Bill Evans Trio with Symphony Orchestra
Facts
| Studio | Polygram Records |
| Release Date | October 25, 1990 |
| UPC Code | 042282198327 |
| Buy this item | $14.98 at Amazon.com As of Dec 5 12:27 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
About Bill Evans Trio with Symphony Orchestra
Released in 1965, this date features Evans's trio with drummer Larry Bunker, who, three decades later, guest-starred on Diana Krall's When I Look in Your Eyes, and the sensitive bassist Larry Bunker. They're augmented by the azure-tinged arrangements by the famed conductor Claus Ogerman, who worked his magic with artists from Antonio Carlos Jobim to Frank Sinatra. The result of this union is a swinging and seamless interplay in which improvisation becomes spontaneous composition, and vice versa. The linearity and logic of Evans's lines erase centuries of musical distance from the works of Bach, Chopin, Granados, Fauré, and Scriabin, with the trio's trademark telepathy expressed in 4/4 and 3/4 time signatures and light Latin tinges. Evans's haunting compositions, "My Bells" and "Time Remembered," imbued by Ogerman's ethereal strings, are the jewels of this delightful recording, whose brilliance has increased with time. --Eugene Holley Jr. Amazon.com
Tracks
- La maja y el ruiseñior arr. as Granada for jazz trio & orchestra
- Sicilienne
- Prelude - Bill Evans, Skryabin, Alexander
- Time Remembered - Bill Evans, Evans, Bill [Piano]
- Pavane - Bill Evans, Faure, Gabriel
- Elegia (Elegy)
- My Bells - Bill Evans, Evans, Bill [Piano]
- arr. as Blue Interlude for jazz trio & orchestra
Similar CDs
| Across The Crystal Sea - Conducted and Arranged by Claus Ogerman | From Left to Right | The Complete Village Vanguard Recordings, 1961 | Bill Evans at Town Hall | Moon Beams |
User Reviews
Average user review:| Still amazing after all these years... |
It was "kismet." Now I have multiple CD's of Bill Evans with Symphony Orch. - one for each car, and one for home. In spite of some minor technical flaws, this is an absolutely wonderful album to relax to. The orchestral parts are lush and well brought off, and the trio's playing is exceptional. If you have one oar in jazz and another in classical, please do yourself a favor and buy this CD. "You'll thank me later..." July 23, 2007
| Bill Goes 'Symphonic' |
One of the minor oddnesses of the album is the way in which, on some tracks, the beginning of Evans's solo launches into a very different tempo and mood from the one just established in the orchestra's theme statement. Sometimes - as on Faure's Pavane - this creates a musically effective contrast; elsewhere - as on "Granados" - it leaves you feeling too sharply aware of the incongruity rather than empathy between the different musical worlds being brought together. Maybe that's partly why the most satisfying of the "classical" tracks are the Bach Sicilienne and "Blue Interlude" (on Chopin's C minor Prelude): each solo seems to grow organically out of its theme and both themes inspire Evans to some excellent improvisation. Listen, for example, to the way in which he exploits the "bluesy" aspect of the Chopin as his solo builds to its climax. Evans's own "My Bells" is another high spot of the album - an attractively nostalgic modal theme tastefully arranged for the orchestra, leading to a gently swinging solo and a rubato restatement of the theme by Evans before a wistful coda.
There's certainly a lot of absorbing, beautiful playing from the Evans trio here, including a high level of melodic invention and incomparable rhythmic subtlety from the pianist. But the appeal of the album will largely depend on what you think of the orchestra's part in the proceedings. It's probably one to try before you buy. June 10, 2004
| A Gem Among Bill's Recordings |
| One for the Ages |
| a stunning fusion of classical and jazz |
More reviews at Amazon.com ...
