Added: 4 years ago
From: pedropregueiro
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  • Which version of "It Never Entered My Mind" is this? It sounds different than the album version. I've been looking everywhere for this particular one, but I can't find anything.

  • thanks thanks thanks for sharing...

  • The song is: Miles Davis - It Never Entered My Mind :)

  • Someone know the name of this song

  • Miles and Picasso met in Paris. I've never heard or read an account of what was exchanged between the two--even if it was through translators. Thanks for this video.

  • lol Miles wasn't no Picasso of jazz , he was a million times bigger than that.

    Picasso would be someone like tristrano.

  • Very Nice video

  • i take the man overall, and i see greatness defining us, RIP

  • Wunderbar!!!

  • Its his drug problems that helped put the emotion into his music

  • @brogelo21 I don't think so, drug did something, but it's his genius that really made his music so emotional. He knows music in a way not many musicians did or do even now.

  • The best video on youtube!

  • A jerk wouldn't be making such beautiful music to make you feel good, sounds like love so stop the hate,hate is why there is war and peace is why there is happiness so find peace with yourself and the world because it will only make it a better place.

  • Whether he was the picasso of jazz, but when thinking about the technicality and musicianship, he was an amazing trumpet player and musician

  • 2:46 ....whats that trumpet doing :P Oh Miles you sick man

  • Actually, I think Thelonious Monk was the Picasso of jazz. If anyone had a Cubist sound, it was Monk. Maybe Miles was Picasso's "Blue Period".

  • @comateensnyc

    i agree with you.

  • I guess he was full of himself if he really said "I've changed music four or five times - what have you done other than be white?" ...as long as it was everything just Jazz he didn't change that much I guess...people which invented Jazz itself...HipHop...Funk...Elect­ro...Rock...Reggae...a new genre is in my opinion to "change music" not just to collab with some other modern musicians and being racist...classical music is still from "white" people I guess but who cares?

  • @abaex there is no such thing as classical music, if you care to do your research, it is music which was played in the classic period, that's why people refer to it as classical music.

  • @skatersaxman but it seems to be used for a certain kind of genre...or how would you refer to music of that time? World-Music?

  • @abaex don't know

  • Beautiful tribute, and an even more beautiful choice of song which deftly illustrates Miles sensitivity.........excellent stuff Pedro. People can say what they like about Miles's personality but musically he gave us far more than he ever took away and that at the end of the day is all that matters.

  • Miles Davis and Arturo Sandoval are my favorite trumpet players. Different styles and both great.

  • Impresionante

  • 4099aj~I love this tune very much and so does my grandsons

  • When was it recorded? Witch year? Who's on piano? Sounds a little it different then R. Garland...

  • great song, great movie! congrats!

  • Great vid. That portrait at 1:12 is very cool.

  • It never entered my mind

  • Thanks for your wonderful video.

    Miles Davis "Kind of blue"

  • Miles Davis = inventor + innovator + artist

  • soothing as i am bathing under a beautiful waterfall or i am having coffe at a beach side cafe with my beloved

  • you should be ashamed of yourself for that comment. Miles invented cool jazz, modal jazz, and jazz fusion in 49, 59, and 69 respectively. The albums were called, Birth of the Cool, Kind of Blue, and Bitches Brew. If you don't bow to that kind of vision then your just a poseur anyway.

  • No! Miles is no Picasso of Jazz. Picasso is the Miles of Painting.

    Miles Davis>Picasso

  • @moonlightdriver800 OWNED LMAO

  • @moonlightdriver800 Spinner^^

  • @moonlightdriver800 Picasso is older along the human calendar and so by convention miles davis is picasso of jazz. well personally I would say miles is the dali of jazz. oh well.. beauty is in the eye of the beholder - we each got different tastes and I sure do love me some miles davis late at night

  • @moonlightdriver800 Probably Django is the Picasso of jazz - both from same era - and Hockney the Miles of painting... or should that read PIles of painting? Pain in the ass, anyway.

  • @zthetha I don't know who is who anymore...

    but to my consolation, at this time Django and Miles are jamming somewhere between Heaven and Hell, being painted by Picasso.

    Love Django too.

  • @moonlightdriver800 everything's a contest, ha? ...

  • Simply Devine Mr. Davis

  • ever since i heard davis´music, something in my soul has been vibrating and moving. i was 5 years old. that is 20 years ago now, and still i feel deeply touched by his music. i am a musician myself and i play many instruments on a high technical level, but i think i am still trying to figure out what made miles´music so wonderful, and every day i discover something new in it. greets, sia from germany

  • i think what your talking about is emotion. that is the diffrence between being ok and having amazing talent. the ability to really project your emotions and your soul into the music is a gift. its quite hard to teach that!!

  • I love Miles but the truth is if you didnt know him .....and ever met him in person he'd probably tell you "fuck out of my face!!" And I still think hes great ! thank you for the great video.

  • he might have needed some privacy and i beleive because of that he chose to vent in the way he did.but after reading his bio and listening to his interviews and collecting the majority of his works we still need him today more tha ever.please include trane as well

  • this is "It never entered my mind" i love this tune. he makes it so sad.Its brilliant.

