Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 1 de ago. de 2019 · 15. L’Ascenseur Pour L’Echafaud (1958) The director Louis Malle hired a Paris-loving, 31-year-old Miles and a French/US band including the bebop drummer Kenny Clarke to improvise a soundtrack ...

    • 10 min
    • John Fordham
  2. Track 4 recorded 20 April 1953 at WOR Studios, NYC. Released 1953. Available on Miles Davis Volume 2. Track 5 recorded 29 April 1954 at Rudy Van Gelder Studios, Hackensack NJ. Released 1946. Available on Walkin'. Track 6 recorded 10 September 1956 and Track 7 recorded on 5 June 1956 at Columbia 30th Street Studios, NYC.

  3. Miles Davis: All Blues: 11:35 – The Miles Davis Sextet: Some Day My Prince Will Come (Un Jour Mon Prince Viendra) 8:47 – Miles Davis With Orchestra Under The Direction Of Gil Evans* Concierto De Aranjuez: 16:15 – Miles Davis With Orchestra Under The Direction Of Gil Evans* Springsville: 3:25 – Miles Davis With Orchestra Under The ...

  4. Listen to The Essential Miles Davis by Miles Davis on Deezer. Now's the Time, Jeru, Compulsion... Miles Davis. 2001 | Columbia/Legacy The ...

  5. 15 de may. de 2001 · At first glance, it would seem like an impossible task to summarize Miles Davis' career into a succinct double-disc set. Still, a career as multifaceted and ever-changing as Miles' winds up having a clear narrative, one that can be told by just the highlights, which is exactly what Columbia/Legacy's excellent double-disc Essential Miles Davis does.

  6. Available on Miles Davis - Tutu (Warner Bros 25490). CD 3 tracks: Track 1 recorded on 26 May 1958 at Columbia 30th Street Studios, NYC. Available on Miles Davis & John Coltrane - The Complete Columbia Recordings 1955-1961 (Columbia C6K 90922). Track 2 recorded on 4 February 1958 at Columbia 30th Street Studios, NYC.

  7. 25 de may. de 2023 · On May 26, 2023, Miles Davis would have turned 94 years old. The brilliant trumpeter and bandleader was only 65 years old when he died in 1991. But during a career of under five decades, he managed to change the direction of jazz at least that many times, albeit with the help of gifted collaborators along the way, like Gil Evans, Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, Marcus Miller and many others.