Guitar fans have had a rough couple of days. Yesterday brilliant folk and country guitarist Doc Watson
died at age 89. This morning, according to the private Facebook page of
fellow guitarist and collaborator Vernon Reid, Chicago's own Pete Cosey
died at 68. Obituaries
and remembrances for Watson have already appeared all over, and
deservedly so—few instrumentalists so completely absorbed America's folk
and country traditions, and fewer still brought such quiet virtuosity
to them. Watson was a key catalyst in the folk revival after his
discovery by producer Ralph Rinzler in 1960.
Pete Cosey, on the other hand, was a classic musician's musician;
he's not especially well-known, though he played on tons of classic
records. As such, word of his passing is traveling rather more slowly.
Cosey was a key session musician at Chess Records in the 60s, appearing
on sides by Howlin' Wolf, Muddy Waters, the Rotary Connection, and Etta
James, and he worked with the great Phil Cohran
in the latter's Artistic Heritage Ensemble. He's probably most famous,
though (to the extent that he's famous at all), for his mind-melting
work with Miles Davis in the early 70s: he played on the trumpeter's
heaviest, most electric albums, including Agharta, Pangaea, and Get Up With It.
After Davis broke up the band in 1975 and went into semi-retirement,
Cosey was never able to build the solo career he so richly deserved. He
used his guitar like an abstract expressionist painter, creating thick,
richly textured solos with fierce rhythmic power, dazzling colors, and
nonchalant violence. He continued to appear on records here and there,
including Herbie Hancock's Future Shock and an album with
Japanese saxophonist Akira Sakata, but he always seemed to be planning
his own next project, which never quite materialized.
( Chicago Reader)
via Ed Kuepper and Mark Stewart on FB
November 3, 1973
Stadthalle, Vienna (Austria)
Miles Davis (tpt,
org); Dave Liebman (ss, ts, fl); Pete Cosey (g, perc); Reggie Lucas (g);
Michael Henderson (el-b); Al Foster (d); James Mtume Forman (cga, perc)
Friday, 1 June 2012
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Pete Cosey was the guitarist for Miles Davis most electric work which many people NOW say they "Loved" but who at the time totally dised what that band was doing to a degree that makes what people today, who NEVER SAW THAT BAND now say they"LOVED" it is disingenious at best.The SOUND will never be matched, EVER
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