All copies of this title, including those transferred to portable devices and other media, must be deleted/destroyed at the end of the lending period.
Description
Miles to Go is a frank and intimate exploration of Davis’s eccentric working life, drug habits, paranoia, depression, and subsequent recovery. Murphy explores Davis’s troubled relationship with his children and the controversial role Cicely Tyson played in his life. The book also delves into the dynamics that made Davis’s band work so well together, placing Davis’s work in a historic, literary, and musical framework.
Willie Nelson, Mick Jagger, Jimi Hendrix, and a very unlikely Mother Teresa all have walk-on parts in this engaging, intelligent, and often hilarious narrative. Miles to Go takes us from the small seedy jazz clubs that Davis frequented to the world tours, and then finally to Davis’s triumphant return with his celebrated concerts at Lincoln Center in the early 1980s.
Through anecdotes and personal recollections, narrator Patrick Lawlor presents Chris Murphy's remembrances of jazz great Miles Davis. Lawlor's voice is friendly and inviting, sounding as excited and delighted as if he were Murphy, getting the chance to go on the adventure of a lifetime, as techie, roadie, and personal assistant to the trumpeter. As a white man allowed into the mercurial Davis's inner circle, Murphy's view presents a more humane, less intimidating vision of Davis, very personal and perhaps somewhat skewed (if other accounts are to be believed), but never dull. While Lawlor's narration makes Davis seem a bit too ingenuous, he reveals a man who was openhearted and generous as well as depressive and unpredictable, a man who had "something unearthly about him." S.J.H. (c) AudioFile 2007, Portland, Maine
About the Author
Chris Murphy worked closely with Miles Davis from 1973 to 1976, first as a crew member and later as his road manager. He then returned to Davis’s employ in 1981 when Davis staged his comeback tour. Murphy lives in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains.