Jazz
CDアルバム

Get Up with It

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フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2000年09月14日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルLegacy Recordings
構成数 2
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 C2K63970
SKU 074646397022

構成数 : 2枚
合計収録時間 : 02:03:52
Personnel includes: Miles Davis (trumpet, piano, organ); Steve Grossman, John Stubblefield, Carlos Garnett (soprano saxophone); Sonny Fortune (flute); Dave Liebman (alto flute); Keith Jarrett, Cedric Lawson (Fender Rhodes piano); Herbie Hancock (Clavinet); Pete Cosey, John McLaughlin, Reggie Lucas, Dominique Gaumont (guitar); Khalil Balakrishna (electric sitar); Michael Henderson (electric bass); Al Foster, Billy Cobham (drums); Badal Roy (tabla); Mtume, Airto Moreira (percussion). Producers: Teo Macero, Billy Jackson. Reissue producer: Bob Belden. Recorded between 1970 and 1974. Includes liner notes by Dave Liebman. Digitally remastered by Seth Foster (Sony Music Studios, New York, New York). Personnel: Miles Davis (trumpet, piano, electric piano, organ); Reggie Lucas, Cornell Dupree, Dominique Gaumont, John McLaughlin, Pete Cosey (guitar); Khalil Balakrishna (sitar, electric sitar); David Liebman (flute, alto flute, tenor saxophone); Sonny Fortune (flute, saxophone); Wally Chambers (harmonica); Carlos Garnett (saxophone, soprano saxophone); John Stubblefield, Steve Grossman (soprano saxophone); Cedric Lawson (piano, electric piano, Fender Rhodes piano); Keith Jarrett (electric piano, Fender Rhodes piano, keyboards); Herbie Hancock (Clavinet, keyboards); Michael Henderson (bass guitar); Al Foster, Bernard "Pretty" Purdie, Billy Cobham (drums); Badal Roy (tabla); James Mtume, Airto Moreira (percussion). Audio Remixers: John Guerriere; Stan Weiss. Recording information: Columbia Studio E (09/06/1972-10/07/1974). Photographers: Paul Slaughter; Urve Kuusik. Arrangers: Wally Chambers; Billy Jackson . By 1974, Miles Davis had become not only a music legend in general and a jazz legend in particular, but also a reclusive and confounding character. Davis' music had excited many and exasperated others, including many of his older fans, with its forays into space-age free-form meta-funk. Released in 1974 but unavailable on CD in the US until 2000, GET UP WITH IT is a compendium of several of Miles's early-to-mid-'70s studio adventures, and one of the most challenging albums in his catalog. His tribute to Duke Ellington, "He Loved Him Madly," is a darkly intense, 30-minute-plus exercise evoking the dense textures of such contemporary classical composers as Paul Schutze and Georgy Ligeti. "Red China Blues," a wry homage of sorts to Chicago blues, features some stinging trumpet by Davis and some earnest blues harmonica. The 2-CD GET UP WITH IT is a collection of feverish, dense textures and deep grooves, which range from sensual, to bereaved, to confrontational, and features the outstanding players with whom Davis surrounded himself during this period. Fans of electric Miles Davis will find this a must-have, displaying as it does Davis's anticipation of much of the music of the '90s and beyond.
録音 : ステレオ (Studio)

  1. 1.[CDアルバム] DISC 1:
    1. 1.
      He Loved Him Madly

      アーティスト: Miles Davis

    2. 2.
      Maiysha

      アーティスト: Miles Davis

    3. 3.
      Honky Tonk

      アーティスト: Miles Davis

    4. 4.
      Rated X

      アーティスト: Miles Davis

  2. 2.[CDアルバム] DISC 2:
    1. 1.
      Calypso Frelimo

      アーティスト: Miles Davis

    2. 2.
      Red China Blues

      アーティスト: Miles Davis

    3. 3.
      Mtume

      アーティスト: Miles Davis

    4. 4.
      Billy Preston

      アーティスト: Miles Davis

録音:1970-1974年

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Miles Davis

ゲスト
アーティスト: Keith Jarrett

その他
エンジニア: Stan Tonkel

商品の紹介

Alternative Press (11/00, pp.104-6) - 5 out of 5 - "...Essential....the overlooked classic of psychedelic soul and outlandish improv....representing the high water mark of his experiments in the fusion of rock, funk, electronica and jazz..." JazzTimes (11/00, p.70) - "...Intensely spacious....rhythmic cross currents and textural landscapes serve as the focal point..." Pitchfork (Website) - "During these sessions, Miles began to seek an emphasis on rhythm above all else."
Rovi(2009/04/08)

When Get Up with It was released in 1974, critics -- let alone fans -- had a tough time with it. The package was a -- by then customary -- double LP, with sessions ranging from 1970-1974 and a large host of musicians who had indeed played on late-'60s and early-'70s recordings, including but not limited to Al Foster, Airto, John McLaughlin, Reggie Lucas, Pete Cosey, Mtume, David Liebman, Billy Cobham, Michael Henderson, Herbie Hancock, Keith Jarrett, Sonny Fortune, Steve Grossman, and others. The music felt, as was customary then, woven together from other sources by Miles and producer Teo Macero. However, these eight selections point in the direction of Miles saying goodbye, as he did for six years after this disc. This was a summation of all that jazz had been to Davis in the '70s and he was leaving it in yet another place altogether; check the opening track, "He Loved Him Madly," with its gorgeous shimmering organ vamp (not even credited to Miles) and its elaborate, decidedly slow, ambient unfolding -- yet with pronounced Ellingtonian lyricism -- over 33 minutes. Given three guitar players, flute, trumpet, bass, drums, and percussion, its restraint is remarkable. When Miles engages the organ formally as he does on the funky groove that moves through "Maiysha," with a shimmering grace that colors the proceedings impressionistically through Lucas, Cosey and guitarist Dominique Gaumont, it's positively shattering. This is Miles as he hadn't been heard since In a Silent Way, and definitely points the way to records like Tutu, The Man with the Horn, and even Decoy when he re-emerged. That's not to say the harder edges are absent: far from it. There's the off-world Latin funk of "Calypso Frelimo" from 1973, with John Stubblefield, Liebman, Cosey, and Lucas turning the rhythm section inside out as Miles sticks sharp knives of angular riffs and bleats into the middle of the mix, almost like a guitarist. Davis also moves the groove here with an organ and an electric piano to cover all the textural shapes. There's even a rather straight -- for Miles -- blues jam in "Red China Blues" from 1972, featuring Wally Chambers on harmonica and Cornell Dupree on guitar with a full brass arrangement. The set closes with another 1972 session, the endearing "Billy Preston," another of Davis' polyrhythmic funk exercises where the drummers and percussionists -- Al Foster, Badal Roy, and Mtume -- are up front with the trumpet, sax (Carlos Garrett), and keyboards (Cedric Lawson), while the strings -- Lucas, Henderson, and electric sitarist Khalil Balakrishna -- are shimmering, cooking, and painting the groove in the back. Billy Preston, the organist who the tune is named after, is nowhere present and neither is his instrument. It choogles along, shifting rhythms and meters while Miles tries like hell to slip another kind of groove through the band's armor, but it doesn't happen. The track fades, and then there is silence, a deafening silence that would not be filled until Miles' return six years later. This may be the most "commercial" sounding of all of Miles' electric records from the '70s, but it still sounds out there, alien, and futuristic in all the best ways, and Get Up with It is perhaps just coming into its own here in the 21st century. ~ Thom Jurek
Rovi

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