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Miles Davis

Volume 2 (2025 Reissue)

Remastered UHQ CD with Obi Strip (Import) - £17.99 | Pre Order
Marking 85 years representing The Finest In Jazz, UM Japan have made available no less than 118 titles selected from Blue Note’s analogue "Tone Poet" and "Cla...
Miles Davis

The Musings of Miles (Original Jazz Classics Series)

180g black LP in tip-on sleeve with Obi strip - £36.99 | Buy
Released in 1955 on Prestige Records, 'The Musings of Miles' is the first 12” LP from legendary trumpet player, Miles Davis.
Miles Davis

Miles '54: The Prestige Recordings

4LP boxset - £128.99 | Buy
2CD - £18.99 | Buy
Released to celebrate the 70th Anniversary of these sessions and the 75th Anniversary of Prestige Records, “Miles ’54” brings together 20 trac...
Miles Davis

Paris Jazz Festival, Salle Pleyel 10/1/1964

Limited "Tricolour French Flag" 2LP - £41.99 | Buy
This 2LP set captures Miles Davis’ Second Great Quintet just as Wayne Shorter completed the group and the band toured Europe.
Miles Davis

You're Under Arrest (2024 Reissue)

limited numbered 180g audiophile red & clear marbled LP in gatefold sleeve (1500 only) - £32.99 | Buy
'You’re Under Arrest' is a 1985 album recorded by Miles Davis, presenting a mixture of pop covers (including Cyndi Lauper’s “Time Afte...
Miles Davis

Star People (2024 Reissue)

Limited 180g Orange & White Marbled LP - £29.99 | Buy
Star People is a 1983 album by the famous jazz trumpeter and composer Miles Davis.
Four and More (2024 Reissue)

SIDE A
1. So What
2. Walkin'
3. Joshua/Go-Go (Theme and Announcement)

SIDE B
1. Four
2. Seven Steps To Heaven
3. There Is No Greater Love/Go-Go (Theme and Announcement)

Miles Davis

Four and More (2024 Reissue)

music on vinyl
  • 180g Black LP

    Released: 15th Nov 2024

    £28.99
    Buy

Recorded at the same Feb 12, 1964 New York concert that yielded the more balladic album, 'My Funny Valentine', 'Four & More' showcases the Miles Davis quintet at their blistering best.

The great trumpeter and bandleader (1926-1991), and his stellar group, which was less than a year old at the time of this recording, mostly essayed tempos that ranged from Indianapolis 500 to Bonneville Salt Flats. Offering a well-balanced, albeit reconfigured, repertoire featuring the familiar hard-bop strains of “Four” and “Walkin’,” newer, original free bop compositions like “Joshua” and “Seven Steps To Heaven,” and the standard “There Is No Greater Love,” which the ensemble performed relatively infrequently and is the only tune herein not taken at a supersonic pace, the quintet electrified a sold out Philharmonic Hall. Spurred on consistently by the mercurial rhythm section of pianist Herbie Hancock (23 years old at the time), bassist Ron Carter (then 26), and especially by the cross rhythms of 18-year old genius drummer Tony Williams, Davis’ work, particularly in the upper register, was seldom more commanding. As for his front line partner, tenor saxophonist George Coleman, Davis would write in his autobiography that he “played better that night than I ever heard him play.”