August 14, 1947—Miles Davis, a 21-year-old Julliard School dropout who had achieved a steady reputation as a trumpeter in the trendy bebop scene,
gave signs of his future greatness as bandleader by helming his first
recording session, with mentor Charlie Parker taking a subordinate role on tenor sax.
On that groundbreaking session, Davis played with,
besides Parker, John Lewis on piano and Max Roach on drums. Two Davis
compositions were recorded: “Half Nelson” and “Milestones.”
(The latter, according to critic Gary Giddens’
account in Visions of Jazz: The First Century, contained “so many harmonic bottlenecks that Parker insisted he’d
play just the bridge because the tune was too hard for a country boy like him.”)
In the clubs dotting New York’s 52nd
Street the last couple of years, shifts in jazz were occurring with unusual
rapidity, overwhelmingly centered around Parker. Musicians were in awe of
“Bird,” but his drug addiction was also causing fissures in the community.
Friend Dizzy Gillespie, despairing
over Bird’s substance abuse, left the band. Gillespie’s replacement, Davis, learned what
he could from Diz while the latter was still around, but, realizing he could never match the older musician’s
power, strove for his own, more personal, more lyrical tone.
In all of this, Davis was encouraged by Parker, who,
when the shy young man from St. Louis first came to New York, urged him to get
up and play: “Go ahead. Don’t be afraid.”
Davis had tried imitating Parker’s
sound at first, but, finding it impossible, determined to “play under him, and
let him lead the note, swing the note.”
A series of gigs followed, including an
especially crucial one with the group Parker formed in April 1947, featuring
Davis; Duke Jordan, piano; Tommy Porter, bass; and Max Roach, drums.
Just how much influence Parker exerted on Davis’
life is a matter of some debate still. There is no doubt that, as Davis’ idol
when he came to New York—and first significant boss—he played a big part.
But
critic Dan Morgenstern, in a 1980 retrospective on Davis included in his
anthology, Living With Jazz, suggested
that Parker might have paid the rent for his young musician and roommate.
This seems unlikely. Davis’ autobiography, Miles, is filled
with admiration for Parker as a creative force, but an almost scatological disgust
for his antics when in the grip of drugs:
“He wanted everything. And when he was desperate for
a fix of heroin, man, Bird would do anything
to get it. He would con me and as soon as he left me, he would run around the
corner to somebody else with the same sad story about how he needed money to
get his horn out of the pawnshop, and hit them up for some more. He never paid
anyone back, so in that way Bird was a [expletive] drag to be around.”
Those sidemen
included many, if not most, of the nonpareil jazzmen of the last half century,
including Bill Evans, Wayne Shorter, John Coltrane, Red Garland, Herbie
Hancock, and Ron Carter, to name just a few.
That account would seem to lay to rest any notion
that Parker could help others monetarily at a point when he could hardly help
himself.
In another sense, though, Davis didn’t recognize the
exquisite irony that he could be just as much high-maintenance—perhaps even
more so—than Parker. His interactions with his sidemen were more than a little
similar to Bird’s.
His band members, like Parker’s, depended more than a little on his health. He had a heroin addiction of his own so harrowing that
he needed to leave New York for his father’s farm in Illinois to break it cold
turkey.
In the 1960s, he discovered he suffered from sickle-cell anemia; in the
mid-1970s, continuing health problems (including an addiction to cocaine this
time) led him to withdraw from music.
If Parker’s personality could be bizarre at times,
Davis’ was extraordinarily complex. His irascibility and general willingness to
irk people at times just for the hell of it inspired the nickname “Prince of
Darkness.”
Yet, like Bird again, his skill as a musician was
such that band members were willing to tolerate the sullenness—if they could
get past points of enforced inactivity because of his health. (Not everyone
could do this.)
Those who did stay the course with Miles testified to his willingness
to give them creative freedom—and, surprisingly, for those who only knew that
low voice growling expletives at every turn, he could be sensitive and
kind, inviting them to his house, where he would cook dinner and discuss music.
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