Harmon Gymnasium, UCA, Berkeley, 1967-04-07

DiscoHarmon Gymnasium, UCA, Berkeley, 1967-04-07
Year1967
VenueUSA, Harmon Gymnasium, UCA, Berkeley
Date1967-04-07
NotesSource: www.dimeadozen.org
Original torrent name: Miles Davis--The Rest--and-as requested- Reseed Children of Agharta 2002.torrent
Original folder names:
Miles Davis--The Rest--and-as requested- Reseed Children of Agharta 2002
Miles 7.4.1967 Harmon Gymnasium, University of California, Berkeley, USA
---
07. April 1967
Harmon Gymnasium, University of California, Berkeley, USA

Miles Davis (tp); Wayne Shorter (ts); Herbie Hancock (p); Albert Stinson (b); Tony Williams (d)

Introduction (disk jockey)
Introduction (from stage)
Agitation
Gingerbread Boy
Stella by Starlight
Dolores
'Round Midnight
So What
Walkin'
The Theme (with applause)
Announcement (disk jockey
---
Info.txt

Hi and welcome back Mfs.

After a while i want to share with you some rest Miles stuff i found and after several

mails i will put the Pete Cosey and some MD Members in a Concert Children of Agartha to it

so the Mfs with all the Requests are satisfied.To keep it small i will come with more
stuff after that one.All transfered from Wave to Flac as usual ;)

Here the Line ups



Sound Quality from good to
poor,but i brougth it all up anyway for the collectors Mfs :)

And as an Extra the Reunion of Pete Cosey and some MD Members in a Concert "Children of Agartha performing their Electric Jazz sounds at The
Village Underground Friday,
06/21/02 NYC, NY - The Village Underground
featuring Pete Cosey, Gary Bartz, Don Alias, John Stubblefield, and
others.

Here a note from that:

June 21, 2002 - The Miles-ophiles that dug the Prince of Darkness’ electric period will surely recall the name of Pete Cosey, who was one of the guitarists that was a regular in Miles Davis’ mid-70s bands (circa the albums Agharta, Get Up With It and Pangea). Where he’s been since I don’t know, except that he once “subbed” for Bill Frisell in the jazz power trio Power Tools. Now, Cosey has assembled a killer cast of characters to pay tribute to the still-somewhat-controversial electric period.

NYC’s Village Underground was the setting for Pete Cosey’s Children Of Agharta, which included saxophonists Gary Bartz and John Stubblefield, electric bassist Matt Rubano, drummer J.T. Lewis and Johnny “Juice” Rosado on turntables, plus a couple a poets/rappers/ramblers whose names I didn’t catch. Like Miles’ music of this period, the tapestries wove by these Children were heavily rhythmic and driving/driven – they laid down thick slabs of psychedelic free-jazz funk with sinuous melodies that drew the crowd into a set of slippery grooves that would not quit. Cosey was a revelation – this fellow who looked like a beatnik Burl Ives generated played some wildly inspired, fluid guitar playing that synthesized the influences of Jimi Hendrix (openness to the possibilities of sound), Sonny Sharrock (the “free” approach of Pharaoh Sanders on the electric guitar) and Eric Clapton (stinging tone and sustain) into a personal style that flew from the stratosphere into the ionosphere while maintaining a lifeline to the blues. Cosey even tipped his hat to his Chicago blues roots (he played guitar on a Howlin’ Wolf album on Chess in the 60s) by singing a mellow, gently misogynist blues song, assuring the ladies in the audience there was another version that slammed the “male side” of the equation. Bart and Stubblefield both wailed, the former in a singing, bittersweet hard-bop mode, the latter in a more pointed, piercing, rippling roar. Rubano and Lewis were the Kings Of Rhythm that night, keeping various grooves going but never rigid – they weren’t a funk players trying play jazz, but jazz guys who had an undeniable feel for the funk. Rosado functioned both as a “rhythm” player, adding jabs, accents and flourishes to the matrix, other times as a counterpoint to Cosey. The crowd went wild, of course, and well they should have – there was inspiration, perspiration and a general let-the-good-times-roll, hoist a drink to Miles spirit.






Miles Davis


05. - 08. Dezember 1968


Jazz Workshop, Boston, USA


First fragment
'Round Midnight 11:06
The Theme 00:10




Second fragment
So What (incomplete) 10:48



Third fragment
Agitation (incomplete) 07:00
Walkin' (incomplete) 07:36


Fourth fragment
Walkin' (incomplete) 13:26




Fifth fragment
'Round Midnight 14:28
Directions (incomplete) 06:21



Selim Sivad

07. April 1967


Harmon Gymnasium, University of California, Berkeley, USA


Miles Davis (tp); Wayne Shorter (ts); Herbie Hancock (p); Albert Stinson (b); Tony Williams (d)


Introduction (disk jockey)
Introduction (from stage)
Agitation
Gingerbread Boy
Stella by Starlight
Dolores
'Round Midnight
So What
Walkin'
The Theme (with applause)
Announcement (disk jockey



Miles Davis unknown 18.8.1964

I would say

Miles

Ron

Tony

Wayne

but location and setlist unknown (from a Trade) couldnt get it at Losins site neither on www. kind of blue site.

Miles Davis



25. September 1981
Hollywood Bowl, Los Angeles, USA

Miles Davis (tp); Bill Evans (ss, ts, fl, el-p); Mike Stern (g); Marcus Miller (el-b); Al Foster (d); Mino Cinelu (perc)

Back Seat Betty (incomplete)
My Man's Gone Now
Aida
Announcement
Kix
Fat Time
Jean Pierre



Well.Just put all the rest i have to make it complete for the collector freaks.

Quality is from good to poor,but fun to listen to,and thats the main thing!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

not only collect---listen to it--its all about music ;)

Hope you enjoy it.

If i will find more Miles i will put it up here anyway.
Will come up with other cool stuff next.Some Weather Report and others.




So hang in there--vote for Miles--- On the Corner-- In a silent way,life but not
evil(sorry Miles Mf).Get new Directions ,have Big Fun and remember him MADLY.




Later

Alienman MF
MediaFLAC
Live1
Incomplete0
ALBW0
Compilation0
nVol139