Total Pageviews

After a Lengthy Battle, ‘Miles Davis Way’ Is Official

Shirley Zafirau underneath the sign on West 77th Street that will be renamed Emon Hassan for The New York Times
Shirley Zafirau underneath the sign on West 77th Street that will be renamed “Miles Davis Way,” in honor of the jazz musician who lived on the Upper West Side block. Ms. Zafirau led the campaign to rename the street.

For about 25 years, until the mid-1980s, Miles Davis, the legendary jazz trumpeter who died in 1991, lived in an apartment building at 312 West 77th Street, where he enjoyed a well-established New York City tradition: loitering outside on the stoop, greeting passers-by and chatting with neighbors.

“He interacted with the community on the street,” said, Shirley Zafirau, a neighbor of Davis, who still lives on the block. “He really liked being here.”

Ms. Zafirau believed that Davis’s long tenure on the block deserved to be memorialized and so embarked on a campaign to have the block renamed after him. It was a long process that included numerous phone calls and emails to city officials, many visits to the local community board and the attending of several City Council hearings.

Her effort finally bore fruit when Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg signed a bill on Tuesday officially renaming West 77th Street between Riverside Drive and West End Avenue as “Miles Davis Way.”

Ms. Zafirau first got the notion about five years ago when she was studying to obtain a tour guide license from the city’s Department of Consumer Affairs. She learned that many well-known jazz musicians â€" Duke Ellington, Chico O’Farrill and John Hicks, among others â€" had streets named after them. “So I wondered - why isn’t Miles recognized in the same way on this block?” she said, sitting in the garden duplex apartment a few doors away from Davis’s building where she has lived since the 1960s.

The local community board gave her a lukewarm reception, questioning if Davis really lived that long on the block and whether he merited such a distinction. Instead, the board suggested a cultural medallion outside the building from the Historic Landmarks Preservation Center. But Ms. Zafirau believed it to be a somewhat lesser honor because it does not encompass the entire block.

The effort to place a medallion on the building also failed for bureaucratic reasons. But Ms. Zafirau continued to press her case for a street renaming and enlisted a former chairman of the local community board to be her ally and use his connections on the Council. The Council voted last week to approve the renaming.

“It’s a great honor for my uncle,” said Vince Wilburn Jr., a nephew of Davis. “The family is very excited about it.”

Mr. Wilburn, a drummer and music producer who divides his time between Los Angeles and New York, fondly recalled spending summers with his uncle at the brownstone as a child in the 1970s.

“People used to come by all the time,” he said, mentioning jazz legends like Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter, Dizzy Gillespie, Art Blakey and Tony Williams, who rented an apartment in the building, which is where Davis created the music for celebrated albums such as “Kind of Blue” and “Bitches Brew.”

Mr. Wilburn himself joined the rehearsals there and played drums on five Davis albums, including “Man With the Horn.”

“Those were beautiful times,” he said.



After a Lengthy Battle, ‘Miles Davis Way’ Is Official

Shirley Zafirau underneath the sign on West 77th Street that will be renamed Emon Hassan for The New York Times
Shirley Zafirau underneath the sign on West 77th Street that will be renamed “Miles Davis Way,” in honor of the jazz musician who lived on the Upper West Side block. Ms. Zafirau led the campaign to rename the street.

For about 25 years, until the mid-1980s, Miles Davis, the legendary jazz trumpeter who died in 1991, lived in an apartment building at 312 West 77th Street, where he enjoyed a well-established New York City tradition: loitering outside on the stoop, greeting passers-by and chatting with neighbors.

“He interacted with the community on the street,” said, Shirley Zafirau, a neighbor of Davis, who still lives on the block. “He really liked being here.”

Ms. Zafirau believed that Davis’s long tenure on the block deserved to be memorialized and so embarked on a campaign to have the block renamed after him. It was a long process that included numerous phone calls and emails to city officials, many visits to the local community board and the attending of several City Council hearings.

Her effort finally bore fruit when Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg signed a bill on Tuesday officially renaming West 77th Street between Riverside Drive and West End Avenue as “Miles Davis Way.”

Ms. Zafirau first got the notion about five years ago when she was studying to obtain a tour guide license from the city’s Department of Consumer Affairs. She learned that many well-known jazz musicians â€" Duke Ellington, Chico O’Farrill and John Hicks, among others â€" had streets named after them. “So I wondered - why isn’t Miles recognized in the same way on this block?” she said, sitting in the garden duplex apartment a few doors away from Davis’s building where she has lived since the 1960s.

The local community board gave her a lukewarm reception, questioning if Davis really lived that long on the block and whether he merited such a distinction. Instead, the board suggested a cultural medallion outside the building from the Historic Landmarks Preservation Center. But Ms. Zafirau believed it to be a somewhat lesser honor because it does not encompass the entire block.

The effort to place a medallion on the building also failed for bureaucratic reasons. But Ms. Zafirau continued to press her case for a street renaming and enlisted a former chairman of the local community board to be her ally and use his connections on the Council. The Council voted last week to approve the renaming.

“It’s a great honor for my uncle,” said Vince Wilburn Jr., a nephew of Davis. “The family is very excited about it.”

Mr. Wilburn, a drummer and music producer who divides his time between Los Angeles and New York, fondly recalled spending summers with his uncle at the brownstone as a child in the 1970s.

