The Gil Evans Orchestra - Out of the Cool
Facts
| Artist(s) | The Gil Evans Orchestra |
| Studio | Grp Records |
| Release Date | March 26, 1996 |
| UPC Code | 011105018623 |
| Buy this item | $14.98 at Amazon.com As of Oct 9 20:53 EDT (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
About The Gil Evans Orchestra - Out of the Cool
Recorded after Gil Evans provided the orchestral clouds through which Miles Davis blew on such classics as Sketches of Spain, Porgy and Bess, and Miles Ahead, Out of the Cool is a starburst. Evans's title makes clear that this is a path away from the legendary 1949 Birth of the Cool, opening as it does with an obsessive (if calmly so) vamp that pulses for two minutes with maracas rattling before all the orchestra's instruments enter. Built on a repeating four-bar figure, "La Nevada" goes on to peg Evans as a fully realized orchestra player, one who uses the color palette of over a dozen distinct voices as his instrument. As a pianist Evans manages startling spareness, making dramatic miniature figures and then comping through the orchestra's skein with ritual regularity. Looking at the provenance of these tunes, one realizes Evans's true scope of knowledge: he moves from Kurt Weill's "Bilbao Song" to the Lydian (as in George Russell) modal structure of "Stratusphunk" to close the session with a regally charted take on Horace Silver's "Sister Sadie." Note how trumpeter Johnny Coles steps up as a main soloist, and follow the harmonic topography. It's a rare treat. --Andrew Bartlett Amazon.com
Tracks
- La Nevada
- Where Flamingos Fly
- Bilbao Song
- Stratusphunk
- Sunken Treasure
- Sister Sadie
Similar CDs
| The Complete Pacific Jazz Recordings | The Individualism of Gil Evans | The Blues and the Abstract Truth | Gil Evans & Ten | Birth of the Cool |
User Reviews
Average user review:| Jazz de fino, ecléctico, potente |
| Why not give it SIX stars? |
This too, it's a wonderful argument for the value of CDs. This one, and "Individualism" were my first purchases... and Oh glory, there's even more subtlety to audit on the CDs!
All I want to add is this: Gil Evans is the ultimate crossover artist. From Jimi Hendrix to the blues, to the sonorities and moods of Maurice Ravel's music, he loved tunes and harmony and he LOVED each instrument in the orchestra. No one like him, not at all. Well, maybe Maria Schneider, who was (I'm told) his assistant at the end... She's got a good ear, but Gil was still the most amazing arranger. And, as others have noted, he sure had the players to do his imagination full justice.
I'll shut up now, and you go buy a copy, OK? June 6, 2006
| A rare gem |
| Gil's Greatest |
| simply astounding |
More reviews at Amazon.com ...
