Recorded live in France at the Festival Mondial, du Jazz Antibes,
Miles Davis in Europe captures trumpeter
Miles Davis in late 1963. While
Four & More and
My Funny Valentine -- both taken from the same 1964 New York Philharmonic Hall concert -- are most often cited as this lineup's essential live recording,
Miles Davis in Europe is a no less exciting listen. The band, including tenor saxophonist
George Coleman, pianist
Herbie Hancock, bassist
Ron Carter, and drummer
Tony Williams, had recorded
Seven Steps to Heaven a few months earlier, which would turn out to be the one studio album
Davis would make with the lineup. Already, the band's adventurous, avant-garde leanings are on display with the young
Williams propelling
Davis to scorching heights on the fast swinger "Milestones." Similarly,
Hancock helps turn the standard "I Thought About You" into an impressionistic and free-flowing ballad allowing
Davis to spread wide swaths of tonal color and deep note bends across the stage. Although
Coleman would depart the group in less than a year, he proves himself here to be a muscular, keen improviser who deserved more attention than he got at the time. [The 2005 Columbia reissue of
Miles Davis in Europe includes one bonus track not available on the original LP as well as new liner notes from noted comic book scribe Harvey Pekar.] ~ Matt Collar