Who was that famous trumpet man from out Chicago way?!


Question: Who was that famous trumpet man from out Chicago way!?
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Answers:
That's interesting, and thanks for the video!. I like that song!.Www@Enter-QA@Com

You're probably referring to MILES DAVIS

Miles Davis

This Illinois native came from a middle-class family that moved to Chicago form East St!. Louis, Ill!., where he grew up and started studying trumpet at 12!. He got his first musical jobs in high school, and was inspired when he saw Billy Eckstine's big band with Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker!. He went to New York to attend the Juilliard School of Music, but found his real education working in jazz clubs with Charlie Parker and joining Benny Carter's and Billy Eckstine's band!. In the late 1940s, he organized a nonet that performed arrangements by Gil Evans, Gerry Mulligan and others that led to the recordings known as "The Birth of the Cool" and to the West Coast style of jazz!. However, he developed a drug problem that made him unreliable, and ultimately went back home to quit heroin cold turkey!. He recorded a number of classic albums for the Prestige label, and after his performance at the Newport Jazz Festival in 1955, he was signed to Columbia Records!. For that label, he made a number of celebrated albums arranged by Gil Evans and with his small groups!. He experimented with modal playing, and the result was the biggest-selling album in jazz history, "Kind of Blue," which still sells well after over 40 years!. He collaborated with such greats as Cannonball Adderley, John Coltrane, and Wynton Kelly in a celebrated quintet!. Late in the 1960s, he started working with eletric instruments, and this would ultimately lead to his work with fusion and jazz-rock, which bothered many older jazz fans but attracted younger listeners!. After a car accident and a hip replacement, he stopped recording for five years!. In his last years, his approach had gained more fans, and he experimented with covers of pop songs by Cyndi Lauper and Michael Jackson, as well as with rap!. However, he surprised many just weeks before his death by doing something he had never done; at the Montreux Jazz Festival, he went back to some of his older music by performing some of the arrangements that Gil Evans had written for him decades before!. Not long after, he was dead at 65!. However, the innovative and expressive music found in all the styles of Miles Davis will certainly live as long as people are around to hear it, and he continues to gain new fans and to influence jazz musicians!.


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