND MERCURY
"Adrian Orange, the person behind the music of Thanksgiving, is one young and prolific artist. I dare you to look up his discography and not be amazed - all of this work done by the age of nineteen ... he has a gift of making great three-minute rock songs that break the mold." - BIG YAWN
Thanksgiving's eleventh release, Bitches Is Lord is a revelation of the highest order as Adrian Orange sets out to capture the energy, presence, and full-bodied force of a Thanksgiving live performance. Features more of the meaningful songs that Orange does so well, but this time around things just sound fierce. Hints of Johnny Cash and Crazy Horse-era Neil Young are touchstones. Minimal dirges and cloaked political blues butt up against triumphantly colorful anthems. Bitches Is Lord lyrically drafts propositions for a new era of humanity while exploring the painful beauty of what it is to be human. This is, notably, the first Thanksgiving album completely performed, recorded, mixed, and produced by Adrian Orange himself. Drums smack with raw intensity, and guitars curl and bounce around Orange's deep, older-than-his-age voice, sounding out cries, laments, and triumphs unto the dawn of this troubled world.
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Bitches Ain't Shit But Good People
Hella Manufacturer: Suicide Squeeze ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000095SLS Release Date: 2003-06-17 |
Tracks:
- Ho's in the House
- Bitches Aint Shit But Good People
- Rich Kid
- Elkan Since Republic of R+B
Customer Reviews:
math rock at it's finest........2003-10-09
Average customer rating:
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The Complete Bitches Brew Sessions
Miles Davis Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000FC7S Release Date: 1998-11-24 |
Tracks:
- Pharaoh's Dance
- Bitches Brew
- Spanish Key
- John McLaughlin
Tracks:
- Miles Runs The Voodoo Down
- Sanctuary
- Great Expectations
- Orange Lady
- Yaphet
- Corrado
Tracks:
- Trevere
- The Big Green Serpent
- The Little Blue Frog (Alt.)
- The Little Blue Frog (Mst.)
- Lonely Fire
- Guinnevere
Tracks:
- Feio
- Double Image
- Recollections
- Take It Or Leave It
- Double Image
Amazon.com
These historic sessions, recorded between 1969 and 1970 and originally released as a 90-minute double LP, merged jazz and rock into the hybrid genre known as fusion. They remain Miles Davis's most controversial recordings. Davis, along with pianists Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea, and Joe Zawinul; bassist Dave Holland; soprano saxophonist Wayne Shorter; bass clarinetist Benny Maupin; drummers Jack DeJohnette, Billy Cobham, and Lenny White; and percussionist Airto Moreira, went electric with rock rhythms, and the rest, as they say, is history, or as some feel, the end of jazz history.Now, all of the sessions' 265 minutes are contained on this four-CD set, compiled from alternate takes, nine unreleased tracks, and selections from previously released LPs. The superb remastering reveals the spectral power of Davis's amplified, muted, and open trumpet painting on a swirling harmonic canvas created by Hancock, Corea, and Zawinul, especially on Zawinul's impressionistic "Pharoah's Dance," Shorter's elliptical "Sanctuary," and Davis's rocking "John McLaughlin."
The previously unreleased tracks, including "Yaphet," "Corrado," "Tevere," "The Big Green Serpent," and Zawinul's "Double Image," contain some interesting East Indian motifs and inventive arrangements but will probably not change anyone's mind about this well-debated period of Miles Davis's career. --Eugene Holley Jr.
Customer Reviews:
A fascinating document.......2006-09-11
Let's forget the title and think of it as the Miles Davis story from August 1969 to February 1970. As such, it is a great document which sheds much light on a period that is fascinating, but hitherto a little confusing.
I remember well listening to Great Expectations/Mulher Laranja for the very first time, having bought the Big Fun CD some years ago. I was instantly amazed and wondered when this music would have been recorded. The notes said "between 1969 and 1972". Oh well...
The Bitches Brew box-set tells you exactly what you need to know in every detail, and as it turns out, Great Expectations/Mulher Laranja was recorded only 3 months after Biches Brew. What a dramatic stylistic turn ! This new material, along with the early 1970 recordings of "Guinevere" and "Recollections", is as chilled and floating as Bitches Brew was hot and fiery. It is also much less abstract, relies on drones and incantations, using indian- as well as Brazilian- instruments.
