Miles Davis: Pangaea – A genre of its own

On the front page of the Audio Federation website Neli and I get to post our favorite albums of the day, week, whatever.

[These favorite albums take the place of what was previously our Linkedin profile photos. Neli got tired of seeing this photo of herself everywhere. I think it is a great photo of her. Women… 🙂 ]

I currently have ‘Miles Davis Pangaea‘ as my Audio Federation front page album.

This double-album is part of a set of concerts during Miles’ electric funk space jazz phase. Agharta is another double live album of this concert series from Osaka, Japan. To a large extent Black Beauty, Dark Magnus, In a Silent Way, and even Miles Smiles are other examples of his of this genre. And as far as I am concerned he has this genre all to himself. Although Live-Evil is much more widely available, and many consider it part of this phase of his, I do not – it is more commercial electric jazz-fusion – nice but without the ‘space’ and ‘deep rhythm’ these other albums mostly have (Miles Smiles is missing a lot of the deep rhythm of these others, but it still stands above Like-Evil IMO in terms of groove and aggressiveness).

Here is what Amazon has to say:

“(2-LP set) Recorded on the same day as Agharta (FMN 811), Pangaea‘s 2 LPs of material are culled from the evening performances at Osaka’s Festival Hall. Featuring just 2 songs, both clocking in at over 40 minutes, Pangaea shows Miles’ band really stretching itself to the limit. Live electric jazz-fusion from the undisputed master of the genre. 180 gram vinyl in a gatefold jacket with a reproduction of the original black and white insert.”

I discovered these albums back in the late 70s, early 80s. There was a store on the ‘Hill’ in Boulder that sold lots of cutouts for $3 and lots of mostly Japanese and some European (mostly German) imports for $7. I spent a large percentage of my wealth here at the time [not much to speak of, but it was a lot to me…]. I got this as a Japanese import.

It was definitely an OMG experience that has lasted for 40 years. At the time it was also life-affirming in the sense that an ‘old’ master of ‘boring’ jazz could do something that was so now and ‘with it’.

There is nothing out there like it that I have come across. They lay down a groove with a significant beat and then overlay electric jazz and space all over it for over 40 minutes [on the album].

Make no mistake, this is NOT Kind of Blue. This is more like Funkadelic if you imagine them at the end of a week of playing in front of 100,000 people after being dosed to the gills over and over again. Or Sun Ra if Sun Ra knew what the heck a beat and a melody was.

There are some bootlegs of these concerts. Haven’t played them in awhile, so forget what quality they are [the music itself is, of course, awesome in the sense that It does Inspire Awe].

Neli likes these albums too and they are accessible to the average listener –  just Not At All what you would expect to hear from Miles Davis.

The sound quality is B+. It is really quite good IMO. I have mostly played the original Japanese import LP, though we have been playing the CD for convenience lately. 40 minute songs do require a commitment – there are no obvious places to stop the rhythm once it gets started – so you have been warned 🙂

 

Where to find collectible Vinyl, LPs, Records

I haven’t been tempted in a loooong time.

I used to be an addict. Rent. Food. Brain Food. Music. [Luckily, beer fell in both Food and Brain Food categories].

You know the feeling. Where you want to spend outrageous amounts of money for albums that you didn’t think you needed… until you see them! Until you find out that they exist.

Record Luuuuuust!

I just stumbled across RecordMecca. They have a boatload of collectible Vinyl, LPs, Records. Records I might even want to, the horror, listen to over and over.

Full reverse, Scotty! Hurry, before it is too late!

I know, Ebay is supposed to be the place. Many people seems to like to shop there for LPs. I find it… unexciting. YMMV.

Another place for weird rare stuff is SystemRecords in the U.K.

Maybe should add a page for these places to a new page in the Audiophile’s Guide. Maybe, after my eyes stop bugging out.

 

 

Moozar launches a new way to finacially REWARD music / artists

[This seems like a nice way to pay artists for music. Seems really intuitive and natural to me and goes right along with ‘facebook like’ and all the other buttons these days. Not sure what kind of backend infrastructure and financial security is involved – and whether these guys are up to it – but a great idea, I think.]

“MOOZAR.com has created an easy way for artists to be “rewarded” for their efforts… on line. The “reward button” can be placed anywhere on the web for the artist’s work to be shared. This system creates a direct way for music fans to financially “reward” an artist when and where they appreciate the artist’s tracks on Facebook, YouTube, Soundcloud and most places it’s listened to and shared.

An example of the set-up can be found here: http://reward-my-music.com/526

The main site is at: Moozar