Trisha Shetty (Editor)

In Concert (Miles Davis album)

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Released
  
May 1973

Length
  
84:06

Release date
  
May 1973

Label
  
Columbia/Legacy

Recorded
  
September 29, 1972

Artist
  
Miles Davis

Producer
  
Teo Macero

In Concert (Miles Davis album) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen116In

Venue
  
Philharmonic Hall in New York

In Concert (1973)
  
Jazz at the Plaza (1973)

Genres
  
Jazz, Jazz fusion, Funk, Jazz-funk

Similar
  
Miles Davis albums, Jazz albums

Miles davis in concert part 2


In Concert is a live double album by American jazz musician Miles Davis. It was recorded at the Philharmonic Hall in New York City. Columbia Records' original release did not credit any personnel, recording date, or track listing, apart from the inner liner listing the two titles "Foot Fooler" and "Slickaphonics".

Contents

Critical reception

In a contemporary review of the album, Bob Palmer of Rolling Stone magazine wrote that, although Carlos Garnett's saxophone playing is marginalized, the music is "bracing, popping, at least one step ahead of the many Davis imitators. There are few real surprises, but there's a continuing skein of rhythms, themes and developments that makes fine extended listening." In a 1981 review, Robert Christgau gave In Concert an "A–" and said that, although "it takes a while to get into gear" and is "pretty narrow in function", its "urban voodoo" has "more going for it rhythmically than On the Corner." In an article for The Village Voice, Christgau wrote of the album upon its reissue in 1997:

"By In Concert ... [Michael] Henderson is the sole survivor from the more talented prior band—although, crucially, Al Foster pushes like [Jack] DeJohnette with less excess motion. The result is the purest jazz-funk record ever—not as quick or tricky as James Brown, but more richly layered, riffs and drones and wah-wahs and tunelets and weird noises and shifting key centers snaking along on a sexually solicitous, subtly indomitable pulse."

According to AllMusic editor Steve Huey, "melody isn't the point of this music; it's about power, rhythm, and the sum energy of the collective, and of Davis' electric jazz-rock albums, In Concert does one of the most mind-bending jobs of living up to those ideals". Erik Davis, writing in Spin magazine, praised its "rhythmic wall of sound" and said that its music is "of such propulsive psychedelic density that it makes the heaviest P-Funk sound like the Archies." JazzTimes writer Tom Terrell called Davis "a spiritual Hendrix with his own cosmic band of gypsies", and commented that the album's "visionary performance ... predicts hip hop ('Rated X''s bassline = 'White Lines'), Ornette's Prime Time ('Black Satin') and Talking Heads ('Ife')".

In a mixed review, Don Heckman of the Los Angeles Times criticized Davis' use of the wah-wah effects controller and said that he was "not in particularly exceptional form" because he had "moved more deeply into pounding funk rhythms and fairly static sound textures." In The Rolling Stone Album Guide (2004), J. D. Considine felt that, although it was "occasionally fascinating, the busily churning rhythms often seem oddly static, as if the band were laboriously treading water."

Original LP

All tracks were composed by Miles Davis.

Record one ("Foot Fooler")
  1. "Miles Davis in Concert" – 20:45
  2. "Miles Davis in Concert" – 25:23
Record two ("Slickaphonics")
  1. "Miles Davis in Concert" – 18:12
  2. "Miles Davis in Concert" – 20:21

CD reissue

Disc 1 (first set): "FOOT FOOLER" IN CONCERT, PARTS 1 & 2

Disc 2 (second set): "SLICKAPHONICS" IN CONCERT, PARTS 3 & 4:

Personnel

  • Miles Davis - electric trumpet with wah-wah
  • Carlos Garnett - soprano & tenor saxophone
  • Cedric Lawson - electric piano, synthesizer
  • Reggie Lucas - electric guitar
  • Khalil Balakrishna - electric sitar
  • Michael Henderson - electric bass
  • Al Foster - drums
  • Badal Roy - tablas
  • James Mtume - percussion
  • Songs

    1Rated X (Instrumental)12:16
    2Honky Tonk (Instrumental)9:19
    3Theme From Jack Johnson (Instrumental)10:13

    References

    In Concert (Miles Davis album) Wikipedia