In the 4 tracks of Great Expectations/Orange Lady, Guinnevere, Recollections and Lonely Fire; Davis and Macero already possessed all 4 sides of a potential suberb double vinyl, which would have been a chilled and meditative sibling of Bitches Brew. It leaves me wondering why they didn't publish it. Was it too fashionnable, too hippie? too repetitive? not jazzy enough, too easy? did it go against the real path of Miles Davis who was looking towards a more guitar-dominated, harder sound? It wasn't until 1974 that the two strongest tracks, Great Expectations/Mulher Laranja and Lonely Fire got eventually released, and Guinnevere didn't see the vinyl until 1979.
A harder guitar sound on Double-Image is heard again in early 1970, for a later inclusion in "live-evil" .And the First Jack Johnson session is only 2 months away !!
This box-set reminds us just how much happened in 6 months. Of the 4 and a half hours recorded here, a good 3 is very commendable music.
Which leads us to the question of the previously unreleased material: there is some good in theses tracks, but you can forgive Davis and Macero for "forgetting" them. Much of it sounds like recreational, a tad vacuous music intended to entertain the musicians, but perhaps not a large public. Even so, it remains interesting and some of it is entertaining. The wonderful miniature "Take it or Leave it" , just over 2 minutes in lenght, is my star unreleased track. The playing on the alternate take of "little Blue Frog" links back to In A Silent Way, as does the theme of "Recollections". A piece like "Trevere", however, points at the cliches of psychedelic/progressive rock of the time and you can guess why it took it 3 decades to get out of the can.
You learn so much from this box-set, and the presentation is irresistible. Bitches Brew sounds better, Lonely Fire sounds better, and much exciting , precise information - for example the editing process of Pharaoh's Dance - is made available.
Cemented in History.......2006-08-15
In retrospect, Bitches Brew was a very bold move artistically (duh). Even in alienating himself from old fans, he brought in a whole slew of younger, hipper people.
Go electric, amplify the horn, add weird effects to it, jam out with a dozen guys for half an hour, and call the track "Bitches Brew".
Actually, upon hearing that title track the first time, I found it kind of scary. Dark, forboding organ chords pounding in free time. Suddenly, a burst of drums, organ and bass. This happens a couple of times. Then Miles' trumpet, laced with delay, creeps in, and adds to this gigantic sound.
After about 3 minutes, everything stops. A steady bass line ensues, accompanied by bassoon and finger snaps(?!) Eventually everybody else comes back, and jams the rest of this monstrous, half hour track.
It's quite a hard listen, to say the least. I fell asleep the first time. It was pretty disheartening.
Approach it with an open mind, give it a listen.
Other than that, my favorite track is "Miles Runs the Voodoo Down". Don Alias and Jack Dejohnette lay down a very sexy groove, to which John McLaughlin tastefully complements. It, too, grows to be an enormous jam session.
Another aside. Once, by accident, two CD players were going in my house. I don't know when we started the second one, but here's the deal. "Pharaoh's Dance" was playing at the same time as "Cowboys" by Portishead. Same Tempo, same hectic feel. I believe once, when the vocals cut out in "Cowboys", Miles seemed to come out of nowhere in "Pharao's". You might check that out. It was pretty trippy.
Overall, one of the strangest musical experiences I can recall. But, in retrospect, most people can agree on the lasting power that is Bitches Brew.
Nothing Much to Add..........2006-04-29
Bitches Brew never sounded better, but many of the extras are non-essential.......2006-04-07
For me, these tracks make it worth it; but then again, I own tons of Miles Davis recordings, everything from his work with Gil Evans, to the Birth of Cool, to his work with the original quintet as well as the "new" quintet, and all the way through his fusion period. For those that don't need *that* much Miles, I would suggest you go with the standard Bitches Brew release, which has also been remastered and sounds just as good as this set. If you're a nut like me, and can't get enough of his early electric work, then you will want to get this, as well as the complete Jack Johnson sessions, and you may even want to check out the Cellar Door sessions (the sessions from which 'Live-Evil' was extracted.)
All in all for an expanded set it's not the greatest, but it's still pretty good based on the strength of the original album's material and a few very nice extras. Miles nuts (like me) will enjoy it.
the apocalyptic moment for jazz revisited.......2006-03-14
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