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Focusing on one of the legendary musicians in jazz, this book examines Miles Davis's often overlooked music of the mid-1960s with a close examination of the evolution of a new style: post bop. Jeremy Yudkin traces Davis's life and work during a period when the trumpeter was struggling with personal and musical challenges only to emerge once again as the artistic leader of his generation. A major force in post-war American jazz, Miles Davis was a pioneer of cool jazz, hard bop, and modal jazz in a variety of small group formats. The formation in the mid-1960s of the Second Quintet with Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter, and Tony Williams was vital to the invention of the new post bop style. Yudkin illustrates and precisely defines this style with an analysis of the 1966 classic Miles Smiles.
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Reviews
"... the author writes convincingly about the actual music, as well as its surrounding circumstances.... this book should be widely welcomed and especially recommended to readers interested in the nuts and bolts of the music."
Brian Priestley, Jazzwise, July 2008
"It will make a fine addition to the still small number of solid musical studies of jazz, as begun by scholars like Gunther Schuller, Mark Tucker, and Lewis Porter."
John J. Joyce, Associate Professor of Music, Tulane University
"A thoughtful exploration... Highly recommended."
Wisconsin Bookwatch