DiscoverThe Jazz Real BookDolores and Tony Williams
Dolores and Tony Williams

Dolores and Tony Williams

Update: 2025-10-05
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(93) “Dolores” and Tony Williams 

Standard Rating 5 Difficulty Rating 6

“Dolores,” from Miles Smiles (1967), is a brisk, harmonically shifting Wayne Shorter composition that showcases the daring interplay of Miles Davis’s Second Great Quintet. Built on a 38-bar form (A–Interlude–B–Interlude–A), the tune moves fluidly through changing tonal centers and unexpected ii–V progressions, challenging soloists with its constant motion and ambiguity. The melody, light yet intricate, features Shorter’s characteristic use of upper extensions and rhythmic displacement. In performance, Miles delivers a fiery, angular solo, while Shorter and Herbie Hancock expand on the tune’s open texture, supported by Ron Carter’s grounding bass and Tony Williams’s explosive, responsive drumming. Tony Williams (1945–1997), the group’s rhythmic engine, redefined jazz drumming by treating the kit as a equal conversational instrument. His restless polyrhythms, dynamic control, and fearless interaction drove the quintet’s sound, influencing generations of drummers. “Dolores” exemplifies his balance of fire, freedom, and precision within modern jazz innovation.

Miles Davis 

VSOP

Spotify


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Dolores and Tony Williams

Dolores and Tony Williams

Jay Sweet