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E.S.P. (Miles Davis album)

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E.S.P.
Studio album by
ReleasedAugust 16, 1965[1]
RecordedJanuary 20–22, 1965
StudioColumbia (Hollywood)
Genre
Length48:05
LabelColumbia
CL 2350 (Mono)
CS 9150 (Stereo)
ProducerIrving Townsend
Miles Davis chronology
My Funny Valentine
(1965)
E.S.P.
(1965)
Miles in Berlin
(1965)

E.S.P. is an album by Miles Davis, recorded on January 20–22, 1965 and released on August 16 of that year by Columbia Records. It is the first release from what is known as Davis's second great quintet: Davis on trumpet, Wayne Shorter on tenor saxophone, Herbie Hancock on piano, Ron Carter on bass, and Tony Williams on drums. The album was named after a tune by Shorter, and was inspired by the fact that, "since Wayne Shorter's arrival, the five members of the quintet seemed to communicate by mental telepathy."[1]

Background

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The album represented a departure from Davis's previous recordings in that it does not include any ballads or standards.[3] Davis contributed one composition ("Agitation", which the quintet would often play live,[4] as they did at the Plugged Nickel dates later that year), and co-wrote two pieces with Carter ("Eighty-One" and "Mood"). Carter also contributed "R.J.", while Hancock was represented by "Little One", which would appear on his album Maiden Voyage, recorded roughly two months later. Shorter, having been told to "bring the book" (referring to his growing book of original compositions),[5] is credited for the title track and "Iris". Originally, the rights to the title track were shared between Davis and Shorter, but Davis returned all the rights in later years.[5]

A number of the pieces on the album challenge standard 32-measure forms: "Mood", for example, has a 13-bar form, while "R.J." is 19 bars in length.[6] All of the pieces were either modified by Davis or collectively reworked by the group at the session.[7] Hancock recalled how Davis approached "Eighty-One": "Miles took the first two bars of melody notes and squished them together, and he took out other areas to leave a big space that only the rhythm section would play. To me, it sounded like getting to the essence of the composition. He'd take the inherent structure and leave us room to breathe and create something fresh every night. There were the basic elements of the song, but not used exactly as they were in the composition."[7]

E.S.P. was recorded at Columbia's Hollywood Studios following a falling-out between Davis and Teo Macero after the release of Quiet Nights.[8] It was the last album bearing a photo of Davis's then-wife Frances on the cover, as the couple would separate by the end of 1965 as a result of Davis's erratic and violent behaviour.[1][3]

Reception

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Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[2]
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music[9]
The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings [12]
Record Mirror[10]
The Rolling Stone Jazz Record Guide[11]
Down Beat[13]

Kenny Dorham reviewed the album in the December 1965 issue of DownBeat, awarding it 4.5 out of 5 stars, but commented: "Emotionally, as a whole, this one is lacking. It's mostly brain music... This type of music has that drone thing that I don't like, but because of the almost flawless presentation, I give five stars—but only four stars for the writing and effort—and no stars for the over-all sound. E.S.P. music in general is monotonous—one long drone."[14]

Recent commentators have been more positive overall. Stanley Crouch wrote: "the music still sounds fresh. The trumpeter was in superb form, able to execute quickstep swing at fleet tempi with volatile penetration, to put the weight of his sound on mood pieces, to rear his way up through the blues with a fusion of bittersweet joy and what Martin Williams termed 'communal anguish.' The rhythm section played with a looseness that pivots off Williams's cymbal splashes and unclinched rhythms, Carter walking some of the most impressive bass lines of the day, and Hancock developing his own version of the impressionism that Evans was making popular."[15] Davis biographer John Szwed wrote: "The mixture of the abstract and the earthy that Davis had so often seemed to be reaching for began to take shape with this record. Wayne Shorter's ease with indeterminate melodies and his eagerness to join the rhythm section in churning up the music to the point that it threatened to break loose from the traditions of jazz gave Davis the space he needed to reexamine his own playing."[7]

