Previously unheard recordings of jazz legend Miles Davis to be heard in festival play premiere

The play will be funded through the Meadows Award

A play about the life of jazz legend Miles Davis and featuring previously unheard recordings of the artist is to be performed at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival after winning a funding award.

Miles, which details the life of the American musician, based on his own autobiography and describes the musician as “pimp, addict, genius”, is the winner of the Meadows Award for underrepresented artists of colour.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The production, which details the "chaos" of the making of a Kind of Blue, the bestselling jazz album of all time, will receive cash to fund a full run at Summerhall.

Presented by theatre company :DELIRIUM: and Lauren Reed Productions, the play will see acclaimed jazz trumpet player, Jay Phelps perform alongside an actor representing Miles. Mr Phelps, who has performed at London jazz club Ronnie Scott’s and the BBC Proms, has recently been touring Kind of Blue in various venues across the country with his band.

Described as a “hypnotic, smoke-laced fever dream”, the story of Mr Davis’ life is said to be “a visceral journey into the soul of an artist who redefined modern music”.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Previously unheard recordings of Mr Davis speaking to his band and the musicians warming up and practicing will be used in the play.

Miles Davis Quintent, Hammersmith, London, 1967. Artist Brian Foskett. (Photo by National Jazz Archive/Heritage Images via Getty Images)Miles Davis Quintent, Hammersmith, London, 1967. Artist Brian Foskett. (Photo by National Jazz Archive/Heritage Images via Getty Images)
Miles Davis Quintent, Hammersmith, London, 1967. Artist Brian Foskett. (Photo by National Jazz Archive/Heritage Images via Getty Images) | National Jazz Archive/Heritage I

Creative director Oliver Kaderbhai, who was resident director for the UK tour of hit musical Hamilton, said: “As a mixed-race theatre maker of Anglo-Indian descent, I am curious about identity - what drives people to do the things they do. We’re interested in humanity under pressure.

“Miles was a complex man and we’re going to explore how he became the creative genius we know today - how did his race, his circumstances, his upbringing impact his choices? And would we have been a different Miles if he existed today?”

Summerhall Arts, the new charity heading arts and culture provision at the venue for the next three years, said: “Summerhall is proud to support MILES. through the Meadows Award, a production that embodies the bold, necessary, and artistically rich storytelling we believe deserves to take centre stage. We are committed to making space for Artists of Colour at the Fringe and thrilled to see MILES. lead that vision.”

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

International work makes up more than half this year’s Fringe

Summerhall this week announced its line-up for this year’s Fringe, which includes over 50 per cent international work, with artists from countries such as Singapore, Brazil, New Zealand, and the USA. It features a 50 per cent female-led line up, with 20 per cent of shows created by artists of colour and 25 per cent including LGBTQ+ narratives.

Highlights include Skye: A Thriller, written by Ellie Keel. Set on the Isle of Skye, follows a group of siblings confronting the reappearance of their deceased father.

Earlier this year, a financial crisis at Summerhall was averted after a winding up order over alleged unpaid tax was abandoned. Summerhall's management announced that HMRC had dropped a legal action that led to its bank accounts being frozen.

A public consultation is being launched into the future of the building, which has operated as an arts hub for 14 years.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Developer AMA recently said it wanted to include residential properties in its redevelopment of the venue, as well as commercial space and a “facility to sustainably continue the provision of the arts”.

Summerhall Arts Fringe producer and programmer, Tom Forster, said: “As promised back in January, our 2025 Fringe performance programme continues to be exactly what we know and love. It’s the same beating heart - consisting of colleagues old and new - but underneath brand-new skin, an approach that denotes quality not quantity.”

MILES. premieres at this year’s Edinburgh Fringe Festival in Tech Cube Zero at Summerhall,

3–25 August 2025

Comments

 0 comments

Want to join the conversation? Please or to comment on this article.

Dare to be Honest
Follow us
©National World Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved.Cookie SettingsTerms and ConditionsPrivacy notice