It is, indeed, a Rhodes. In fact, one of the tunes on the record is titled "New Rhodes".
Liked the Pascua clip; a lot. O-10 is correct, 70’s Miles. Not quite the level of grit and excitement heard on "Bitches Brew", but the overall vibe is very similar with very harmonically extended soloing over rock influenced rhythms. Ambrose Akinmusire sounds fantastic; a very young exciting player with a very interesting harmonic sense in his improvising and an obvious extension of the style that Miles created. The tune starts with an interesting melody and sounds just a little "smooth jazz" for my taste. It is in the solo sections that things really take off and approach the feeling of 70’s Miles. The amazing thing about "Bitches Brew" is that the "tunes" were created on the spot or from very sparse outlines. There was musical magic in those sessions and one more indication of the genius of Miles. Listen to the Pascua clip again and then listen to this; especially the solo sections:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?list=PL94gOvpr5yt0fSZzCnnYWwUFF3evnG4x4¶ms=OAFIAVgD&v=ibanLl...Also liked the Alan Parks record; a lot. Interesting player and compositional concept. About the only thing I don't like about the record is how they recorded the drums. The balance between the drums and piano seems skewed toward the drums because the piano was recorded to sound a little distant and covered in comparison to the the very up close sound of the drums. Very "ECM" vibe overall; in the best sense.
Nice clips; thanks for sharing.