In a review for AllMusic, Stephen Thomas Erlewine commented: "ESP marks the beginning of a revitalization for Miles Davis, as his second classic quintet... gels, establishing what would become their signature adventurous hard bop. Miles had been moving toward this direction in the two years preceding the release of ESP and he had recorded with everyone outside of Shorter prior to this record, but his addition galvanizes the group, pushing them toward music that was recognizably bop but as adventurous as jazz's avant-garde. Outwardly, this music doesn't take as many risks as Coltrane or Ornette Coleman's recordings of the mid-'60s, but by borrowing some of the same theories -- a de-emphasis of composition in favor of sheer improvisation, elastic definitions of tonality -- they created a unique sound that came to define the very sound of modern jazz... The compositions are brilliantly structured as well, encouraging such free-form exploration with their elliptical yet memorable themes. This quintet may have cut more adventurous records, but ESP remains one of their very best albums."[2]

Brian Morton noted: "E.S.P. is... the first record on which Miles seems to be flirting with rock. 'Eighty-One' has a strong backbeat, and the kind of regular, repetitive bass line and percussion that was characteristic of funk, and still considered somewhat infra dig in jazz. Any suggestion that Miles only began to explore a rock idiom on 1970's Bitches Brew misses the mark by a good four years."[8]

Track listing

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Columbia – CS 9150[16]

Side one
No.TitleWriter(s)Recording sessionLength
1."E.S.P."Wayne ShorterJanuary 20, 19655:27
2."Eighty-One"Ron Carter, Miles DavisJanuary 21, 19656:11
3."Little One"Herbie HancockJanuary 21, 19657:21
4."R.J."Ron CarterJanuary 20, 19653:56
Side two
No.TitleWriter(s)Recording sessionLength
1."Agitation"Miles DavisJanuary 22, 19657:46
2."Iris"Wayne ShorterJanuary 22, 19658:29
3."Mood"Ron Carter, Miles DavisJanuary 22, 19658:50
Total length:48:05

Personnel

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Technical

References

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  1. ^ a b c "E.S.P." MilesDavis.com. Retrieved April 4, 2021.
  2. ^ a b c Erlewine, Stephen Thomas E.S.P. review allmusic.com. Retrieved on 2015-11-23.
  3. ^ a b Cartwright, Garth (2012). "A New Energy: 1964-1968". Miles Davis: The Complete Illustrated History. Voyageur Press. p. 122.
  4. ^ Waters, Keith (2011). The Studio Recordings of the Miles Davis Quintet, 1965–68. Oxford University Press. p. 84.
  5. ^ a b Mercer, Michelle (2004). Footprints - The Life and Works of Wayne Shorter. Penguin Group. p. 101.
  6. ^ Waters, Keith (2011). The Studio Recordings of the Miles Davis Quintet, 1965–68. Oxford University Press. pp. 83–84.
  7. ^ a b c Szwed, John (2002). So What: The Life of Miles Davis. Random House. p. 252.
  8. ^ a b Morton, Brian (2005). Miles Davis. HopeRoad.
  9. ^ Larkin, Colin (2007). The Encyclopedia of Popular Music (4th ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195313734.
  10. ^ Jones, Peter; Jopling, Norman (13 November 1965). "Miles Davis: E.S.P." (PDF). Record Mirror. No. 244. p. 8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 April 2022. Retrieved 18 August 2022.
  11. ^ Swenson, J., ed. (1985). The Rolling Stone Jazz Record Guide. USA: Random House/Rolling Stone. p. 58. ISBN 0-394-72643-X.
  12. ^ Cook, Richard; Morton, Brian (2008). The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings (9th ed.). Penguin. p. 346. ISBN 978-0-141-03401-0.
  13. ^ Down Beat: December 30, 1965 vol. 32, no. 27
  14. ^ Dorham, Kenny (December 30, 1965). "Review of Miles Davis, E.S.P.". DownBeat. p. 34.
  15. ^ Crouch, Stanley (2007). Considering Genius: Writings on Jazz. Civitas Books.
  16. ^ "Miles Davis – E.S.P." Discogs. Retrieved February 4, 2017.