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If you used to hang out at some of the really trendy clubs in the mid seventies, this track will bring back one or two memories! Miles is probably best known for his work with Jimi Hendrix in the Band of Gypsys, although he also featured with the Electric Flag, Mike Bloomfield, Nils Lofgren, Three Man Army, Muddy Waters and Santana. He has a very distinctive voice and isn't too bad on the drums either.
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Biography by Steve Huey
Best known as the drummer in
Jimi Hendrix's Band of Gypsys,
Buddy Miles also had a lengthy
solo career that drew from rock,
blues, soul, and funk in varying
combinations. Born George Miles
in Omaha, NE, on September 5,
1947, he started playing the
drums at age nine, and joined
his father's jazz band the
Bebops as a mere 12 year old. As
a teenager, he went on to play
with several jazz and R&B
outfits, most prominently
backing vocal groups like Ruby &
the Romantics, the Ink Spots,
and the Delfonics. In 1966, he
joined Wilson Pickett's touring
revue, where he was spotted by
blues-rock guitarist Mike
Bloomfield. Bloomfield had left
the Paul Butterfield Blues Band
earlier in 1967 and was putting
together a new group, the
Electric Flag, which was slated
to be an ambitious fusion of
rock, soul, blues, psychedelia,
and jazz. Bloomfield invited
Miles to join up, and the band
made its debut at the Monterey
Pop Festival; unfortunately, the
original lineup splintered in
1968. With founder Bloomfield
gone, Miles briefly took over
leadership of the band on its
second studio album, which
failed to reignite the public's
interest.
With the Electric Flag's horn
section in tow, Miles split to
form his own group, the
similarly eclectic Buddy Miles
Express. Signed to Mercury, the
group issued its debut album,
Expressway to Your Skull, in
1968, with Miles' fellow
Monterey Pop alum Jimi Hendrix
in the producer's chair. In
turn, Miles played on Hendrix's
Electric Ladyland album, and
later took part in an all-star
jam session that resulted in
Muddy Waters' Fathers and Sons
album. Hendrix also produced the
Miles Express' follow-up, 1969's
Electric Church, and disbanded
his backing band the Experience
later that year; shortly
afterward, Hendrix, Miles, and
bassist Billy Cox formed Band of
Gypsys, one of the first
all-black rock bands. Bluesier
and funkier than Hendrix's
previous work, Band of Gypsys
didn't last long in its original
incarnation; Miles departed in
1970, replaced by Experience
drummer Mitch Mitchell, but not
before his powerhouse work was
showcased on the group's lone
album, the live Band of Gypsys.
After backing John McLaughlin on
1970's Devotion, Miles returned
to the role of bandleader and
recorded his most popular album,
Them Changes, in 1971; it stayed
on the charts for more than a
year, and the title cut became
Miles' signature song. From
December 1971 to April 1972,
Miles toured with Carlos
Santana, which produced the
CBS-released concert document
Carlos Santana & Buddy Miles!
Live!; recorded inside an
inactive volcano in Hawaii, the
album sold very well, climbing
into the Top Ten. Miles cut a
few more albums for CBS,
participated in a short-lived
Electric Flag reunion in 1974,
then moved to Casablanca in 1975
for a pair of LPs. Aside from a
one-off album for Atlantic in
1981 (Sneak Attack), Miles kept
a low profile over the next
decade, partly to battle
personal problems.
Miles returned in 1986 as the
lead voice in a TV ad campaign
that featured clay-animated
raisins singing "I Heard It
Through the Grapevine"; the ads
proved so popular that a
kid-friendly musical franchise
was spun off, and thus Miles
became the lead singer of the
California Raisins, performing
on two albums (mostly R&B
covers) and a Christmas special.
Additionally, Miles rejoined his
old friend Carlos Santana as the
official lead vocalist of
Santana during part of the late
'80s, making his studio debut on
1987's Freedom. In the early
'90s, Miles played with Bootsy
Collins (both solo and as
members of Hardware), and in
1994 he formed a new version of
the Express and recorded Hell
and Back for Rykodisc. Miles
Away From Home followed in 1997
on Hip-O. Miles toured steadily
through the '90s, and
subsequently formed a more
straightforward blues band
called the Blues Berries with
guitarist Rocky Athas; their
first album, Blues Berries,
appeared on Ruf in 2002.


Jimi
Hendrix
Billy Cobham
Santana

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make to this band or something
to add,
email me - Japie Marais.


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