  • jones2796, i have to desagree. Miles had his problems with drugs and all that, but musically speaking, he was a great trumpet player

  • I'm not saying he wasn't a great trumpet player and musician;I think that he was a genius. It's just that the way that he deliberately intimidated new trumpet players, the physical abuse he dished out to his wife, and his all around grumpy and abrasive attitude towards everyone in general makes me think of him as a jerk.

  • in response miles was a deplorable father and husband.but with respect to his fellow musicians he was very unselfish and gave them creative space.only with regard to blue in green ,it was bill evans who wrote that not miles.although miles took the credit.not neccessary.from dana

  • @pedropregueiro Yeah, doesn't matter too much what the man was like, if he could do this . . . sketches of spain is my favourite. Convinced me to take up the trumpet at the age of 23, lol.

  • @jones2796 I think you'll find most performers are jerks, its in their nature. But they never asked you to rate there personality, they only asked you to listen. You failed at that mate, you couldnt just listen to the music you had to pick into his personal life, which makes you just as bad as the papporazzi. :)

  • @jones2796 You knew him did you?

  • Miles Davis is a Motherfucker on the trumpet, always has and always will be.

  • lol

  • PedroP, that was a good video.

  • from reading miles davis' autobiography for the third time I think he sort of lost his creative search in the 70's and just wanted to stay a millionaire

  • well quite possibly he needed to always create and search yet at the same time do the same with making his fortune.he always knew how to keep everyone curios as to what he would do next.from dana

  • Great and true!

  • talkingwall, I couldn't agree more with you. Miles was simply Miles...

  • Clifford was great but in my opinion, and I've been listening to jazz for over 30 years, no one comes close to the incredible expressiveness and personal sound of Miles Davis and that goes for ANY instrument. Clifford was hot, so was Lee Morgan and Booker Little but when it comes to bearing the soul, there's no one like Miles.

  • Exactly. Miles Davis was a great contributor to Jazz. Everyone who knows a little about jazz, knows that. That's why he's called "The Picasso Of Jazz", because he reinvented himself and his sound endlessly in his musical quest.

  • Clifford Brown was great, but he stayed in one style that was already there, and he died young. He might have been a greater trumpet player than Miles, if you like, but his contribution to music is minimal compared to Miles.

  • Clifford was a greater technician but he certainly wasn't the artist and innovator that Miles was. Long live Miles!

  • if only clifford had lived he would have brought immense joy to his listeners.he was a beautiful man,and most of all stayed away from the drug scene.from dana

  • listen to clifford brown

  • Beautifull. What is the name of that cut ?

  • What cut? Didn't understand.

  • It Never Endterd My Mind

  • It Never Entered My Mind. That's from one of the Prestige records that the quintet made. I have the complete set so I don't recall which album it was released on. Maybe "Relaxin'"? I think that one was ballad heavy.

  • I've used this music from my "Ballads & Blues" CD, from "Blue Note".

  • Ballads and Blues is one of those repackage deals that the record companies have been doing with Miles and Trane. I did go back to my Miles collection (80+ discs) and found that he did record that tune in 1954 on the Blue Note label. You should check out that later version (Prestige) with Red Garland on piano.

  • Yes that is a beautiful version i think its on workin' with the miles davis quintet it might be better than this version

  • Miles accomplished much more than any jazz musician, he innovated and forged new trends in jazz, rock and funk. He is the only jazz musician ever to be inducted into the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame! He is the greatest of all time!

  • Trés émouvant! Je l'ai vu 5 fois sur scéne et ne m'en lassait jamais. La dernière fois était Wembley à Londres.

    J'aime le personage comme sa musique, comme sa peinture.

  • emouvant!....love him!!!!!! he was a Master!

  • Good job! Yep! The Picasso of jazz... Dan from Montreal

  • Thanks for your great tribute to Miles. I love him and miss him....

  • K, Miles Davis is definitely ONE of jazz's greatest trumpet players. Was he better than Wynton Marsalis? I don't know. Of course, there's also Gillespie and Satchmo. But Miles was still one of the best.

  • Did you compare Miles with Wynton Marsalis???? If miles could hear you he would be... revolcándose en en su tumba.

  • you guys {apparen}tly never heard of CLIFFORD BROWN

  • Wynton is a great classical trumpeter but he has no business playing jazz music.

  • Very well done video - excellent use of the photo stills.

  • What's the name on the song you use? Nice video!

  • Miles Davis - It Never Entered My Mind from the album Ballads & Blues

  • omg dont call him the greatest trumpet player of all time you are just silly

  • Why do you say that? Do you know a better one?

  • it has nothing to do with whos better man. thats the whole point.

  • Ok, you're right. But he is considered by many people as the best and i'm one of them.

  • There is no greatest but as far as comparing Miles to others, he took what he had and developed his own intimate, personal style. No one had ever done that before. He might not have been the greatest technician or hit all the notes in the extreme register, but that horn was an extension of the man's soul and everytime you get to hear it, you are looking right into his core essence. I think he is one of the very few musicians who's done that with soooo much honesty.

  • yes, a guy like Kenny Wheeler is far superior technically. But NOBODY had as intimate, deeply personal sound as Miles.

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