For the first of the afternoon concert's two
sets, the band performed the compositions "Tatu", "Agharta Prelude", and "Maiysha" (from
Get Up with It), making up
Aghartas first disc of music. The second-set performances of "Right Off" (from Davis' 1971
Jack Johnson album), "Ife" (from
Big Fun), and "Wili (= For Dave)" spanned the second disc; between the "Right Off" and "Ife" segments, the band improvised a passage based on "
So What" (from the 1959 album
Kind of Blue) for 41 seconds after Henderson started to play its
ostinato. The pieces were performed in
medleys, which were given generic track titles on
Agharta, such as "Prelude" and "Interlude". As with his other live releases in the 1970s, Davis refused to have individual compositions specified in the track listing because he felt critics and other listeners often overlooked the music's intrinsic meaning by indulging in abstract
musical analysis. "I'm not doing anything, it doesn't need an explanation", he later told
Leonard Feather. Music scholars were able to identify the pieces through an examination of what Davis researcher Enrico Merlin called "coded
phrases", which Davis played on trumpet or organ to signify the end of one segment and direct the band toward the next section. He first used such cues and
modulations when recording "
Flamenco Sketches" in 1959, Merlin said. The pieces featured on
Agharta were part of a typical set list for the group, but their performances of each sometimes changed almost beyond recognition from concert to concert. This, along with the track names, led to the widespread misunderstanding that the music was mostly or entirely improvised and unstructured. Lucas explained that the band started each performance with a "very defined compositional basis" before developing it further in a highly structured yet "very free way"; the "Right Off" segment, for instance, was improvised from the original recording's
E-flat riff. Davis had the band play around a single
chord in a piece for several minutes with
variations as each member performed in a different
time signature; Foster might have been playing in
common time and Mtume in
compound duple metre or
septuple time, while the guitarists would
comp in another tempo altogether. "That's a lot of intricate shit we were working off this one chord", Davis remarked. From Lucas' perspective, this kind of "structured improvisation" resulted in significant interplay between the rhythm section and allowed the band to improvise "a lot more than just the notes that were being played in the solos; we were improvising the entire song as we went along." (1971), the bassist in Davis' rhythm section Like
Pangaea and
Dark Magus – the two other live albums showcasing the septet –
Agharta revealed what
Amiri Baraka described as Davis' affinity for
minimalism. He abandoned melodic and harmonic conventions in favor of riffs,
cross-rhythms, and funk
grooves as a backdrop for soloists to improvise throughout. Davis had preferred understated compositions throughout his career but by the mid 1970s he showed a deeper embrace of rhythm, inspired by
Afrocentric politics. When Mtume and Cosey joined the band, his live music lost most of its "European sensibilities" and "settled down into a deep African thing, a deep African-American groove" emphasizing rhythm and drums rather than individual solos, Davis said, although he did not completely reject melody. "We ain't in Africa, and we don't play just chants. There's some theory under what we do." Categorizing
Agharta as a jazz-rock record,
Simon Reynolds wrote in
The Wire that the music "offered a drastic intensification of rock's three most radical aspects: space,
timbre, and groove". In
Martha Bayles' opinion, it drew from jazz only in its element of
free improvisation and from rock only in its use of electronics and "ear-bleeding volume". The album also showcased Davis'
avant-garde impulses and exploration of
ambient sounds. According to
Greg Tate, the septet created "a pan-ethnic web of avant-garde music", while Sputnikmusic's Hernan M. Campbell said they explored "progressive ambiences" particularly within the record's second half; Phil Alexander from
Mojo characterized
Agharta as "both ambient yet thrashing, melodic yet coruscating", and suggestive of
Karlheinz Stockhausen's electronic experiments.
Dynamics and effects During the concert, Davis directed approximately 50 stops or
breaks to the band, particularly the rhythm section, by gesturing with his head or hand. These stops served as dramatic turning points in the
tension-release structure of the performances, changing their tempo and allowing the band to alternate between quiet passages and intense climaxes. He also interjected the performances with
drone washes from his
Yamaha organ, achieving a "strange, nearly perverse presence" that
Mikal Gilmore believed "defined the temper" of the music. Lucas said Davis applied a feel for
dynamics he had developed earlier in his career playing jazz, but with a greater array of
contrasts, including
atonal, dissonant chords, and his own
bebop trumpet playing set against the group's funk rhythms. "Extreme
textures and extreme volume", Lucas explained, "were as much part of the palette as the contrasting chord and rhythmic structures. Being equipped like a full rock band, we sometimes literally blew the walls out." During the "Tatu" and "Agharta Prelude" segments, Davis abruptly stopped and started the septet several times to shift tempos by playing a dissonant, cacophonous organ figure, giving Cosey space to generate eccentric,
psychedelic figures and effects. The main theme for "Tatu" had been played at a slower tempo when Cosey first joined the band, but they played it faster as their rapport grew, especially by the time of the Japanese tour. Cosey credited Davis with having the ability to "transmit thoughts and ideas" to the soloists with his playing. According to
John Szwed, the "Prelude" theme was played here with more pronounced riffs and
tonality than in past performances of the piece. , which
Pete Cosey used as an
effects unit The rhythmic direction of the music was occasionally interrupted by densely layered percussive and electronic effects, including repeated whirring and grinding sounds. Cosey generated these sounds by running his guitar through a
ring modulator and an
EMS Synthi A. The latter device was an early synthesizer with knobs and buttons but no keyboard, making it useful for producing abstract noises rather than exact pitches and melodies. While serving as an effects unit for his improvisations, it was also used by Cosey to suggest a certain
soundscape during each performance. "Whether we were in space, or underwater or a group of Africans playing – just different soundscapes", he later explained. Onstage, Cosey also had a table set up holding a
mbira,
claves,
agogo bells, and several other
hand percussion instruments, which he played or struck with a mallet to indicate a different break or stop. "I would hit them just like they do at [boxing] fights!", Cosey recalled. His synthesizer sometimes interacted with the experimental sounds Mtume was able to generate from his drum machine, as during the "Ife" segment. Davis gave the instrument to Mtume after receiving it from Yamaha, the Japanese tour's sponsor, and told him "see what you can do with it." Rather than use it to create rhythms, Mtume processed the drum machine through several different pedals and
phase shifters such as the
Mu-Tron Bi-Phase, creating a sound he said was "total tapestry". "I'm also using a volume pedal, so I'm bringing the sounds in and out", Mtume recalled. "Unless you were told, you'd have no idea that you heard a rhythm machine."
