2024.07.08 Matt Garrison on 1981 Miles Davis - 1 of 3

2024.07.08 Matt Garrison on 1981 Miles Davis - 1 of 3

Author: Small Media Large July 28, 2024 Duration: 1:01:30
People love to talk about Miles Davis reinventing himself and reinventing the music.  They talk about the First Great Quintet in the fifties, the Second Great Quintet in the sixties, the Lost Quintet of 1969, maybe of the electric bands that followed (although often not).  What do they almost never talk about? In 1981, Miles hadn't performed in public, hadn't released a new album, and had barely touched his horn in 5 years (consider that for a moment!).     How does a legend go from a standing start to a full-on touring and recording schedule overnight?    How does he address the way the music has changed (partly from his influence)?   Who is he going to have in his band? What music are they going to play?     So many questions!   Bassist/impresario Matt Garrison saw this band when they first played in Rome.  Deep Focus host Mitch Goldman saw the same band at their first appearance in New York City.  Both were enthralled by what they saw and heard.  On Deep Focus this Monday night (7/8), you will listen to that Rome concert with them.  Mitch has "so many questions!" for Matt about this experience.   It's on WKCR 89.9FM, WKCR-HD or wkcr.org Monday from 6pm to 9pm NYC time.  Or join us next week when it goes up on the Deep Focus podcast on your favorite podcasting app or at https://mitchgoldman.podbean.com/.  Either way, it's ad-free, all free, totally non-commercial.  Find out more about Deep Focus at https://mitchgoldman.com/about-deep-focus/ or join us onInstagram at deep_focus_podcast.   Photo credit: Miles Davis 1981 by David D. Spitzer - courtesy of the Smithsonian Institution, used with the principles of fair use under Section 108 of the U.S. Copyright Act -  NMAAHC-2012_164_127_001   #WKCR #JazzAlternatives #DeepFocus #MattGarrison #MilesDavis  #MitchGoldman #JazzInterview #JazzPodcast #JazzRadio

Mitch Goldman, from Small Media Large, sits down with a different working musician each week for Deep Focus. The premise is beautifully simple yet endlessly revealing: together, they dive into rare archival recordings-bootlegs, demo tapes, lost studio sessions-of an artist the guest deeply admires. This isn't a standard interview format. Instead, you're listening in on a shared, intimate listening session between two knowledgeable fans. The conversation flows from technical dissection of a guitar tone to personal stories about how a particular live bootleg soundtracked a pivotal life moment. You'll hear the crackle of a vintage tape as Mitch and his guest pause, rewind, and marvel at a forgotten vocal take or an experimental arrangement that never made the official album. This podcast lives in the spaces between the famous tracks, uncovering the raw, unpolished moments that often reveal an artist's true process and passion. It’s for anyone who believes the magic isn't just in the finished product, but in the journey of how it got there. Each episode of Deep Focus feels like being invited into a private club where the sole entry fee is a genuine love for music's hidden corners.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 100

Deep Focus
Podcast Episodes
2026.01.19 Mazz Swift on Butch Morris - 3 of 3 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:01:39
Improvisation is considered a high art form for an instrumentalist, but what about for a composer? Is it even possible to create a piece of music for an ensemble, and to hear it performed in real time? How would you go a…
2026.01.19 Mazz Swift on Butch Morris - 2 of 3 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:07:33
Improvisation is considered a high art form for an instrumentalist, but what about for a composer? Is it even possible to create a piece of music for an ensemble, and to hear it performed in real time? How would you go a…
2026.01.19 Mazz Swift on Butch Morris - 2 of 3 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:07:33
Improvisation is considered a high art form for an instrumentalist, but what about for a composer? Is it even possible to create a piece of music for an ensemble, and to hear it performed in real time? How would you go a…
2026.01.19 Mazz Swift on Butch Morris - 1 of 3 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:05:48
Improvisation is considered a high art form for an instrumentalist, but what about for a composer? Is it even possible to create a piece of music for an ensemble, and to hear it performed in real time? How would you go a…
2026.01.05 Jay Rodriguez on Jim Pepper - 3 of 3 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:04:04
Meet me at Edge City. Isn't that place where worlds collide the only one where new ideas are ever generated? Saxophonist Jim Pepper knew all about these cultural collisions. His band Free Spirits was arguably the first t…
2026.01.05 Jay Rodriguez on Jim Pepper - 2 of 3 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:08:18
Meet me at Edge City. Isn't that place where worlds collide the only one where new ideas are ever generated? Saxophonist Jim Pepper knew all about these cultural collisions. His band Free Spirits was arguably the first t…
2026.01.05 Jay Rodriguez on Jim Pepper - 1 of 3 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:05:38
Meet me at Edge City. Isn't that place where worlds collide the only one where new ideas are ever generated? Saxophonist Jim Pepper knew all about these cultural collisions. His band Free Spirits was arguably the first t…
2025.12.22 Will Calhoun on Jack DeJohnette - 3 of 3 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 57:22
Plate tectonics, this idea that the very surface of the earth is not an unyielding solid, but a set of independent segments in a constant state of flow, was not always accepted as truth. It was only developed in 1967, bu…
2025.12.22 Will Calhoun on Jack DeJohnette - 2 of 3 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:09:46
Plate tectonics, this idea that the very surface of the earth is not an unyielding solid, but a set of independent segments in a constant state of flow, was not always accepted as truth. It was only developed in 1967, bu…
2025.12.22 Will Calhoun on Jack DeJohnette - 1 of 3 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:01:41
Plate tectonics, this idea that the very surface of the earth is not an unyielding solid, but a set of independent segments in a constant state of flow, was not always accepted as truth. It was only developed in 1967, bu…