Miles and Me by Quincy Troupe 189 pages
I
picked this nonfiction piece as my August selection to meet my 2018 New Year’s
resolution. As I was pondering what titles to add the list in December 27, I
grabbed this one off the shelf. I’ve like jazz music, but I have to admit that
I’m extremely knowledgeable about it. I was aware that Miles Davis is one of
the greatest of all time.
As
I started to flip the pages, I landed on the title page, where lo and behold,
was an inscription to me, personally, from the author. It was dated 10/7/06. I
must have picked it up at a booksigning, probably at St. Louis’ best indie
bookstore, Left Bank Books, but I have absolutely no recollection of the event.
So I figured it was time to read this little gem.
The
book is about Troupe and Davis and their collaboration on a book, “Miles: The Autobiography,”
that was published in 1989.
In
the first chapter of Troupe’s memoir, “Meeting Miles,” Troupe pulls no punches
telling about their rocky start and how Davis was not an easy many to get along
with. In fact, he as a snob, a jerk ad used the most awful language. With that
kind of drivel spewing from his mouth, no wonder he hid behind dark sunglasses
most of the time.
In
the second chapter, “Up Close and Personal,” the two men become friends. Miles
is hard to be friends with. He’s really just a jerk who can play the trumpet. I
can’t say that I would even have like to have met the man after reading this
book. I was struck about how much Davis hated how black he was and wondered if
that didn’t contribute to his orneriness.
The
third chapter is about the music. I won’t say I can recognize a Davis piece
when I hear it, but Troupe’s musical criticism seems right on. Of course, I
would have no real clue if Troupe was accurate or not. The final chapter is
about the last few years of Davis’s life (he died on 1991) and his legacy.
“Miles
and Me” receives 4 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world.
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