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Complete in a Silent Way Sessions
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Complete in a Silent Way Sessions  (Audio CD) 
by Miles Davis

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A827969092125

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Product Details:
Audio CD Release Date: May 11, 2004
Studio: Sony
Number Of Discs: 3
Format: Box set, Extra tracks, Original recording remastered
Average Customer Rating: based on 13 reviews
Track Listing:
Disc: 1
1. Mademoiselle Mabry (Miss Mabry)
2. Frelon Brown
3. Two Faced
4. Dual Mr. Anthony Tillmon Williams Process
5. Splash: Interlude 1 /Interlude 2 /Interlude 3 [
6. Splashdown: Interlude 1 (No Horns) /Interlude 2 (No Horns [Rejected][#]
Disc: 2
1. Ascent
2. Directions I
3. Directions II
4. Shhh/Peaceful
5. In a Silent Way (Rehearsal)
6. In a Silent Way
7. It's About That Time
Disc: 3
1. The Ghetto Walk
2. Early Minor
3. Shhh/Peaceful
4. In a Silent Way/It's About That Time : A. In a Silent Way [LP Version]
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review: 5.0 ( 13 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

34 of 37 found the following review helpful:

5Maybe the greatest Miles ensemble ever . . .Mar 08, 2006
By cvairag
The initial Miles Davis - John McLaughlin collaboration at the peak of its perfection - with help from Tony Williams - Wayne Shorter -Ron Carter - Dave Holland - Joe Zawinul - Herbie Hancock - Chick Corea and others. The set represents the group at the end of its magical late 60's run of great studio sessions and on the verge of the wild fusion-funk period of larger, louder sound. In A Silent Way retains that particular introspective pathos and the intimacy of a smaller ensemble that helped make Miles' music singularly definitive . . . and here - the bluesy echoes mesh perfectly with Miles' new found discovery of electricity - moments before his music would spin completely off the edge - forever - a classic moment in jazz - captured here in all its precarious balance, delicacy, and depth.

40 of 46 found the following review helpful:

5The soundtrack to a religious experienceSep 25, 2006
By The Delite Rancher
While I would like to provide a balanced review of this box set, I simply can not. I also want to avoid using clichés but "The Complete In a Silent Way Sessions" is one of the world's greatest recordings. It would seem that such a statement must surely be victim to hyperbole. Without overstatement, my case unapologetically stands. Once the listener hears a work of this lofty caliber, words become meaningless. This box set lives somewhere beneath a wave of adjectives like "greatest ever" "amazing" and "un-friggin' believable." This was a unique and all too brief time period for Miles. Before the gauntlet was thrown down with "[...] Brew," this was Miles' light trip music. Psychedelica is omnipresent but never overpowering. This album occupies a special place that is triangulated between rock, jazz and trance music. Either this is music to contemplate at one o'clock in the morning or this is the soundtrack to a profound meditation. The original LP seems like the "In A Silent Way" starter kit compared to this full-blown box set. Indeed, this release makes the original seem painfully short since the vibe and atmosphere is consistent. The inclusion of "Dual Mr. Anthony Tillmon Williams Process" is especially appreciated. The listener must ultimately ask, so how can music be played in a silent way? Miles not only contemplates this zen paradox, he finds the path and takes us along on his vision quest. Get "The Complete In a Silent Way Sessions" and take a trip with Miles Davis on his most spiritual journey.

14 of 14 found the following review helpful:

5Oooof... Beautiful.Sep 12, 2007
By B. Hornback "Agatha Crispies"
I am obsessed with this set. I own a number of Miles Davis albums and sets, and this was one of my firsts and I'm still just as in love with it as the first time I heard it. Disc 1 is my favorite and sometimes I'll listen to it for hours on repeat. It was an amazing time of transition for Davis and the results are luscious and moody and so many other things rolled into one wonderful three disc collection. Highly recommended.

8 of 8 found the following review helpful:

5Welcome to the summitOct 05, 2009
By Joseph S. Neighbor
I usually don't go out of my way to write reviews on things. No matter how good or bad, everyone has their opinion, so who needs mine, right? Miles certainly doesn't need me to endorse his work, that's for sure.

But this set is so impressive in every way that I feel compelled to share. To hear something so strange and absolutely gorgeous and refuse to tell the world would be a sin.

