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The CALIBAN ARTS THEATRE in conjunction with BROWNMAN MUSIC INC.
proudly presents the 2009 - 4th Edition of:
.
 FIVE WEEKS FOR MILES
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Produced & directed by Brownman...|...Executive producer Frank Francis
@
Trane Studio
TraneStudio.com  (MAP)
964 Bathurst Street West, Toronto, Ontario, Canada  416.913.8197
Every friday in October 2009
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6:00 pm - open for dinner
8:00pm - show
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$20 at the door   |   $15 advance guest list
Please email Andrew McIntosh andrew@brownman.com to get on the advance guest list
(please include your name and phone number for a callback confirmation of the reservation)
or call 416.913.8197 to make a reeservation by phone
Table seating will be given preference to those with dinner reservations
on a first come first serve basis.  Those on the Advanced List should
arrive before 8:15pm to ensure good seating.
Dinner reservations are being taken & the Trane Studio
features some of the finest Caribbean cuisine in Toronto. 
See menu
Reservations: 416.913.8197 
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In 2009 there are 5 fridays in October.
Every friday multi-award winning trumpeter/composer
Brownman will lead 5 different all-star ensembles
through 5 historic eras of jazz which Miles Davis
catalyzed & immortalized with his presence.
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5 Fridays...    5 Ensembles...    5 Eras of Miles Davis...
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POSTER  (coming soon)
Brownman, when asked about the tribute and the musicians behind the music, states, "For those who appreciate jazz as a true art form, FIVE WEEKS FOR MILES represents a rare opportunity to understand it's greatest legend's career, where he could have gone and a reminder of what he might have meant to us today.  I'm truly honoured to be fronting this sequential tribute and performing with such a monsterous cross-section of players."  Brownman has put together a spectacular all-star cast for his production featuring everyone from Canadian jazz legends Pat Labarbera & Bob McLarene, to luminaries in his own generation such as Adrean Farrugia & Dave Restivo; to the best of the youngest new breed of jazz modernists like Tyler Emond & Colin KIngsmore.  This year will also feature a few New Yorkers with acclaimed pianist Chris Ziemba and most sought after drummer Aaron Staebell making the border crossing. "Whatever age, whatever background, whatever colour - we're all going to be giving all of ourselves over to Miles’ music… to try and do the man and his vision justice”, Brownman concludes.









Week 1 - Fri Oct 2, 2009
"Young Miles"  -  The Bird Years
 At 17 years of age Miles would travel across the river from his home in East St. Louis, Illinois to St. Louis, Missouri to hear well-known jazz musicians play in clubs.  Mesmerized by their talent and style, he would listen to their all night jam sessions until Charlie "Bird" Parker arrived in St. Louis with the Billy Eckstine Band in 1944.  Bird was the creative force behind a new form of jazz later to be dubbed "bebop" and the young Miles would become fascinated with it's complex melodic and harmonic structure leading Miles to follow Bird across the country until he was allowed to substitute for his trumpet player at the time - Dizzy Gillespie.  His tenure as Bird's sideman would most exemplify this hard-swinging period of his life.
Brownman Ali - trumpet (National Jazz Award winner)
Bobby Brough - alto sax (acclaimed jazz artist)
Chris Ziemba - piano (up from NYC!!)
Ross MacIntyre - upright bass (Matt Dusk)
Bob McLaren - drums (Canadian jazz legend)

Week 2 - Fri Oct 9, 2009
"Birth Of The Cool & Kind Of Blue"  -  Post-Bop Miles
 The term "cool" came to particular prominence in the 1950s to describe a more cerebral, less impassioned way of playing jazz. It's generally supposed that these sessions were part of the inspiration for the 'cool school' of jazz which flourished, particularly on the West Coast, in the 50s.  Miles would confound the public's expectations by departing the bop world of Charlie Parker and embracing this new order of jazz as heard on "Birth Of The Cool" (Capitol Records, '49).  This 'cooler' form of expression would gradually over the next 10 years lead to the modal approaches of "Kind Of Blue" (Columbia, '59) free of fixed harmony and the now legendary collaboration with the then rising tenor saxophone icon John Coltrane.
Brownman Ali - trumpet (National Jazz Award winner)
Pat Labarbera - tenor sax (Canadian jazz legend)
Adrean Farrugia - piano (National Jazz Award nominee)
Jon Maharaj - upright bass (just back from NYC!)
Anthony Michelli - drums (Juno Award nominee)
The first set will focus on the "Birth Of The Cool" beginnings of this era... 
the second set will emphasize the "Kind Of Blue" approaches

