
Miles Davis - The Complete Plugged Nickel Live 1965 (Limited Edition)
October 3, 2025 – Six decades later, the music still wows, baffles, and inspires. What happenedÂ
over two nights in a tiny, unassuming Chicago club under a bakery was a fascinating andÂ
unplanned documentation of a pivotal moment in the evolution of Miles Davis's leadership andÂ
sound. Columbia Records and Legacy Recordings, the catalog division of Sony MusicÂ
Entertainment, today announce the reissue of these legendary recordings: THE COMPLETEÂ
LIVE AT THE PLUGGED NICKEL 1965. Arriving January 30, 2026, as a cornerstone momentÂ
in the year-long celebration of Miles Davis’ Centennial to come next year, this comprehensiveÂ
collection will be available as a 10LP or 8CD box set. Pre-orders begin today.Â
As a preview of the larger collection, a standalone 2LP set, Live At The Plugged Nickel:Â
December 23, 1965 – Second Set, will be released for RSD Black Friday on November 28.
The recordings capture Miles Davis’s Second Great Quintet—featuring Wayne Shorter, HerbieÂ
Hancock, Ron Carter, and Tony Williams—at an inflection point. Wayne Shorter was just over aÂ
year into his tenure, and the group, fresh off of recording E.S.P., was solidifying into what wouldÂ
become the most transformative small group in jazz. What unfolded on the stage of the ChicagoÂ
club was not just a performance, but a provocation. Sparked by a pact instigated by drummerÂ
Tony Williams to play "anti-music," the band actively subverted expectations, turning theirÂ
well-tread setlist inside out. As Miles would later put it, “We found ways to make the old musicÂ
sound as new as the new music we were recording.” It is the sound of the Second Great QuintetÂ
becoming itself—alive, unstable, and always mid-mutation.Â
Originally released in 1995 as a Mosaic Records limited-edition LP box set, The Complete LiveÂ
at the Plugged Nickel has been out of print for nearly three decades. The new 10LP editionÂ
recreates the Mosaic musical presentation and offers the complete performances—overÂ
seven hours of music—in a newly designed slipcase featuring ten individual jackets and aÂ
40-page booklet. An 8CD edition will also be available. Both formats feature new liner notes byÂ
Syd Schwartz, who unpacks the radical spirit of the performances, as well as classic material byÂ
jazz historian Bob Blumenthal.Â
“The Plugged Nickel tapes don’t just capture great performances. They document a bandÂ
revolutionizing improvisation in real time, welcoming surprise, discarding certainty, and turningÂ
'wrong' notes into revelations,” remarks Schwartz in the new liner notes. “What unfolded on thatÂ
stage has become one of the most mythologized stretches in post-bop history.”Â
The release has only grown in stature since its initial issue. The Guardian hailed it as "MaybeÂ
the best-ever representation of 'the second great quintet' at work...reinventing small-band jazzÂ
with an all-but-psychic flexibility of timing and on-the-fly harmonising."Â
Sixty years later, The Complete Live at the Plugged Nickel 1965 returns, humming like a liveÂ
wire and daring a new generation of listeners to rethink what's possible.
Original: $81.16
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October 3, 2025 – Six decades later, the music still wows, baffles, and inspires. What happenedÂ
over two nights in a tiny, unassuming Chicago club under a bakery was a fascinating andÂ
unplanned documentation of a pivotal moment in the evolution of Miles Davis's leadership andÂ
sound. Columbia Records and Legacy Recordings, the catalog division of Sony MusicÂ
Entertainment, today announce the reissue of these legendary recordings: THE COMPLETEÂ
LIVE AT THE PLUGGED NICKEL 1965. Arriving January 30, 2026, as a cornerstone momentÂ
in the year-long celebration of Miles Davis’ Centennial to come next year, this comprehensiveÂ
collection will be available as a 10LP or 8CD box set. Pre-orders begin today.Â
As a preview of the larger collection, a standalone 2LP set, Live At The Plugged Nickel:Â
December 23, 1965 – Second Set, will be released for RSD Black Friday on November 28.
The recordings capture Miles Davis’s Second Great Quintet—featuring Wayne Shorter, HerbieÂ
Hancock, Ron Carter, and Tony Williams—at an inflection point. Wayne Shorter was just over aÂ
year into his tenure, and the group, fresh off of recording E.S.P., was solidifying into what wouldÂ
become the most transformative small group in jazz. What unfolded on the stage of the ChicagoÂ
club was not just a performance, but a provocation. Sparked by a pact instigated by drummerÂ
Tony Williams to play "anti-music," the band actively subverted expectations, turning theirÂ
well-tread setlist inside out. As Miles would later put it, “We found ways to make the old musicÂ
sound as new as the new music we were recording.” It is the sound of the Second Great QuintetÂ
becoming itself—alive, unstable, and always mid-mutation.Â
Originally released in 1995 as a Mosaic Records limited-edition LP box set, The Complete LiveÂ
at the Plugged Nickel has been out of print for nearly three decades. The new 10LP editionÂ
recreates the Mosaic musical presentation and offers the complete performances—overÂ
seven hours of music—in a newly designed slipcase featuring ten individual jackets and aÂ
40-page booklet. An 8CD edition will also be available. Both formats feature new liner notes byÂ
Syd Schwartz, who unpacks the radical spirit of the performances, as well as classic material byÂ
jazz historian Bob Blumenthal.Â
“The Plugged Nickel tapes don’t just capture great performances. They document a bandÂ
revolutionizing improvisation in real time, welcoming surprise, discarding certainty, and turningÂ
'wrong' notes into revelations,” remarks Schwartz in the new liner notes. “What unfolded on thatÂ
stage has become one of the most mythologized stretches in post-bop history.”Â
The release has only grown in stature since its initial issue. The Guardian hailed it as "MaybeÂ
the best-ever representation of 'the second great quintet' at work...reinventing small-band jazzÂ
with an all-but-psychic flexibility of timing and on-the-fly harmonising."Â
Sixty years later, The Complete Live at the Plugged Nickel 1965 returns, humming like a liveÂ
wire and daring a new generation of listeners to rethink what's possible.












