A Tribute to Miles
1994 jazz album
A Tribute to Miles | ||||
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Studio album / Live album A celebration of the life & music of Miles Davis by Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter, Ron Carter, Wallace Roney and Tony Williams | ||||
Released | March 22, 1994 | |||
Recorded | September 19, 1992; 1994 | |||
Venue | Berkeley Community Theatre | |||
Studio | Signet/Soundworks, Los Angeles | |||
Genre | Jazz, jazz fusion | |||
Length | 59:57 | |||
Label | Qwest/Reprise/Warner Bros. | |||
Producer | Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter, Tony Williams, Ron Carter | |||
Herbie Hancock chronology | ||||
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Wayne Shorter chronology | ||||
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Ron Carter chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [1] |
The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings | [2] |
A Tribute to Miles is a tribute album recorded by the then surviving members of the Miles Davis "Second Great" Quintet: pianist Herbie Hancock, saxophonist Wayne Shorter, bassist Ron Carter and drummer Tony Williams. Taking the Davis role was trumpeter Wallace Roney.[1]
This album won all five men the Grammy Award for Best Jazz Instrumental Performance, Individual or Group at the 37th Annual Grammy Awards.[3]
Track listing
- "So What" (Live) (Miles Davis) - 10:20
- "RJ" (Ron Carter) - 4:06
- "Little One" (Herbie Hancock) - 7:20
- "Pinocchio" (Wayne Shorter) - 5:44
- "Elegy" (Tony Williams) - 8:42
- "Eighty One" (Miles Davis, Ron Carter) - 7:31
- "All Blues" (Live) (Miles Davis) - 15:14
Source:[1]
Personnel
Musicians
- Herbie Hancock – piano, calliope
- Wayne Shorter – tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone
- Wallace Roney – trumpet
- Ron Carter – bass
- Tony Williams – drums
Production
- Herbie Hancock – producer
- Wayne Shorter – producer
- Ron Carter – producer
- Tony Williams – producer, liner notes
- Suzy Gaal – associate producer
- Tony Meilandt – executive producer
- James Heffernan – executive producer
- Bob Skye – engineer (live recording: tracks 1, 7)
- Tomoo Suzuki – engineer (studio recording: tracks 2-6, mixing)
- Allen Sides – engineer (mixing)
- Bernie Grundman – engineer (mastering)
- Manny LaCarrubba – assistant engineer
- Tom Hardisty – assistant engineer
- Dave Hecht – assistant engineer
- Eric Rudd – assistant engineer
- Mark Gilbeault – assistant engineer
- Rall Rogut – assistant engineer
- Hiroyuki Arakawa – photography
- Yohji Yamamoto – costume design
- Maxine Van-Cliffe Arakawa – art direction
- Takashi Ohmura – hair & make-up
- Dirk Walter – package design, illustration
References
- ^ a b c Yanow, Scott. "A Tribute to Miles". AllMusic. Retrieved 21 October 2018.
- ^ Cook, Richard; Morton, Brian (2008). The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings (9th ed.). Penguin. p. 643. ISBN 978-0-141-03401-0.
- ^ "1994 Grammy Winners". grammy.com. Recording Academy. Retrieved October 25, 2020.
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Years given are for the recording(s), not first release, unless stated otherwise.
- Verses (1987)
- Intuition (1988)
- The Standard Bearer (1989)
- Obsession (1990)
- Seth Air (1991)
- A Tribute to Miles (with Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter, Ron Carter, and Tony Williams, 1992 & 1994)
- Munchin' (1993)
- Crunchin' (1993)
- Mistérios (1994)
- The Wallace Roney Quintet (1995)
- Village (1996)
- No Room for Argument (2000)
- Prototype (2004)
- Mystikal (2005)
- Jazz (2007)
- Home (2010)
- Understanding (2012)
- A Place in Time (2016)
- Blue Dawn-Blue Nights (2018)
- If Only for One Night (2009)
- The Jazz Messengers
- Superblue
- Antoine Roney (brother)
- Geri Allen (wife)
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