Week 3 - Fri Oct 16, 2009
"Plugged Nickel"  -  The Shorter Years
 Two quintets in particular featuring 2 tenor saxophone giants dominated Miles' musical life almost exclusively from the mid 50's, right up until the 70's, one featuring John Coltrane and the other featuring Wayne Shorter. This period would feature an assortment of quintets and sextets all pushing the boundaries of improvisation within a simple modal framework, but the two teamings that would leave the world breathless would be those of Coltrane and Shorter.  Of those two teamings it would be the Miles-Shorter pairing that would result in some of the most explosively creative & exploratory jazz in Miles' history.  "Live at the Plugged Nickel" (Columbia / Legacy '65) continues to be a paramount recording in the great Miles lineage and considered by many to be some of the most ground-breaking jazz in history.
Brownman Ali - trumpet (National Jazz Award winner)
Ryan Oliver - tenor sax (just back from NYC!)
Dave Restivo - piano (National Jazz Award winner)
Mark Cashion - upright bass (Shufle Demons)
Aaron Staebell - drums (up from NYC!!) 

Week 4 - Fri Oct 23, 2009
"From Bitches Brew to Tutu"  -  Electric Miles
 Legendary as a kind of line in the sand challenging jazz fans during the ascendance of electric, psychedelic rock, "In a Silent Way" (Colombia Records, 1969) hinted at the repetitive polyrhythms Davis would employ throughout the early '70s. It also partook generously of electric piano and bass tonal colourings previously explored in acoustic settings, but "In a Silent Way" and the subsequent "Bitches Brew" and "Live Evil" recordings remains a clearly electric jazz record, part ambient color exploration, part rock-inflected energy and vibe, and part outright maverick creativity. Long, breathy solos would be a feature of this era, glistening against his new groups' strange admixture of musical moods.  Miles would stay on this "electric" path right in to the '80's, continually exploring these textures with newer and younger generations of musicians.
Brownman Ali - trumpet, electric trumpet (National Jazz Award winner)
Kevin Breit - electric guitar (Sisters Euclid)
Eric Boucher - rhodes & synths (David Clayton Thomas)
Lionel Williams - 6-string electric bass (Toronto R'n'B icon)
Colin Kingsmore - drums (Brownman Electryc Trio)
With Special guests
Sundar - alto sax (acclaimed saxophoinst)
Ruben Esguerra - congas (Chiva)  (TBC)
The first set tonight will focus on the "Bitches Brew" 70's era... 
the second set will emphasize the "Tutu" 80's ideologies.

Week 5 - Fri Oct 30, 2009
"Doo-bop"  -  Had he lived...
 Towards the end of Miles' life he began an exploration of another sub-component of modern popular music - hip-hop.  The "Doo-bop" recording (Warner,'92) would feature rappers and loops and would have marked the beginning of Miles' exploration or this artform.  It is often harshly referred to by critics as his "worst" documented recording and as a "forgettable" era of his life, but it still stands strongly as a prime example of the Milesian ethic - his ability to recognize "what's next" and creatively move within and extend that artform.  Brownman states "I believe it is extremely probable that Miles would have worked closely with the likes of Tribe Called Quest, The Roots, Rakim, Guru, Big Daddy Kane, junglists, DJs, rappers, beat-makers alike... had he lived.  Tonight will be a salute to what MIGHT have been."
Brownman Ali - trumpet, electric trumpet (National Jazz Award winner)
 Enlight - rapper (Gruvasylum)
Lil Jaz - turntables (K-OS) (TBC)
Marc Rogers - 6-string electric bass (Philosopher Kings)
Mark Kelso - drums (Chaka Khan)
With Special guests
Professor D - rapper (Dope Poet Society) (TBC)
*Just announced - STUDENT SECOND SET:

For Week 5 - the last and final installment of Brownman's
FIVE WEEKS FOR MILES Tribute Series - all students will be admited for
1/2 price with student I.D. ($10) for the second set at the Trane Studio..

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