Product Description
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This collection includes for the first time on commercial video
Bill Evans renditions of the rarely performed or recorded Sareen
Jurer, Blue Serge and Twelve Tone Tune Two. Bill Evans performs
with four different rhythm sections - all of which are excellent
- including the stunning duo of bassist Neils-Henning Orsted
Pedersen and drummer Alan Dawson.
Among the many surprises in this collection is a live
performance of My Melancholy Baby by Bill Evans and saxophonist
Lee Konitz.
Review
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Bill Evans on DVD. It took me four views to finally understand
why Bill Evans: Live '64-'75, the new DVD from Jazz Icons, is so
important. During my first two previews, I had written off the
video as too dull and plodding to recommend. Then last night I
realized what I was doing wrong. I was watching it.
Before I go further, let me first say that this DVD, like all of
the videos in the Jazz Icons series, was exquisitely and
restored. You can't believe how polished and vivid the resolution
is and how strong the contrasts and angles are. The problem for
me, in general, is that most DVDs of jazz concerts and club dates
simply aren't that interesting to watch. If you were actually
there, you were in the moment. On video, most live jazz seems
much less exciting.
Why? I think by watching jazz performances on video, a good part
of your audio perception is distracted by the visual, which
childishly insists on more and more action and entertainment. In
the process, your visual essentially robs that part of your brain
that listens deeply and critically. It's like making too many
demands on a power source. The lights dim a little.
Then last night, I viewed the Bill Evans DVD again-but this time
on my computer. While viewing, I found I had to take care of some
writing. So I started to work, with the visual eclipsed by my
Word document. That's when I realized I was listening much more
intently to the music of Bill Evans in Sweden (1964), France
(1965), Denmark (1970), Sweden (1970) and Denmark (1975). As I
worked, I took mini breaks to peek behind my Word document for a
few seconds to view different sections of the DVD. And I was
always blown away.
That's when I realized how great and significant a DVD this is.
The music is beyond superb. Evans takes many of the songs in
completely different directions. His 'Round Midnight from the
Sweden (1970) chapter may be his most astonishing version of the
song. I was blown away. I'll also say that his in' Bee and
You're Gonna Hear From Me are close behind as monumental
renditions. And the footage is quite revealing-in nibbles.
And perhaps this is the way all DVDs of jazz performances should
be viewed: On your computer, so you can listen hard while doing
something else, checking in every so often to see what the
artists are up to. Blame it on television. Your brain has been
trained to want two guys cing through a window wrestling for
a . But listen to a DVD, and it's a whole new bag. I'm going
to be listening to this Bill Evans DVD over and over again.
Hearing is believing! -- JazzWax.com, Marc Myers, December 21,
2008
Jazz Icons is doing for jazz what the Criterion Collection has
done for classic and important films. -- Jazz Times Magazine
Jazz Icons' Bill Evans DVD is an essential addition to the
pianist's legacy. -- Jazz.com, Thomas Cunniffe, December 2008
Thanksgiving weekend marks 40 years since the Bill Evans Trio,
with bassist Eddie Gomez and drummer Marty Morell, appeared at
Raleigh's Frog and Nightgown. The pianist's "Live '64-'75," part
of the third group of Jazz Icons DVD releases, arrives just in
time for the anniversary.
Tracks recorded in 1970 in Denmark and Sweden capture the
personnel from the Frog gig. The bassist and drummer on the other
tracks include Chuck Israels and Larry Bunker (Sweden, '64),
Neils-Henning Orsted Pedersen and Alan Dawson (France, '65) and
Gomez and Eliot Zigmund (Denmark, '75).
Evans' trios were the antithesis of show biz. Evans, with head
bowed, rarely looked up from the keys. Bass and drums were all
business, all interplay. Evans was the most romantic of pianists.
His harmonies have affected almost every jazz pianist since the
late '50s. And if you were lucky enough to have been a teenage
jazz fan and first heard him then, your harmonic sensitivity was
set for life.
Highlights of the disc include "Detour Ahead" ('65) and "Alfie"
and two swinging, technically brilliant versions of "Someday My
Prince Will Come" (all from '70). The third group of Jazz Icons
also features discs by Sonny Rollins, Cannonball Adderley, Lionel
Hampton, Nina Simone, O Peterson and Rahsaan Roland Kirk. --
The News & Observer, Owen Cordle, November 2008
The sound quality is first rate, and the performances are
extraordinary. -- Newsweek Magazine
This newly issued DVD provides footage of the late and undeniably
influential pianist Bill Evans' performances across Europe,
spanning 1964-1975. Including an extensive booklet with photos
and reminisces by Evans' daughter Maxine, the program offers a
comprehensive documentary of the pianist's various trios,
presented in chronological order.
The booklet features a conversation with bassist Chuck Israels
(appearing on the 1964 tracks) who discusses Evans' ability to
play so wondrously amid his drug addiction while providing other
ins about the pianist's sense of organization et al. And
Maxine Evans recollects the time when she rode in a limo with her
her and Tony Bennett from New York to the Mike Douglas Show in
Pennsylvania. Nonetheless, there's a wealth of information to
accompany the video. With the opening moments of "My Foolish
Heart," from a 1964 performance in Sweden, we see the paradigm of
Evans' stage persona, where he faces down towards the keyboard
via his trance-like enactments.
Alto sax great Lee Konitz sits in with the band for a breezy,
mid-tempo swing on "My Melancholy Baby, which is a highlight from
Evans' 1965 gig in France. Here, the audience is treated to a
flawlessly executed drum solo by Alan Dawson, who employs
cross-sticking and other difficult to execute techniques. Of
course, the late drummer was a revered clinician. Yet Evans
remains the focal point during all of his trio permutations up
through the color footage of his 1975 Danish TV set with bassist
Eddie Gomez and drummer Eliot Zigmund.
Evans' lyrically rich chord voicings and wondrous harmonic
movements were engineered upon an ever-present sense of buoyancy
and swing, regardless of pitch or tempo. A giant among jazz
pianists, his artistry is often imitated, although his
impressionable mark of authenticity can never be compromised. The
film shows Evans bridging the gap between trad-jazz, bop and
modern mainstream while conveying variable stylistic changes
along the way. -- JazzReview.com, December 2008