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Creativity Quote by Miles Davis

"Don't play what's there, play what's not there"

About this Quote

The provocation in Miles Davis's line is that it sounds like a Zen riddle, then lands as a practical instruction: stop treating music as a paint-by-numbers exercise. "What's there" is the obvious: the chord changes, the melody, the safe licks you practiced until they became reflex. Davis is pointing at the dead center of jazz competence and calling it a trap. If you only play the expected notes, you're not improvising; you're reciting.

"What's not there" is space, risk, and intention. It's the note you withhold so the band has somewhere to breathe. It's leaving a phrase unfinished so the listener's ear completes it, turning the audience into a collaborator. Davis built an empire on this kind of negative capability: the cool-era restraint, the haunted sparseness of Kind of Blue, the later electric bands where the groove was a canvas and the horn line a knife slash. He understood that tension is a musical resource, not a problem to solve.

The subtext is also social. In a genre that can reward virtuosity-as-athletics, Davis flips the hierarchy: the bravest move isn't speed or density, it's choosing not to fill every bar. That takes authority, and it takes trust in the band. It's leadership by omission.

Context matters: Davis came up in bebop's firehose era, surrounded by players who could out-run each other all night. His insight is partly an aesthetic pivot, partly a survival strategy. When everyone can do "there", the only way to sound like yourself is to invent the silence around it.

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Do not play whats there play whats not there
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Miles Davis

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

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