Miles Davis & The House of Miles
A Legacy in East St. Louis
The Life of Miles Davis
1926 – 1991
Miles Dewey Davis III is born on May 26 in Alton, Illinois, to Dr. Miles Davis II (a prosperous dentist) and Cleota Henry Davis. His father is also an amateur musician and farmer. Miles is destined to grow up in comfort, but restlessness will define him.
The Davis family moves to East St. Louis, Illinois — a vibrant, working-class Black community across the river from St. Louis. Miles grows up in the house on 1701 Kansas Avenue, now preserved as the House of Miles East St. Louis (HOME). The city’s rich musical culture surrounds him.
At age 10, Miles receives his first trumpet as a birthday gift from a family friend. He begins formal lessons with Elwood Buchanan, a music teacher at Lincoln High School who notably teaches Miles to play without vibrato — a clean, pure tone that would become his signature sound.
At 18, Miles moves to New York City, ostensibly to enroll at the Juilliard School of Music. But his real education happens after dark in the clubs of 52nd Street, where he hunts down his idol Charlie ‘Bird’ Parker. He finds Parker — and never looks back. He soon drops out of Juilliard entirely.
Miles joins alto saxophonist Charlie Parker’s legendary quintet, launching his career in the bebop revolution. Playing alongside Parker and Dizzy Gillespie exposes him to the fastest, most complex jazz ever played — and Miles begins finding his own voice within it.
Miles begins recording under his own name for Savoy Records. His early recordings show a confident young voice already pushing beyond straight bebop toward something more lyrical and spacious.
Miles assembles a groundbreaking nine-piece ensemble featuring unconventional instruments like French horn and tuba. The sessions — recorded for Capitol Records in 1949–1950 — reject the frenetic energy of bebop in favor of something softer, more orchestral, more restrained. The resulting album defines a whole new sub-genre: ‘cool jazz.’
Miles falls into a severe heroin addiction, a struggle that grips much of the jazz world at the time. His career nearly derails. In 1954, in an act of sheer will, he locks himself in his father’s farmhouse in East St. Louis and kicks the habit cold turkey. It is one of the defining tests of his life.
Clean and energized, Miles returns to recording with a swagger that shocks the jazz world. The ‘Walkin” session marks a hard bop pivot — raw, bluesy, muscular — and signals his comeback as one of the most important voices in jazz.
Miles forms his First Great Quintet featuring John Coltrane (tenor sax), Red Garland (piano), Paul Chambers (bass), and Philly Joe Jones (drums). The band records prolifically for Prestige and Columbia, producing some of the most beloved jazz albums ever made.
Miles begins a legendary creative partnership with arranger/composer Gil Evans. Their orchestral collaborations are sweeping, cinematic, and unlike anything in jazz. Miles plays trumpet as a solo voice against vast, lush orchestral backdrops.
On March 2 and April 22, 1959, Miles gathers an extraordinary ensemble — Bill Evans, John Coltrane, Cannonball Adderley, Paul Chambers, and Jimmy Cobb — and records Kind of Blue in two sessions, almost entirely in first takes. Built entirely on modal scales rather than chord progressions, it is the best-selling jazz album in history and one of the most important recordings of the 20th century.
Miles and Gil Evans complete their third and final orchestral collaboration, drawing from Spanish classical music — particularly Joaquín Rodrigo’s Concierto de Aranjuez. The result is a deeply emotional, hauntingly beautiful record that defies easy categorization.
Miles assembles his Second Great Quintet: Wayne Shorter (tenor sax), Herbie Hancock (piano), Ron Carter (bass), and Tony Williams (drums). This lineup takes jazz into entirely new territory — abstract, unpredictable, with an almost telepathic interplay — a style critics call ‘time, no changes.’
Inspired by Sly Stone, Jimi Hendrix, and James Brown, Miles goes electric. He builds vast ensembles of electric keyboards, wah-wah trumpet, and rock rhythms. The music shocks jazz purists and thrills rock fans. Bitches Brew sells half a million copies — unheard of for a jazz record.
Miles pushes into even more abstract, dense territory. The music becomes murky, layered, and rhythmically complex. On the Corner draws from funk, African music, and avant-garde composition. Miles performs increasingly rarely, and by 1975 he retreats entirely from public life, battling health problems.
Miles withdraws from music entirely. He battles hip pain, sickle cell anemia, bursitis, and a return to drug use. He rarely leaves his New York apartment. The jazz world mourns his absence — some fear he will never return.