“People used to come by all the time,” he said, mentioning jazz legends like Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter, Dizzy Gillespie, Art Blakey and Tony Williams, who rented an apartment in the building, which is where Davis created the music for celebrated albums such as “Kind of Blue” and “Bitches Brew.”

Mr. Wilburn himself joined the rehearsals there and played drums on five Davis albums, including “Man With the Horn.”

“Those were beautiful times,” he said.



Ode to the Gotham Jazzmen

The Gotham Jazzmen at the Library for the Performing Arts.Caitlin Whittington/The New York Public Library The Gotham Jazzmen at the Library for the Performing Arts.

Dear Diary:

I’m in love with the Gotham Jazzmen,
six senior musicians
who’ve played together for decades.
Most Tuesdays at noon
I slip into the Bruno Walter Auditorium
at Lincoln Center to inhale
the improvisational ribbons
Of Dixieland.
I’m embraced and seduced
by the clarinet notes that pierce
my heart and confess to a crush
on half the white-haired men
in their khakis and oxford shirts.
They talk to each other on stage, yet
listen respectfully to each other’s riffs
as we applaud as one.

Read all recent entries and our updated submissions guidelines. Reach us via email diary@nytimes.com or follow @NYTMetro on Twitter using the hashtag #MetDiary.



New York Today: Goodbye, City Hall

Outgoing: the mayor and the Brooklyn borough president, Marty Markowitz, on Tuesday.Ozier Muhammad/The New York Times Outgoing: the mayor and the Brooklyn borough president, Marty Markowitz, on Tuesday.

Good morning. If you love inspecting snowflakes, sorry â€" the fun is over.

We’re looking at slivers of sun, with a high of 37. But beware of slippery roadways and sidewalks. There is another black ice alert.

Here’s what else you need to know for Wednesday:

Years ago, Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg put up digital clocks around City Hall that ticked down how many days he had left in office.

The number is nearing zero.

Bill de Blasio will take over next month.

This week, though, Mr. Bloomberg is on a five-borough tour.

We asked Michael Paulson, the editor at The New York Times who has overseen coverage of Mr. Bloomberg since 2011, about the tour.

“He’s had a complicated tenure with a lot of ups and downs,” Mr. Paulson said. “Bloomberg wants to help shape the way he’s remembered.”

On Tuesday, Mr. Bloomberg was in Brooklyn.

Today, he will deliver his last major speech, at the Economic Club of New York, on one of his favorite topics: challenges facing major cities.

After leaving office, he will decamp for Hawaii and New Zealand.

There, he will devote himself, Mr. Paulson said, “to golfing, sightseeing and staying out of de Blasio’s hair.”

“He promised.”

WEATHER

The day starts cold, but it will warm up to the mid 30s by afternoon.

The sun will last, bringing temperatures above seasonal averages, into the 50s, through the weekend.

COMMUTE

Subways: No delays. Check latest status.

Rails: On schedule. Check L.I.R.R., Metro-North or New Jersey Transit status.

Roads: No major problems. Check traffic map or radio report on the 1s or the 8s.

Alternate-side parking is in effect.

DE BLASIO WATCH

From Kate Taylor of the City Hall bureau of The Times:

- The mayor-elect has a news conference at 12:30 p.m. at CUNY City Tech in Brooklyn.

- Political insiders do not expect him to deliver his much-awaited pick for schools chancellor.

- The location suggests an announcement about jobs and higher education. Mr. de Blasio has proposed redirecting $150 million to CUNY from corporate tax subsidies.

- SUNY trustees dropped a plan to close the struggling Long Island College Hospital in Brooklyn after facing criticism from Mr. de Blasio. [NY Times]

- The race for City Council speaker is turning into a fight between Mr. de Blasio and Democratic county leaders. [City and State]

COMING UP TODAY

- “The American West in Bronze” opens at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

- Scrooges: See a 15-minute version of “A Christmas Carol” at lunch hour in the financial district. 12:30 and 1:30 p.m. [Free]

- The official historian and photographer of the Central Park Conservancy signs her book. 12 p.m. and 4 p.m. [Free]

- The already unbearably charming Brooklyn Heights promenade lights its Christmas tree. 5:30 p.m. [Free... with cookies!]

- Calling in sick? Make a mix of your favorite songs, burn it 20 times and head to a mix-tape swap in Clinton Hill. 8 p.m. [Free, RSVP]

- For more events, see The New York Times Arts & Entertainment guide.

IN THE NEWS

- Mr. Bloomberg reacted to a five-part series in The Times about a homeless child, calling her story “extremely atypical.” [Politicker]

- Mr. de Blasio plans a very publicly accessible inauguration, followed by an equally open house at Gracie Mansion. [Daily News]

- The plot thickens in the story of a Brooklyn businessman who escaped prison in Bolivia. [New York Times]

- Eight people were injured in a massive pile-up on the Gowanus Expressway. [Daily News]

Joseph Burgess contributed reporting.

New York Today is a morning roundup that stays live from 6 a.m. till late morning.

What would you like to see here to start your day? Post a comment, email us at nytoday@nytimes.com or reach us via Twitter using #NYToday.

Find us on weekdays at nytoday.com.