On May 26, the day that would have been his 88th birthday, the iconic trumpeter Miles Davis was honored in New York City with the unveiling of a street, Miles Davis Way, on the West 77th Street block where he lived in Manhattan from the late 1950s to the mid-1980s. โThe contribution he made to music, especially when he lived on that street, was immeasurable; some of the greatest music of all time,โ says Quincy Troupe, writer of Miles: The Autobiography.
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Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer supported the effort for recognition of Davis on the Upper West Side since the time she was a City Council member representing the area. โMr. Davis lived in our community when he was writing his most prolific music,โ she says. โThe people in the neighborhood didnโt forget. They really advocated.โ
From the late 1940s through the 1960s, Miles Davis was central to major currents of stylistic development in jazz. A leader of leaders, he mentored many of the young musicians who themselves became great leaders in jazz. He was what collaborator Gil Evans (Sketches of Spain,ย Porgy and Bess), in the documentary Miles Ahead, called a sound innovator who changed the sound of the trumpet for the first time since Louis Armstrong. ย
Miles apprenticed with Charlie Parker, playing bebop; began experimenting with pastel sound forms with the โcool schoolโ as a journeyman; and swung into his own leadership and mastery in the Kind of Blue period (1955-1961), resulting in the first great Miles Davis Quintet/Sextetโwith John Coltrane, Cannonball Adderley, Paul Chambers, Philly Joe Jones or Jimmy Cobb, and Wynton Kelly (and Red Garland or Bill Evans).
The second great quintet in the 1960s (with Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter, Wayne Shorter and Tony Williams) integrated elements of bebop and hard bop with their own take on avant-garde, free jazz experiments of the 1960s. In the late 60s and beyond, Davis ventured into new vistas. He embraced a mรฉlange of influences, incorporating electronic music, pop, rock, โSly Stone, Jimi Hendrix, James Brown, Michael Jackson, Karlheinz Stockhausen and Paul Buckmaster,โ recalls Troupe.
The person most responsible for naming West 77th Street between Riverside Drive and West End Avenue Miles Davis Way was Shirley Zafirau, a longtime neighbor. Drummer Vincent Wilburn, Davisโ nephew, says that sheโs a โheroโ to the Davis family. Zafirau is an avid jazz fan who, after becoming a tour guide, realized that other musical icons such as Duke Ellington and Chico OโFarrill had streets named after them but Davis didnโt. For the past five years sheโs been fighting for Davisโ recognition in the neighborhood.
Sheโs well aware of Davisโ artistic legacy, yet emphasizes his role as a neighbor:
โWe all went to the same butcher. Heโd walk around, always visible. Miles would lean on the retaining wall at 312 W. 77th St., and heโd say in his raspy voice, โHey, howโs it going?โ And heโd interact with all the people who lived on this street.โ
One day she was on her way to work. Davis pulled up in his Ferrari.
ย โHey, where are you going?โ
โIโm going to work, Miles.โ
โWhereโs work?โ
โIn the garment center, 40th and Broadway,โ she said.
โCome on, Iโll give you a ride,โ said Miles.
โHe gave me a lift. So whenever heโd see me on the street, heโd say, โYou need a ride?โ He was cool, nice and a little quiet.โ
This picture differs from accounts by those who ruefully recall his mistreatment of women and his drug abuse. Troupe calls those times of substance abuse his โdark periodsโ and connects Milesโ abusive tendencies to his own demons, as well as hanging around pimps, drug dealers and the like. As much of a tortured artist as Davis certainly was at times in his career, his musical genius is the basis of his artistic reputation and the justification for his recognition via a street naming.
โHe was second to my dad as a father figure and a teacher of music and life,โ says Wilburn. โHe always told me to stay true to the music. Donโt be pigeonholed, keep progressing and evolving. Never rest on your laurels. Keep it exciting.
โSome musicians peak or level off. Miles never did that. He was always striving to play what was in his mind to direct that sound to the public. He was the first one to wake up in the morning and the last one to go to bed at night. Heโd change clothes five or six times a day. Thatโs how his mind worked.โ
Troupe, author too of a memoir about his relationship with Davis, Miles and Me, says that Davis explained the basis of his Picasso-like love affairs with musical forms as well as what remained constant.
โMiles told me: โA lot of people want me to play the old music. I canโt play that because I donโt feel it. Things change in the world. I want to know the next thing. Iโm always being pulled forward by my own curiosity. Not because of money, like some people say. Iโm doing it because thatโs where my head is. Iโm trying to go with my head and what Iโm hearing in my heart. And Iโm always changing.
โโBut if you listen to my sound, my sound is always consistent. I might change the rhythmic flow, but the sound and intent is there. Iโve always located my stuff in the blues and that roadhouse funk, that organ-sax-trumpet-guitar stuff that came out of East St. Louis.โโย
Greg Thomas is a cultural journalist and frequent contributor to The Root. Follow him on Twitter and Facebook.ย
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