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About: “Free Radicals of Innovation DVD”

“The Free Radicals of Innovation is Awesome, Awesome, Awesome! Your training Documentation is very well done and effective. I'll be using it with my Small Business Management class tomorrow.”
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Oregon Small Business Development Center, Coos Bay, Oregon

Music

Miles Davis - Live from the Montreal Jazz Festival
from Geneon [Pioneer]

Miles Davis - Live from the Montreal Jazz Festival

How bad were the 1980s in music? Not even jazz great Miles Davis could escape the black hole. The decade that saw synthesizers and slick approaches ruin pop music somehow caught the master trumpet player's ear and resulted in one of Davis's poorest periods. Of course, Davis was lucky to even be alive during the '80s, surviving sickness and drug abuse, and this hour-long performance, shot during the 1985 Montreal Jazz Festival, shows a performer looking happy just to be playing. Appearing thin and sickly, Davis and his six-piece fusion outfit run through six tunes, none coming close to the trumpet player's past experimental achievements. Songs like “One Phone Call“ are long, metallic funk jams that nonetheless give Davis plenty of room to maneuver in spirited solos, when the rhythm section and keyboards aren't drowning him out. Davis also reinvents pop hits of the era--ballads like Michael Jackson's “Human Nature“ (from Thriller) and Cyndi Lauper's “Time After Time,“ but they come across more like soulless “smooth jazz.“ Still, on all of the numbers, if you can block out everything else and simply focus in on Davis's trumpet, the aging great possessed the ability to mesmerize, even in his down years. Despite the lack of terrific music material, this DVD is wonderfully packaged. The Milestones Biographical Time Line is a great source to introduce beginners to Davis's legacy, while the extensive liner notes on each individual song performed in Montreal are equally impressive. --Dave McCoy

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