An indispensable and entertaining look at the musical giant in his more mundane moments.
Miles and Me
Narrated by Richard Allen
Quincy TroupeUnabridged — 5 hours, 35 minutes
Miles and Me
Narrated by Richard Allen
Quincy TroupeUnabridged — 5 hours, 35 minutes
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Overview
Editorial Reviews
Troupe seems to have penetrated the jazz legend's prickly exterior. Miles and Me seduces with hilariously mundane anecdotes.
Troupe's book will keep Davis fans happy.
Introduces us to the moody genius of the jazz trumpeter and paints a candid portrait-full of imperfections and color-that gives us a rare window into Davis' world.
[Troupe] gives the stories behind the collaboration, from his own introduction to Davis's music in the 1950s-and to Davis's stature as 'an unreconstructed black man'-up to Davis's death in 1991
Using refreshingly unscholarly language, poet and literature professor Troupe paints an aptly minimalist portrait of the artist as a man-child in both his musical curiosity and his irrational tantrums. Miles and Me is witheringly honest and deeply perceptive. A must-read for Davis devotees. A-
Many memoirs of friendships with famous people tend toward the sycophantic and predictable, but Quincy Troupe's Miles and Me is a vivid, complicated tribute to the legendary jazz musician.
Growing up in St. Louis, Mo., in the 1950s, Troupe idolized jazz trumpeter Miles Davis, seeing him as an alternative to his own white-dominated neighborhood and high school. Miles, as a successful black man embodying all that was hip and proud, was a favorite role model for Troupe and his friends. Thirty years later, Troupe met his hero, and eventually collaborated with him on Miles: The Autobiography. Now he's documented his relationships with man and music in this slim, conversational volume. In casual, sentimental language ridden with gossipy details about Miles's Italian designer clothes, Troupe notes every interaction between Miles and himself that preceded their collaboration and relates favorite vignettes from that project. But what's notable about these anecdotes is how banal they are, from a story about an incompetent roadie, whom Miles predicted would drop everything because he "walked out of tempo," to Troupe's reflections on Miles's habit of hurling harsh insults at strangers who approached him. Although Miles's fans may be happy to read sketches from his life, this book works more as a commentary on the phenomenon of devoted fandom than as another biography of the trumpeter. The book's third section, in which Troupe (now a professor of literature at UC-San Diego) writes about how Miles affected his own coming-of-age, is by far the most compelling, because it deals with the emotional effects music can have upon its listeners--which is, after all, both the cause and the most lyrical side of fandom. 16 b&w photos not seen by PW. (Mar.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|
Miles Davis's open-mindedness toward innovation (musically and personally) set an example that inspired many of his listeners. He made young blacks in particular feel special and free; and some, like Troupe (Choruses, Avalanche), were able to use their imaginations in ways not probable without Davis. Pithy and succinct (one wishes he had written twice as much), Troupe continues to flesh out and demystify Davis in this follow-up to their collaboration, Miles: The Autobiography (LJ 10/1/89), and the Miles Davis Radio Project (a multipart radio series). Filled with "Milesian" humor and off-color language (those sensitive to gratuitous swearing may find this an arduous read), Troupe's book reveals Davis as profoundly, artistically sensitive yet maddeningly mean-spirited and rude. From his teenaged impressions during the 1950s to his mature, deeper reflections at the time of Davis's passing, numerous vignettes clearly show that a rewarding and richly hued relationship had developed between the two men. Recommended for public and academic libraries.--William Kenz, Moorhead State Univ. Lib., MN Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.\
Miles and Me is witheringly honest and deeply perceptive. A must-read for Davis devotees.
Entertainment Weekly
"Brilliant, poetic, provocative, Quincy Troupe's Miles and Me reveals the man behind the dark glasses and legend." —Ishmael Reed
"Using refreshingly unscholarly language, poet and literature professor Troupe paints an aptly minimalist portrait of the artist as a man-child in both his musical curiosity and his irrational tantrums. Miles and Me is witheringly honest and deeply perceptive. A must-read for Davis devotees." —Entertainment Weekly
"[Troupe] gives the stories behind the collaboration, from his own introduction to Davis's music in the1950s—and to Davis's stature as 'an unreconstructed black man'—up to Davis's death in 1991..." —New York Times Book Review
"Troupe is a wonderfully astute judge of human behavior and brings a poet's acuteness of vision to depicting Davis's aura of intimidation and kingly power. He is also well aware of Davis's deeply felt loneliness, the terrible solitude of genius." —Kirkus Reviews
"It has been said that Miles Davis was a great poet on his instrument. In a similar vein, it can be said that Quincy Troupe is a great instrument in his poetic delivery. As fate would have it, these two very talented individuals would form a mutual and intriguing bond. Miles and Me, Quincy Troupe's latest book, is a honest, serious and sometimes hilarious memoir of his warm and cherished friendship with Miles Davis." —Larvester Gaither, QBR The Black Book Review
Product Details
BN ID: | 2940174034914 |
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Publisher: | Dreamscape Media |
Publication date: | 09/25/2018 |
Edition description: | Unabridged |
Read an Excerpt
From the book:
"Listening to Miles play, I was always conscious way before I met him of being in the presence of a great poet, one who constructed great metaphors through the medium of sound. His voice is very close to that of a human voice. It was a mysterious voice that made me dream."