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  1. Quiet Nights is a studio album by the American jazz trumpeter Miles Davis, and his fourth album collaboration with arranger and conductor Gil Evans, released in 1963 on Columbia Records, catalogue CL 2106 and CS 8906 in stereo.

  2. Best known as a member of John Coltrane's Classic Quartet in the 1960s and later as a leader of his own bands, he was a trained classical percussionist with marching band experience who performed on Miles' Sketches of Spain. Standout Track. Playlist. Pop-up Player. Saeta. 00:30.

  3. 6. Corcovado (Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars) 7. Summer Night. 8. The Time of The Barracudas. By logging into Apple Music, Deezer, or Spotify through this website, you agree to follow and receive news from Miles Davis and Sony Music. Given the popular wave of Brazilian samba music that engulfed the jazz scene of the early 1960s—“bossa nova ...

  4. MILES DAVIS Quiet Nights ratings distribution. 3.40. (52 ratings) Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music (19%) Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection (21%) Good, but non-essential (42%) Collectors/fans only (15%) Poor. Only for completionists (2%)

    • (52)
  5. Quiet Nights, an Album by Miles Davis. Released 16 December 1963 on Columbia (catalog no. CL 2106; Vinyl LP). Genres: Cool Jazz, Latin Jazz. Rated #169 in the best albums of 1963. Featured peformers: Miles Davis (trumpet), Teo Macero (producer), Fred Plaut (engineer), Scott Hyde (cover art).

    • (1.2K)
    • 27 July 1962-17 April 1963
    • Miles Davis
    • 16 December 1963
  6. www.jazzmessengers.com › miles-davis › quiet-nightsQuiet Nights - Jazz Messengers

    Bob Tricarico (bassoon), Garvin Bushell (bassoon, contrabassoon), prob. Janet Putnam (harp), Paul Chambers (b), Jimmy Cobb (d), Willie Bobo (bgo), Elvin Jones (perc). New York, July 27 (tracks 3 & 6), August 13 (tracks 4-5), November 6 (tracks 1-2), 1962.

  7. Elvin Jones (jazz drummer) soprano saxophone: Steve Lacy (jazz saxophonist and composer 1934–2004) trombone: J.J. Johnson (Jazz/bop trombonist/session leader) and Frank Rehak trumpet: Miles Davis (jazz trumpeter, bandleader, songwriter), Bernie Glow, Harold Baker, Louis R. Mucci (trumpetist) and Ernie Royal tuba