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Creativity Quote by Miles Davis

"Do not fear mistakes. There are none"

About this Quote

Miles Davis isn`t offering a feel-good poster slogan. He`s laying down a working rule for improvisation, where the only real failure is freezing up. In jazz, a "mistake" is often just a note without a story yet. The band either leaves it hanging and it sounds wrong, or they frame it, repeat it, reharmonize it, turn it into a motif. Davis`s line is less about perfection than about velocity: keep moving, keep listening, commit so hard the so-called error becomes material.

The subtext is control disguised as freedom. Davis was famous for stripping things down, demanding space, and letting tension sit in the air. "There are none" doesn`t mean anything goes; it means the standard isn`t correctness, it`s consequence. If you play a harsh note, you don`t apologize with your hands. You answer it with the next phrase. You make the band believe you meant it, and belief becomes aesthetic fact.

Context matters: Davis lived through multiple reinventions of jazz, from bebop`s speed to modal openness to electric fusion. Each pivot required unlearning rules that had hardened into dogma. The quote reads like a shot across the bow at conservatory thinking, but it`s also a survival tactic for any artist under pressure. Onstage, hesitation is louder than dissonance. Davis is telling you to risk being ugly, because that risk is where the new vocabulary starts.

Quote Details

TopicLearning from Mistakes
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Do not fear mistakes. There are none
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Miles Davis

Miles Davis (May 26, 1926 - September 26, 1991) was a Musician from USA.

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