Soloists (2007), a featured soloist on
Agharta Unlike Davis' previous recordings, the
cadenzas throughout
Agharta were mostly played by Fortune and Cosey. Fortune alternated between soprano and alto saxophones and the flute, performing with a "substance and structure" Gilmore believed was very much indebted to
John Coltrane during his
A Love Supreme (1965) period. In his estimation of Fortune's solos on the album, Gilmore said the saxophonist "floats over formidable rhythmic density, taking long and graceful breaks that wing off into a private reverie". Fortune performed his longest alto saxophone solo on "Right Off", which opened the record's second disc in a "propulsive" segment Gilmore said "flies by like a train ride in a dream, where scenes flash past the window in a fascinating and illusive dream". Cosey played a
Guild S-100 electric guitar and heavily employed
chromaticism,
dissonance, and
feedback in his improvisations on
Agharta. He alternated between several effects pedals set up underneath his table of percussion instruments, including a
fuzzbox for distorting guitar sounds and two different
wah-wah pedals he used during solos or when playing more mellow
tones. Cosey often arranged his guitar strings in different places on the
fretboard and never played in
standard tuning, using at least 36 different
tuning systems, each of which altered the style and sound of his playing. According to
Tzvi Gluckin from
Premier Guitar, his experimental guitar playing was rooted in the
blues and displayed a sense of
phrasing that was aggressive and "blistering" yet "somehow also restrained", particularly in his control of feedback. Davis had enlisted Cosey to provide his music with sounds from the
electric blues and
Jimi Hendrix, whose use of distortion and the
E-flat tuning was shared by Cosey. According to
Charles Shaar Murray, he evoked the guitarist's echoic,
free jazz-inspired solos while Lucas performed in the manner of Hendrix's more lyrical
rhythm and blues songs; Cosey's guitar was separated to the left
channel and Lucas' to the right on
Agharta. Jazz scholar
Stuart Nicholson wrote that Davis utilized his guitarists in a way which realized the "waves of
harmonic distortion" Hendrix had explored in his own music. In Murray's view, the album invoked his influence on the trumpeter more explicitly than any other of his records; Nicholson considered it to be the "closest approximation" to the music they could have recorded together.
Davis on trumpet Davis veered from succinct and expressive solos to unsentimental wails during the concert, which suggested he was still mourning
Hendrix's 1970 death, Murray surmised. That year, Davis had started playing with a wah-wah pedal affixed to his trumpet in order to emulate the
register Hendrix achieved on his guitar. The pedal created what
The Penguin Guide to Jazz (2006) described as "surges and ebbs in a harmonically static line, allowing Miles to build huge melismatic variations on a single note". Davis eventually developed what Philip Freeman called "a new tone, the wiggly, shimmering ribbons of sound that are heard on
Agharta", where his wah-wah processed solos often sounded frantic and melancholic, like "twisted streams of raw pain". Davis played his trumpet sparsely throughout the concert, often sounding obscured by the rhythm section. His presence on
Agharta reflected what Szwed called "the feel and shape of a musician's late work, an egoless music that precedes its creator's death". Drawing on
Theodor W. Adorno's commentary of
Ludwig van Beethoven's late works, Szwed said "the disappearance of the musician into the work is a bow to mortality. It was as if Miles were testifying to all that he had been witness to for the past thirty years, both terrifying and joyful." According to
Richard Cook, Davis' final trumpet passage from the "Wili (= For Dave)" segment typified a "sense of gloom, even exhaustion", that colored many interpretations of
Aghartas "dark" music. After Lucas' first and only solo of the show climaxed the "Ife" segment, Davis introduced "Wili (= For Dave)" with a few organ chords, culminating in Cosey's final solo and a trumpet passage by Davis, which
Paul Tingen characterized as plaintive and introspective. According to him, live music shows typically developed toward reaching a final climax, but Davis' concerts "often dissolved into entropy". On
Agharta, Tingen observed a "deep sadness" hanging over the music as the energy of the "Wili (= For Dave)" piece "slowly drained away" to the record's
fade out. == Title and packaging ==