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Warning: I lost track of what I wanted to say in the first place halfway during the following message - feel free to ignore! Rainer Rick said (in that "book turned 100% feedback" thread): "Davis embraced modalism because it finally gave the soloist control over determining harmony as opposed to the comping instruments or the 'tune'" I'll start by stating that for me, "Kind of Blue" is one of the most overrated works in music (together with the entire catalogue of W.A. Mozart, the later Richard Strauß operas, anything by Django Reinhart (sp?) and the majority of Jarret's solo work, to name just a few things). Now that I've gotten your attention ;) There had been, at that time in jazz, different approaches in trying to, as Rick puts it, "give the soloist control". One of them was the modal approach, which basically was bebop with fewer chord changes. Another approach, and in my opinion a much more powerful one, was that of Ornette Coleman, namely to throw out any harmony instruments altogether. This brought the harmony-based structure of jazz down to its essential building blocks: the superposed two-voiced structure, as apparent in the (non-polyphonic and two-voiced polyphonic) work of J.S.Bach. At any given moment, both soloist and bass player would make a statement in continuing their individual melody lines. Each resulting interval could then be seen as defining a chord, and be understood that way be either player, but not necessarily equally (as this is an under-determined concept). (It is noteworthy that in his later work in that period, Coleman would move away more from this "underlying harmony" concept - but it is present a lot on albums as e.g. "This is our music"). Davis himself chose another, much more stripped down of his "bebop with fewer changes" approach, and that made sense. To quote from the liner notes to Agharta: "I would try exploring one chord with this band, one chord in a tune, getting everyone to master these small little simple things like rhythm". Obviously, Davis at that point had left the concept of harmonic progression, already stripped down on "Kind of Blue", left behind completely. What always strikes me as odd that during this period of his work, Davis would most of the time work with two to three chord instruments (first keyboards, then guitars). So, there's the concept of reducing harmony to only one chord - by using three harmony players. Or to have highly plurivalent harmonies - by using no harmony player at all. It's interesting to see that for the jazz world, the only one of those three approaches which had a lasting and widespread impact was that of the modal playing. It's obvious that a concept of only one chord does not work well with the still very bop-influenced (in its use of drums and bass) jazz mainstream. As for the superposed two-voicedness, this simply puts a huge challenge on the bass player (and on the horn player as well), so a lot of people simply don't seem to be willing to rise to it. And finally, it took more than twenty years for Davis' Seventies approach to resurface in some (albeit still mostly percieved "intellectual") works - Laswell, Kaiser etc. Perhaps another decade later... Rainer ps: "Dark Magus" is the Davis album to get! And of course, check out the "Masqualero" version on "Black Beauty". Davis doesn't hit one single not correctly - but it doesn't matter.