Perhaps even more so than his '70s fusion period, trumpeter
Miles Davis' recordings for Warner Bros. from the '80s sharply divided audiences. If 1970's
Bitches Brew forced jazz fans to take sides in the debate over what qualifies as jazz, albums like 1986's
Tutu and 1989's
Amandla were dismissed outright by the jazz police as over-produced pop albums that bore little if any resemblance to
Davis' classic recordings of the '50s and '60s. Despite such backlash from the elite,
Tutu earned
Davis a Grammy Award, and his records from this era often sold better than his previous, more reverent albums. Long in gestation, the 2015 eight-disc
Miles Davis box set
The Last Word: The Warner Bros. Years brings together all of the albums the trumpeter recorded for Warner Bros. from 1986 to 1991, plus various live recordings. Originally planned for release as far back as 2001, issues with the
Davis estate meant the collection went unreleased. Instead, the label released several similar collections, including 2010's Perfect Way and 2011's 1986-1991: The Warner Years. While those sets offered useful thumbnail-sketch versions of
Davis' career with Warner, they are not the complete picture that is
The Last Word. Choosing for various reasons to part ways with his longtime label Columbia,
Davis signed with Warner Bros. in 1985. Coming out of the tail end of his electric fusion period of the '70s and early '80s,
Davis embarked on what would be his final creative period, recording and performing right up until his death in September 1991. A fruitful time for
Davis, albums included here like
Tutu,
Amandla, and
Doo-Bop found him utilizing modern technology such as computerized loops and overdubs. Working with a bevy of talented younger musicians including bassist
Marcus Miller and guitarist
John Scofield,
Davis continued to embrace a cross-genre aesthetic, delving further into funk and hip-hop, and even collaborating with post-punk outfits like
Scritti Politti (whose "Perfect Way" he covered on
Tutu). Also included are
Davis' soundtracks for the films Siesta and
Dingo, the latter of which found him reuniting with composer
Michel Legrand.
Davis' Warner years also found him at the apex of his return to the stage, and to that end, this collection includes three discs of live recordings, the most notable being the storied 1991 Montreux concert with
Quincy Jones in which he revisited his classic
Gil Evans arrangements. Recorded months before his death, the Montreux concert impossibly brought
Davis' relentlessly forward-thinking career full circle. Ultimately, while
Davis' Warner years will probably never appeal to the jazz police, they reveal an artist who remained a maverick until the end. ~ Matt Collar