All About Jazz 5 out of 5
It plays out like a tale of espionage. In Bremen, Germany, more than five-thousand miles from his Los Angeles home, American producer Zev Feldman, has a chance meeting with the son of a late German jazz producer. In a parking lot, the German plays a single track of music on his car stereo; a forgotten recording from tapes almost fifty years old. Feldman, upon hearing more of the tapes, decides he needs to get this out to the world. It is not quite that straight-forward and it takes the better part of two years to complete the deal. The result is a rare Bill Evans studio album, Some Other Time: The Lost Session From the Black Forest.
The never before released album features Evans, bassist Eddie Gomez and drummer Jack DeJohnette and represents DeJohnetteโs only studio recording with Evans. The content is trademark Evans in style, with alternative versions of โYouโre Gonna Hear From Meโ and duo (with Gomez) and trio versions of โBaubles, Bangles & Beads.โ The difference between this and Evansโ better known trio is in the influence of a young DeJohnette who plays with a lightness on the snare that belies his ability to guide the direction of the music. In comparison, the Gomez/DeJohnette trio opens Evans to more consistent cadences and longer lines than what was typical of the Paul Motian/Scott LaFaro trio. The differences may be subtle, but they place Some Other Time in a light that provides a somewhat different perspective on Evansโ creative evolution.
The animated โYou Go To My Headโ opens the first disc and sets the tone for a mostly upbeat collection of twenty-one compositions, relying deeply on well-known standards. There are, of course, the kind of ballads that were mainstays in the Evans repertoire. โVery Early,โ โIโll Remember April,โ โMy Funny Valentineโ and โTurn Out the Starsโ stand out among the more reflective pieces. Another highlight is โLover Man (Oh, Where Can You Be?),โ demonstrating some of Evansโ exceptional improvisational skills. Evans also offers some other fine solo performances with โThese Foolish Thingsโ and an unfinished โItโs All Right With Meโ being noteworthy.
Gomez worked with Evans for some time but DeJohnette, for only six months in 1968. It was, however, at a time when Evans was overflowing with novel ideas and establishing himself as a force for change in jazz. Moreover, Evans was on the cusp of moving away from swinging lyricism to becoming a musical beat-poet. DeJohnetteโs sense of interchange and his propulsive motion, and layering technique lent itself to the new direction that Evans was working toward, and that influence remained after the drummerโs brief tenure with Evans. Some Other Time: The Lost Session From the Black Forest is more than a nice-to-have addition to the Evans catalog; it is an excellent collection that shines a new light on one of the most revered artists in jazz.
Karl Ackermann of All About Jazz
- Source
An unreleased album of Bill Evans music is two white whales in one. And it is proof of my high expectations.
The sound a decade ago, as all piano recordings by MPS that time, is remastered with feeling and perfection. Second, the common tactic of HGBS and Behrendt, to record shortly after concerts at a spot in the picturesque Villingen as a relaxing intermission, with no order or constructed playlist, led to great results.
The trio is in great mood and flow, as Bill Evans is. But the reply โAbsolutely! Of course!โ by the HGBS son on the request of unreleased tapes makes me wonder. What more is there to come? Please be generous as we await the next in this series of Bill Evans remasters.
Eric Berger (verified owner) โ
Bill Evans is my favorite artist. I know his adorable style very well. This is an album that lets you enjoy the magic of Bill Evans.
On the album we hear all his great Jazz mastery. The notes of his historic piano have a unique elegance. In the attacks and releases his technique is refined. Evans is never banal because he always finds reasons that know how to capture you.
His jazz has always been adorable, and his fellow adventurers have always known him to love him. It is no coincidence that he has always played in a trio. Three musicians are a more congenial setting that made him happy.
I listened carefully to this album that I downloaded in FLAC 192. I must say that the sound is very analog, even if it lacks a bit of dynamics. As if there was a veil that does not let the upper part of the frequencies flourish and therefore the recording is affected. But it in no way detracts from the fact that we are in the presence of an exceptionally good recording.
Gianfranco Bonansea (verified owner) โ
Lost in Time takes one back to a space and time where piano sounds like piano at the hands of a cliassicist.
midnightmatinee (verified owner) โ