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1969 live album by Miles Davis
Miles in Tokyo is a live album recorded on July 14, 1964,
[5] by the Miles Davis Quintet at the
Tokyo Kōsei Nenkin Kaikan,
Shinjuku,
Tokyo,
Japan. It was released in the United States on
CD in 2005 and is the first recording of Davis in Japan. It is the only album
[6]
[7] to showcase an early incarnation of his
Second Great Quintet featuring
Sam Rivers on tenor saxophone, following
George Coleman's departure;
[6]
[7] after this,
Wayne Shorter's appointment completed the classic lineup
[6] which recorded such albums as
ESP and
Miles Smiles, through to
Miles in the Sky.
Track listing
Original release
Reissue CD (COL 519507 2, 2005)
[8]
- "Introduction by Teruo Isono" - 1:10
- "
If I Were a Bell" (
Frank Loesser) – 10:14
- "
My Funny Valentine" (
Richard Rodgers,
Lorenz Hart) – 12:45
- "So What" (
Miles Davis) – 8:02
- "Walkin'" (Richard H. Carpenter) – 9:11
- "
All of You" (
Cole Porter) – 11:18
- "Go-Go [Theme] + closing announcement" (
Miles Davis) - (1:19)
Personnel
The Miles Davis Quintet
Production
2005 CD Reissue
- Reissue Producer -
Michael Cuscuna and
Bob Belden
- Remastered - Mark Wilder at Sony Music Studios, New York, NY.
- Project Director - Seth Rothstein
- Legacy A&R - Steve Berkowitz
- A&R Coordination - Stacey Boyle
- Reissue Art Direction - Howard Fritzson
- Reissue Design - Randall Martin
- Photography - Akiyoshi Miyashita
- Packaging Manager - Norm Elrod
- Liner Note -
Takao Ogawa
References
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Studio albums | Prestige era | |
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Columbia era | |
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Warner Bros. era | |
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Soundtracks | |
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Live recordings | |
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Compilations | |
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Box sets | |
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Remix albums | |
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Compositions | |
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Related articles | |
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Years given are for the recording(s), not first release. |
As leader or co-leader | |
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With others |
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Miles in Tokyo (with
Miles Davis, 1964)
-
Change (with
Andrew Hill, 1966)
-
Conference of the Birds (with Dave Holland, 1972)
-
Dialogue (with
Bobby Hutcherson, 1965)
-
Black Stars (with
Jason Moran, 2001)
-
In the Name of... (
James Blood Ulmer's Music Revelation Ensemble, 1993)
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Capricorn Rising (and Don Pullen, 1975)
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The Great Concert of Cecil Taylor (with
Cecil Taylor, 1969)
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Life Time (with
Tony Williams, 1964)
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Spring (with Tony Williams, 1965)
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Into Somethin' (with Larry Young, 1964)
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