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As I understand it from several folks I've spoken to that know Teo as well as other people involved in a pretty exhaustive cataloging of Miles' music, Teo hates the Laswell remixes, is pissed that his remix of the previously unreleased music from the play "Time of the Barracudas" was turned down for inclusion on the Columbia Miles/Gil Evans box, and is a little sour that he's not being given more credit for being the creative force behind Miles' late 60's-early 70's studio pastiche-based works. (Supposedly Miles was virtually never even in the studio for those mixing sessions, although he claimed otherwise - most of the witnesses support Teo's side from what I understand). I think you definitely have to give credit where credit is due - samplers today owe a huge debt to his legacy. Do you have to share his opinions of the current state of sampling? Of course not. If you're serious about it, I wouild listen to them though, because somewhere in there are more than a few nuggets of wisdom to learn from. >2. I don't put Teo in genius category, but he did do a good job of >implementing Miles' ideas. No Miles, no Teo, IMHO. If Miles had started his career with "Silent Way" I'd say there was some basis for this argument, but short of ignoring the 20 year revolutionary legacy of recordings he made before that, especially those with Rudy Van Gelder producing, I'd say it's way off the mark. Although Teo did some great work on those 67-74 Miles recordings, his tape edits on Mingus' "Mingus Ah Um" and "Tijuana Moods" are laughably obtrusive. Ever see the movie "Straight No Chaser" where Monk chews him out in the studio? But, those are easy things to say in retrospect. Bottom line, for me: he was there in the trenches when the techniques were being developed, some of it was a mess and some was dead on, but his work and battle stories are worth checking out if you're interested in that kind of thing. Anyone who had to hang out with Monk, Mingus and Miles in the capacity he did certainly had to have balls of cast iron, I can imagine how guys like Puff Daddy must look to him. That period of Miles ('67-'74) is some of my favorite music ever made, and I vastly prefer Teo's original mixes to the Laswell remixes, mostly because Laswell tries to smooth over too many of the rough edges and reinvent it as sort of a quasi-ambient trip, although I dig that he brought the bass out more front-and-center. Ken R