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Josh Morrison
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 3 พ.ย. 2008
Coyote Sighting in South Durham, North Carolina
Spotted a pack of Coyotes right in the heart of suburban Durham, NC.
มุมมอง: 1 916
วีดีโอ
Morrison @ Scotland Yard Blues Jam Hoboken
มุมมอง 19913 ปีที่แล้ว
Morrison @ Scotland Yard Blues Jam Hoboken
no one's never suffered
"u came out of slavery" is wild
Nn capisco una parola d inglese essendo un italiano che nn ha studiato. L inglese,ma ho tanta stima x quest' uomo e lo ammiro come musicista nn ne arriverà presto 1 del suo calibro !!
Harry Reasoner. What a jack ass. The beginning of the white liberal media.
What pisses me off is that he did not finish his thought because od this idiotic question
Miles was so cool that whenever he spoke the room temperature dropped a few degrees.
THIS IS MAKING MY MIND MELLLLLLTTTTT!!!!!!!
This guy really knows how to wail!!!
miles at his best. for 1:09. I'm surprised it took that long. at least he wasn't playing.
An instrument doesn't care what color you were Miles....you got talent you got talent....this man was a master musician,but he focused too much on the white/black thing...
He's impressively cool considering the interviewer asks such a dumb question.
amen to that
what a stupid interviewer, gosh
If feel if Miles Davis was born on this era he probably would've been a dope ass hip hop producer/beatmaker pierre bourne type shit
Miles was the prototypical hip hop creator 50 years ahead of the curve, playing original sounds, cherrypicking top talent regardless of race or resume, trusting his own ears, and shaping the course of pop music for decades to come. Miles didn't give a fuck about labels and didn't give a fuck about industry marketing. He told his story through his music. Interviews like this one were irritating at best. If you were hip you got a great interview, but he tried even with the Harry Reasoners. Forgive them Oh Lord, they know not how uncool they are. I've been listening for 60 fucking years, cat still blows me away. Miles was vastly imperfect So what. His multiple imperfections enhance his music. You wanna taste? Check out his late 70s and 80s soundboards esp. Montreux. Right here on YT. Fuck the studio crap. Search or Miles and bassists Michael Henderson, Darryl Jones, Marcus Miller. Check out Miles with Al Foster + Mino Cinelu. The live shit from 50 years ago still paces the field. Not to mention his huge output from the 40s-60s offer entirely different and extraordinary worlds to explore.Lifetimes of great music from an extraordinary musician and a unique inspirational force unbound by cliches and unbowed by expectations. Do your ears a favor. Dig Miles.
miles face when the interviwer said "slavery" was instan fucking teneously
i thought lagging behind the beat was what black music does, I'm so confused.
White socialists convinced themselves for the myth they have created
Yeah I agree it’s different. But it becomes a problem when ppl judges the difference in the music.
In other words that's not it has nothing to do with oppression
1:03 your notification made me suffer
Another name for this video could be "Interviewer at his worst"
The lil Wayne of the 50s.
What’s the song he plays at the end?
So What
The best
He had an operation on his throat to remove a non-cancerous polyp.
Interviewer is cringe. Not really interested in listening rather than reinforcing narrative he already has floating in his empty head.
These are the dumbest interview questions I have ever heard. What a complete retard
Wow, the resemblance with Seal is huge
Is this lil waynes grandpa?
Sounds racist, thats his best?
Sounds like a cheap crack pot on fire
Way to go, saying blacks play to the beat "thanks" to slavery
What kind of question is that?
He definitely suffered.
Wokeness batted down by Miles Davis....
What an idiotic question.
The word slave comes from Slavic... (White people). We're all slaves.
Might be the dumbest question I ever heard
Legend. Cant live without his music. Not a day.
Amen
Sadio Mane
The music. Understanding and feeling the beat are a gift and an art. Far and few in between truly have this. And I agree with Miles - many people come in late or early or don’t come in at all on the beat. Some get it naturally and some work on it. The greatest call it having the art. And you cannot deny that. It is not a racial split but definitely character and personality are what permeate the expression. And that can be genetic and cultural. Nothing to do with struggle or pain, of past or present generations. I see few comments here on the subject that Miles was talking about- music. I see a lot more about the social concerns and that is what he is saying music is not about. This is the philosophy of Miles. The music is the most important and capricious subject. It was Miles and his music. He was a genius. And yet folks focus on his success. That is the least of his legacy. Listen closely to every note. That is where the gift of Miles rests.
How old could he be in that interview? It feels like he’s much younger that his voice would suggest
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Chimp musician
Chimpanzee
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Lmao subhuman
It's really strange to me how people assume good music, and honestly all art to a degree, can *only* come from people who are absolutely miserable. Like if your writing music about that, it kinda helps. Most people who are sad all the time like playing music because it's a form of escapism. It's hard to think about xyz bad thing in your life in the middle of ripping a saxophone solo. People play music for the same reason, it's fun, and it can make money sometimes if your good enough at. Ya know, like any hobby.
Your daddy's rich and my mama's good lookin' So hush little baby, don't you cry