Miles Davis returns to the stage and recording studio after six years of silence. His comeback performance at the Kool Jazz Festival in New York is front-page news. The new music reflects pop and funk influences — not everyone loves it — but Miles is alive and creating again.
Miles signs with Warner Bros. and embraces contemporary production. Tutu, produced by Marcus Miller, is built on synthesizers, samples, and studio technology — Miles plays trumpet as the sole human voice over futuristic soundscapes. It wins a Grammy and introduces him to a new generation.
Miles continues performing and recording at a remarkable pace despite declining health. He collaborates with hip-hop producers, records the orchestral Aura for a Danish prize, and paints prolifically (his visual art is displayed at the House of Miles). He performs his last concert on August 25, 1991 in Hollywood.
Miles Dewey Davis III dies on September 28, 1991 in Santa Monica, California, from a stroke, pneumonia, and respiratory failure. He is 65 years old. His death is mourned across the world. He is buried in Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx, New York. His legacy — as the most innovative musician in jazz history — only grows with each passing decade.
The House of Miles
Preservation, Restoration & Community
While serving as Executive Assistant to East St. Louis Mayor Alvin Parks Jr., Lauren Parks noticed the address of 1701 Kansas Avenue on a municipal demolition list. The Davis family had attempted to donate the property to several organizations, but none stepped forward. The house had sat vacant for at least 15 years and was in serious disrepair. Parks contacted her longtime friend J. Gary Pearson, and together they formed a nonprofit — using their own personal funds — to acquire and save the landmark before it was lost forever. The Davis family gifted the property in 2014.
With the property secured, Lauren Parks and J. Gary Pearson began Phase I — a full structural assessment and restoration of the 1920s home at 1701 Kansas Avenue. A local engineering firm evaluated the structure pro-bono and found it sound. Parks used personal funds to begin the renovation, preserving original walls, ceilings, and floors while making the space welcoming. Personal artifacts were collected and installed, including a tapestry from Miles Davis’s New York apartment. The home was assessed and designated a Historic Site by the St. Clair County Historical Society.
HOME officially opened its doors to the public, welcoming visitors from across the region, the nation, and the world. Tours became available by appointment, and the 1701 Club monthly giving movement launched to sustain HOME’s programming. Artistic Director Jason Brown led music education workshops, and community events — including the annual fundraiser honoring Miles Davis — became fixtures on the East St. Louis cultural calendar. HOME earned a Google rating of 4.8 out of 5 from visitors praising its warmth, education, and community impact.
Parks and Pearson also acquired a property at 1636 Missouri Avenue, directly across from HOME, to serve as HOME’s Educational Enrichment Center. Future plans include the development of 1709 Kansas Avenue to house Studio 100 — HOME’s forthcoming recording studio. The campus expansion reflects HOME’s long-term vision: a full cultural district rooted in the legacy of Miles Davis and dedicated to East St. Louis youth.
HOME’s growing campus introduced the Butterfly House — a nature-centered educational space designed to complement HOME’s arts programming by connecting youth with the natural world. The project reflects HOME’s holistic approach to community development, weaving together music, art, ecology, and inspiration within the historic Kansas Avenue neighborhood that shaped Miles Davis.
HOME expanded its educational programming with the Solar Lab — a hands-on STEM and sustainability learning space that connects science and innovation to the creative spirit at HOME’s core. In the same way Miles Davis constantly reinvented himself and embraced new technology in his music, the Solar Lab encourages East St. Louis youth to innovate, explore, and build a future rooted in both heritage and possibility.
Phase III of HOME’s development includes construction of “Miles’ Cellar” — an intimate event venue to be built in the lower level of 1701 Kansas Avenue, the very basement where Miles Davis practiced and formed his first band as a teenager. The Cellar will function as a fundraising and community space, featuring a curated wine collection where patrons sponsor private events to generate ongoing support for HOME’s educational programs.
Also part of Phase III, Studio 100 will be housed at the newly acquired property at 1709 Kansas Avenue — directly next door to HOME. The professional recording studio will give HOME’s student musicians and community artists access to industry-quality equipment and mentorship, creating a direct pipeline from music education to real creative production. Studio 100 embodies HOME’s belief that East St. Louis youth deserve the same world-class opportunities that Miles Davis himself sought out in New York City.
The childhood home of Miles Davis at 1701 Kansas Avenue in East St. Louis, Illinois, has been preserved and revitalized as the House of Miles East St. Louis (HOME). The organization honors Miles Davis’s legacy through music education, community programming, heritage tours, and the arts — nurturing the next generation of musicians and creative leaders from the very neighborhood that shaped one of the greatest artists who ever lived.

