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Recorded mostly in three days (August 19 to 21, 1969) it incorporated electronic instruments, such as electric piano and guitar, and mostly rejected traditional jazz rhythms in favor of a looser, funk influenced improvisational style. Davis's recording was an unusual contribution to jazz.
The 2 LP/CD set contains mostly very long tracks, improvisations on pieces that were largely written on the spot. Instead of the largely diatonic style of cool jazz, Bitches Brew often favored dissonance.
Some jazz fans and musicians felt the album was crossing the limits: "Davis drew a line in the sand that some jazz fans have never crossed, or even forgiven Davis for drawing." [1] In a 1997 interview, drummer Bobby Previte sums up his feelings about Bitches Brew thusly: "Well, it was groundbreaking, for one. How much groundbreaking music do you hear now? It was music that you had that feeling you never heard quite before. It came from another place. How much music do you hear now like that?" [2]
Bitches Brew is often called the best-selling jazz record. Such sales figures have been disputed, but it was Davis's first gold record, selling more than half a million copies. However Davis had 11 years earlier released Kind of Blue, another groundbreaking record that has been cited as perhaps the best-selling jazz release.
In 2003 the TV network VH1VH1 (which stands for Video Hits 1 is an American cable television channel that was created in 1985. With then four-year-old MTV's popularity rising drastically among teens, VH1 began with the intention to capitalize off of the success of the music video. named Bitches Brew the 64th greatest album of all time.
(The original two disc vinyl album does not include a track titled "Feio".)
The Miles Davis recording, Bitches Brew was a turning point in modern jazz. Davis had already spearheaded two major jazz movements— cool and modal jazzModal jazz is jazz played using musical modes rather than chord progressions. An understanding of modal jazz requires prior knowledge of musical modes. Modes are the seven scales used in medieval music, but 'rediscovered' by composers like Claude Debussy—and was about to instigate another major change.
It is perhaps easy for today's audience to forget how astonishing it was in 1969 to have a major label— Columbia RecordsColumbia Records is the oldest continually used brand name in recorded sound, dating back to 1888. 1925 Columbia was originally the local company distributing and selling Edison phonographs and phonograph cylinders in Washington, D. Maryland and Delaware.—release a major album by a important jazz artist with the term " bitchBitch originated as a noun which referred to a female dog or other canid, and is still often used with this meaning by breeders, dog aficionados, etc. The word, however, has since come to be used as an insult, primarily against women but also more generales" in its title. The use of the word on the album cover may be a factor in certain fans' and critics' dismissive or even hostile responses to the record.
Some have criticized Bitches Brew by saying the album was more rock than jazz, and that it was overtly commercial. Fans counter that while Davis was explicitly seeking younger audiences--he took signifigant cuts in his usual fees to open concerts for Santana and Steve Miller BandSteve Miller is a blues and rock and roll guitarist and performer. He was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on October 5, 1943. He attended the University of Wisconsin, Madison during the 1960s. He formed a new band called The Ardells. Steve taught Boz Scaggs--nothing heard on the two discs indicates that by incorporating elements of funk and rock Davis was diluting the power of his music. Fans assert that Bitches Brew is more abstract, challenging and less restrained than music found on the preceding several years of Miles Davis recordings.
The Abdul Mati Klarwein painting featured on the cover—though striking and memorable—was perhaps an artifact of the " psychedelic" era, and may demonstrate Davis' desire to reach a different audience; for example, Klarwein's work is also prominently featured on the cover art of Santana's (1970) Abraxas, released by the same label.
The "Who's Who" level of musicianship among the participants involved in the "Bitches Brew" recording is indicative of the excellence demanded and the collaborative organizational abilities of Miles Davis. Some critics at the time characterized this music as simply obtuse and "outside", which recalls Duke Ellington's description of Davis as "the Picasso of jazz."