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Miles Davis Quintet Concert

Fillmore East (New York, NY)

Miles Davis Quintet concert at Fillmore East on Mar 6, 1970

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  • Date:
    03.06.1970
  • Tracks:
    5
  • Total Time:
    41:05
  • Catalog:
    Bill Graham

Concert Summary

Miles Davis, opening on a bill that also featured the Steve Miller Band and headliners Neil Young and Crazy Horse, exemplifies the musical diversity that Bill Graham often embraced at the Fillmores. This historic stint of shows came at the beginning of a major crossroads in Davis' career. This night and the next were the…entire summary

  • webvicious | Saturday, September 05, 2009 | 10:53 am

    Miles also was really into what Jimi Hendrix was doing and used that in his music, hence Miles Runs the Voodoo Down...but could he really??

  • tatittle | Saturday, September 05, 2009 | 7:38 am

    It also appears there was considerable envy and jealousy of Miller's worldy success...unjustified no doubt in Davis' opinion. Of course Miller knew deep down it was unjustified (never is for anyone to be worshipped as American performers so often are), which is why he goes overboard trying to convince himself it is justified leading to his attitude which is based in his insecurity, and feelings of unworthiness. He wrote some timely, good-great pop songs--which is what it is--valuable.

  • tatittle | Saturday, September 05, 2009 | 7:33 am

    Perhaps Miles shouldnt allow other people (e.g. Steve Miller) to rent so much space in his head. While Miles Davis' musical virtuosity is apparent, his spiritual virtuosity is not...he is every bit as much of an arrogant egotist as the young Miller--only people think this is excusable when backed up with great talent. Actually extraordinary talent is all the more reason he shouldn't be insecure and so concerned about what others think, say and do regarding him. We all are continually growing and maturing though, at least hopefully!

  • bubbahey | Friday, September 04, 2009 | 6:27 pm

    Well, I have to agree. Steve Miller really wasn't that talented and he had attitude too. Here's Mile's quote on this: "I was opening for this sorry-ass cat named Steve Miller. Steve Miller didn't have his shit going for him, so I'm pissed because I got to open for this non-playing motherfucker just because he had one or two sorry-ass records out. So I would come late and he would have to go on first and then we got there we smoked the motherfucking place, everybody dug it."

  • PhillyDave | Friday, September 04, 2009 | 11:42 am

    I was at this show.Neil & Crazyhorse's Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere was new and I was a fan. I liked Steve Miller from Sailor days. Miles was new to me, coming from a Weavers/Pete Seeger folk background with Jefferson Airplane being my favorite band, as the 60's morphed into the 70's. My friends and I, up from Delaware, with a stop at Rutger's, where our Fillmore ticket source friend would prep us for the show. By the time we got to the venue, and waited for early show exit, my consciousness was fully expanded and ready for anything, I thought. Miles opened, and I discovered that the Universe was more chaotic than I had imagined. Not only was my headspace not prepared for Miles, but my auditory system was the enemy. I retreated to the farthest recesses of the Fillmore bathroom and jammed my fingers in my ears in a semi-vain attempt to block the screaming banchee tones of Mile's set. I was, in the vernacular of the times, freaking out. Not that, cosmically speaking, that's necessarily a bad thing. Any experience as a sentient being prepares one for the Bardo, and, from a karmic perspective, the worst can be for the best. A few years ago, this show was released, I think by Collector's Choice, and I was able to rehear what I had so tried to block out so many years ago. Interesting screaming banchee explorations. Survival is the key. That was an interesting Spring at the Fillmore. A month later I saw my first Pink Floyd show from the 8th row center, my best Fillmore seats, then a few days after Kent State a few weeks later, the late show Jefferson Airplane, with Grace's Shrimp Shit rap, and my first listen to Hot Tuna, as Jack & Yorma tried to calm the few assholes, who were giving Bill Graham, Grace, and the rest of JA a hard time. Seems like there were always a few jerks taking advantage of their 1st amendment rights, and their total lack of consideration for others. "Same as it ever was". The process continues, and thankfully that Miles set did not prevent Kind of Blue from becoming one of my favorite albums.

  • Anonymous | Saturday, March 21, 2009 | 3:11 pm

    I read a comment about fans of deep end Grateful Dead will dig this and the answer is yes. Not the KC Jones dead but more improved Other ones and dark stars and the like, but I think Miles takes it farther. Which is a good thing, like the dead sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn't but a true experimental musician has to keep pushing the limits like they did, and thank god. It takes a different ear to be able to appreciate it but for those that have that this type of jamming is priceless.

  • Nor'wester | Wednesday, February 25, 2009 | 3:27 pm

    Just got done re-reading his autobiography. I first saw him on mtv for the Amnesty tour back in '86 at Meadowlands. He wasn't at the LA stop(which I attended) and I was blown away by that band (Robben Ford, the late Bob Berg and Carlos came on at the end,trading solos with Robben). Seriously, they opened with 'You're Under Arrest'. So hip and so on-top-of-the-beat funky. He said he always wanted to reach a younger audience. I was 21 at the time. I'm still a freak for Miles!

  • michaelfe | Tuesday, February 10, 2009 | 12:27 pm

    I understand Miles's rermarks about Miller in his autobiography and I'm all for Miles. Great concert!!

  • jims | Saturday, January 03, 2009 | 8:09 am

    i have been playing music some 40 plus years and i am still learning more about and from miles davis. it just seems to be unending. it does seem funny to see the billing here. back in that time there were a lot of odd pairings (hendrix with monkees for one). i'll tell you of another that i simply have never heard anyone speak of. the first concert i attended was in 1967 in miami at a baseball stadium. the headline was sonny and cher. the opening act was the doors. i was just a kid and the doors just blew my mind. it did happen, i was there and remember it well. i have never ever heard or met any who knows anything about the show. it was not the show jim dropped his pants at. i think that was the following year. anyway, odd pairings is my point. this space should really be about referring to the man, miles davis. miles and his band are just simply awesome. i don't think there will ever be another. here's to the man. peace, jim

  • Santanafan | Friday, August 22, 2008 | 11:02 am

    Miles Davis is one of the many masters of Jazz. These recordings are from the early '70's, when he was playing more Abstract Jazz, and although they did change Jazz forever, it is a little too abstract for me.

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