With that said, I had some reservations. I was not crazy about "In a Silent Way" as it was originally released. After having bought the Quintet 65-68 box, I became totally infatuated with Tony Williams' dynamic, explosive drumming style. While listening to IASW, I kept waiting for Tony to blow up and push the intensity through the roof, but, except for a brief moment towards the very end of the album, it doesn't happen. It was frustrating. But after buying the "Bitches Brew" box, I had to fill the blank between the two sets, to make sense of the transition. Based on the customer reviews on here, I decided to give it a chance.

Since then, this has become by a wide margin my favorite music produced by Miles - it could reasonably be called my favorite jazz, period. But to pigeonhole something like this into the corner that "jazz" implies would be incorrect. This is not Louie Armstrong or Charlie Parker, or even Ornette Coleman. To echo a previous review, it is a trance-inducing, medative place somewhere beyond jazz, beyond rock. The music on this set is so open and free, to wait for the melody is to miss the point. I now understand what Miles was going for when he made the album. More so than the other Miles sets, what became IASW was a process that had to be stumbled across. It is some of the finest musicians in any genre operating on such a high caliber, not content to rehash standards or play it safe. This is exploration - what they found I have yet to hear achieved by anyone else. It simply can't be duplicated.

There is plenty of wild Tony Williams drumming here (and Jack Dejohnette absolutely kills in "Directions" too!) to fulfill my urges, and placed in the context of the searching, more contemplative, material, it gives a balanced and satisfying listening experience that the original album lacked. I now love the album for what it is, but, as a previous reviewer said, it feels like the starter kit when compared to the sessions box. To understand this strange music, and how Miles arrived at such conclusions, you really need the set.

This is music that works on multiple levels: it is great to zone out to while doing homework, or driving, or doing chores; it also rewards a close listen, as the interaction between the musicians is very subtle and colorful. There is much to appreciate here, so much so that a list of highlights simply won't capture what makes it so great. To be ambiguous, it is not a moment that makes it special, it is an experience, a process, a journey. Like a dream, it is hard to grasp precise details, yet you can't shake the feeling you are left with when it's over.

Do yourself a favor. Get this, approach it with an open mind and let it take you somewhere. Music with this power is very rare indeed.

8 of 8 found the following review helpful:

5Transition from jazz to something else entirelyMay 03, 2008
By G B
This 3 CD box set covers recordings from September 1968 to February 1969; as such it covers a lot more than the actual In a Silent Way sessions, but nevertheless illustrates how Miles and his cohorts moved from the spontaneous abstraction of the Second Great Quintet to an ethereal sound that merged jazz, rock, and R&B. If you want to hear this transition, pick up the box; if you don't feel the need, all you really need is the eventual remaster of the original album. So it's for hardcore Davis fans only, but those fans will be very pleased.

Disc 1 opens with the first session to include bassist Dave Holland and pianist Chick Corea. The languid, bluesy "Mademoiselle Mabry" and the furious boogaloo "Frelon Brun" are essential tracks from the classic album Filles de Kilimanjaro, and should really be heard in that context rather than just this box. Of the next four tracks, "Two Faced" is a lengthy post-bop exploration while the last 3 tracks are somewhat cheesy boogaloos (especially "Dual Mr. Anthony...") salvaged by genius of the musicians. The last track, "Splashdown", has never been previously released.

Disc 2 is where the music really starts to move to new territory. Joe Zawinul's composition "Ascent" is a beautiful though slightly unfocused tone poem, a clear predecessor of "In a Silent Way" and "Orange Lady". If you like the shimmering keyboard trio sound of In a Silent Way, you'll love this. On the other hand both takes of "Directions" fuse jazz improvisation with a pounding rock backbeat; though live performances of this tune are more intense, this version definitely has its charms.

Disc 2 continues with the actual In a Silent Way sessions and the first appearance of guitar virtuoso John McLaughlin: an amusing though inessential bossa nova version of Zawinul's "In a Silent Way"; the take of "In a Silent Way" that eventually appeared on the album; and Teo's original mixes for "It's About That Time" and "Shhh/Peaceful". The latter is a real surprise and gem -- it was originally a harder-hitting piece and Tony Williams played more than just the hi-hat!

It's disc 3, though, that makes this package worth it: first, two previously unissued tracks with the In a Silent Way lineup plus Joe Chambers on drums. "The Ghetto Walk" is a grooving, bluesy piece not unlike the Bitches Brew material, while "Early Minor" is a gorgeous ballad in the Silent Way mold. And then the original In a Silent Way album. If you haven't heard the delicate beauty of this album, you are really missing one of jazz's masterpieces.

Enough of this material is unavailable on individual discs to justify picking up the box for a Davis fan who enjoys the other music.

See all 13 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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