Friday, December 31, 2021

Miles Davis: Get Up With It

For many, Miles Davis passed beyond the pale when he embraced electric instruments, funk and soul rhythms, avant-guard touches, and other elements to his music by 1970.  While In A Silent Way and Bitches Brew caused consternation, the situation only became more controversial as the first half of the decade crawled on.  

On The Corner from 1972 fully embraced a youth-oriented sound and was roundly lambasted and then Davis took his sound into even more diverse realms with sprawling double albums, studio and live, that alienated many of this long-time fans and frustrated fellow musicians, many close friends.  Typically, he pressed on, though the effects of alcohol and drugs, often a result of self-medication for a variety of physical ailments and mental and emotional turmoil, have often been debated.

Get Up With It, released by Columbia on 22 November 1974 and with Teo Macero's usual production wizardry, is a compilation of pieces from May 1970 to October 1974 that is both confounding and thrilling.  It has two very long musical meditations in "He Loved Him Madly," a heartfelt tribute to the recently deceased Duke Ellington, and the great "Calypso Frelimo" that find Miles exploring what would later be broadly called "ambient" sound.  

"Red China Blues" is pretty straight-forward, on the other hand, while "Rated X" is a razor-sharp and often wickedly propulsive piece with avant-garde touches.  The other tunes are named for people in the leader's life, including "Maiysha," "Mtume," named for the single-monikered percussionist in his band, and the funky "Billy Preston," who is now back in the spotlight because of the late keyboardist's fundamental contributions to the Beatles' Let It Be sessions, the subject of Peter Jackson's new documentary.

For its time, though really for any era, this is an astonishing album with its wildly experimental bent, explorations of genre, and performances by quite a roster of master musicians including the incredible Pete Cosey on guitar, Sonny Fortune on flute, guitarist John McLaughlin, pianists Herbie Hancock and Keith Jarrett, and drummer Al Foster.  Having tabla player Badal Roy and electric sitarist Khalil Balakrishna on some tracks really adds a great international perspective and Michael Henderson's bass is too repetitive for some, but is exactly what his boss wanted and it holds everything together.  Saxophonist David Liebman, who played on the two long masterpieces, contributes really insighful liner notes to the 2000 remaster.

In under a year, an exhausted, pain-wracked and addicted Davis abruptly quit performing, not to return for six years.  While he got cleaned up and relatively healthy, his music was entirely different, less challenging and generally just not as interesting as before.  Yet, he was clearly happier and in better shape, physically and mentally.  When I saw him three times in the late 80s, he was having fun, even if the music was not as creative as it had been for most of thirty years—an incredible run by any artistic standard.  It's sometimes hard to believe Miles been gone for three decades, but Get Up With It is a favorite of his for this listener.

Wednesday, December 29, 2021

Black Uhuru: Sinsemilla

As has been related here before, a highlight concert experience for this blogger was the incredible double-bill in summer 1984 of Black Uhuru and King Sunny Ade and one of the most enduring memories was the powerful throb from the stage through the concrete floor and up into the plastic seats from the bass of the incomparable Robbie Shakespeare ("Basspeare"), who was locked in tight with his "Riddim Twins" partner, drummer Sly Dunbar ("Drumbar") as Black Uhuru showed why it was the greatest reggae act in the aftermath of Bob Marley's death a few years earlier.

Shakespeare's death three weeks ago at age 68 following kidney surgery is a huge loss, but, fortunately, his body of work over decades with the session ensembles The Revolutionaries and The Aggrovators, Black Uhuru, with Dunbar through their Taxi Productions work, and in many sessions including several with the great Peter Tosh, Bob Dylan's Infidels and other records, Culture's masterpiece Two Sevens Clash, Yoko Ono, Mick Jagger, Joan Armatrading and many others, remains to enjoy and appreciate.

Sinsemilla was released by Island Records in July 1980 and is a phenomenal record with Shakespeare and Dunbar working with singer Michael Rose to create eight tracks that are all strong.  Rose's keening vocals, socially conscious lyrics, the backing vocals of Derrick Simpson and Rose (Puma Jones didn't show for the session, so the lead singer jumped in,) the contributions of lead guitarist "Duggie" Bryan, the rhythm guitar of "Ranchie" McLean, keyboards from Ansell Collins and percussion by "Sticky" Thompson, and, of course, the brilliant work of the rhythem section are work together seamlessly for an album that retains its high quality from start to finish.

The opening tracks "Happiness" and "World is Africa," along with "No Loafing (Sit and Wonder)," and the title tracks are standouts, but, again, the cohesiveness of the album, which was carried through with the amazing follow-up, Red, previously featured on this blog, is very impressive.  Reggae is a genre that puts the rhythm section front and center and Robbie Shakespeare was virtually without peer in his long career--long may he be recognized for his stellar body of work.