Bated Breath and Blue
AI Process/Open Source Software: HUMAN, Google Flow Music, Claude.ai, ChatGPT, Meta.ai, Perchance.org – DAW: Audacity 4 (alpha), OS: Linux (Ubuntu 26.04)
Kind Of Miles: Bated Breath and Blue – Full Mix (1:39:34)
Stream/Download Free Full Mix MP3:
“It’s not the notes you play. It’s the notes you don’t play.”
– Miles Davis (1959)
Google Deep Dive Podcast: 100 Miles
A Century of Miles
Today, Miles Davis would have been 100 years old. It is an astonishing milestone that forces us to reckon with a simple truth, that we are still living in the sonic universe he constructed. Miles was not merely a jazz musician. He was a seismic force who altered the trajectory of modern music multiple times over. From the cool restraint of birth-of-the-cool arrangements to the expansive, suspended landscapes of Kind of Blue, and later into the raw, urgent electric collisions of Bitches Brew, Miles never looked back. He didn’t just change the notes being played. He changed how humanity perceives time, tension, and sound.
To adore Miles, to still be captivated by him a century after his birth, is to love the courage of deliberate omission. In a world increasingly crowded with noise, over-production, and predictable digital quantization, Miles remains the ultimate master of restraint. He famously challenged his musicians not to play what was there, but to look for what wasn’t there. He played the spaces between the notes. He weaponized silence. His trumpet didn’t shout but it whispered, sighed, and hesitated, capturing the complex vulnerability of the human condition with painfully beautiful intimacy.
As you prepare to listen to Kind Of Miles: Bated Breath and Blue, it is helpful to understand the architectural philosophy behind this tribute. In 1959, Miles and his septet walked into Columbia’s 30th Street Studio and abandoned the frantic, complex chord changes of bebop. Instead, they embraced modal jazz, improvising over a single scale or mood for minutes at a time. It forced the music to slow down, to breathe, and to inhabit a state of profound stillness.
I approached this project with that exact centenary spirit, pairing the historical logic of modal jazz with my direction using modern generative tools to carve a facsimile. As you press play, listen closely to the deliberate hesitation of the virtual trumpet, the soft scrape of the wire brushes, and the heavy analog tape hiss. Do not rush through these tracks. Let the tempo pull you down into a slower cadence. Listen to the silence, notice the room, and feel the active, living space left entirely empty, just as Miles taught us.
Kind Of Miles: Bated Breath and Blue
This album is a deliberate exercise in restraint, an intentional step away from the relentless metric perfection of modern digital production. In anchoring this project in the 1959 modal jazz movement pioneered by Miles Davis, the title and subtitle serve as our technical and creative manifesto.
“Kind Of Miles” anchors our sonic lineage. It explicitly references Kind of Blue, signaling a commitment to modal exploration over complex, frantic chord progressions. It allows a single mood, a solitary scale, to hang suspended in mid-air.
“Bated Breath and Blue” addresses the exact mechanism of our generative execution. In vocalizing and texturing the arrangements through GenAI and Open Source tools, “bated” represents the literal moderation and holding back of sound. It frames silence not as an absence of data, but as active, living breath. By instructing the AI to prioritize the spaces between the notes, the “breath” becomes a tangible, physical instrument, while the “blue” dictates the harmonic color, emotional weight, and unhurried pacing of the work.
This is the machine learning the art of hesitation, where what is left unplayed carries the entire weight of the performance.
The Text to Music Prompt
Acoustic modal jazz ballad, slow unhurried BPM, rooted in the Dorian mode. A solitary, close-mic’d trumpet with a harmon mute plays a spacious, improvisational melody, full of breathy texture and long spaces between notes. In the background, a warm, resonant double bass walks a minimal, sparse line, accompanied by a soft acoustic piano comping with open, modal chords. A jazz drummer plays a delicate, whisper-quiet rhythm using wire brushes on a crisp snare drum and a sizzling ride cymbal. Cavernous, dark studio room acoustics with natural tape warmth, high dynamic range, leaving massive room for silence.
This prompt is specifically engineered to exploit the way GenAI now handles acoustic modeling, shifting it away from a modern, quantized MIDI feel toward a fluid, historical human performance.
Here is a concise breakdown of why and how it was structured:
1. Stripping the Metric Grid (“Slow unhurried 60 BPM”)
- The “Why”
Standard AI music models default to strict, grid-aligned tempos. Jazz requires elasticity. - The “How”
Using words like “unhurried,” “spacious,” and “long spaces between notes” instructs Flow Music’s pacing algorithm to introduce slight micro-delays in note triggering, mimicking natural human hesitation.
2. Modifying Tone Generation (“Harmon mute” + “Breathy texture”)
- The “Why”
Default trumpet syntheses in AI are usually bright, loud, and brassy. Miles Davis’s signature sound is the exact opposite. - The “How”
Specifically calling for a “harmon mute” tells the model to filter the high-end frequencies into a sharp, tight buzz. Adding “breathy texture” forces the audio generation engine to simulate the sound of air passing through a physical pipe, introducing organic noise.
3. Controlling Chords and Harmony (“Dorian mode” + “Open, modal chords”)
- The “Why”
Standard AI engines love resolving chord progressions cleanly (e.g., V-I cadences). Kind of Blue is famous for abandoning standard progressions for stagnant, moody scales. - The “How”
Specifying “Dorian mode” and “open, modal chords” restricts the pitch-prediction model from moving to predictable pop or classical chord resolutions, forcing the virtual piano and bass to hover suspended in an atmospheric, tense harmonic space.
4. Texturing the Percussion (“Wire brushes on a crisp snare”)
- The “Why”
Default percussion hits in LLM audio generation often resolve to heavy acoustic sticks or synthetic drum kits. - The “How”
Specifying “wire brushes” and “sizzling ride cymbal” forces the high-frequency generators to produce sustained, whispering white-noise textures rather than hard, transient attacks, capturing a late-night, smoky studio room energy.
5. Architectural Space (“Dark studio room acoustics”)
- The “Why”
Digital reverbs can sound cold and artificial. Miles Davis was recorded in Columbia’s 30th Street Studio, a massive converted church. - The “How”
Calling for “dark studio room acoustics with natural tape warmth” informs the spatial modeling component to generate a decay tail that absorbs bright reflections, resulting in a deep, vintage-sounding analog master that sits naturally alongside the open-source Linux environment in which it is post-produced.