Front cover of Another Time: The Hilversum Concert, with Bill Evans, Eddie Gomez, and Jack DeJohnette. Recorded in 1968, released in 2017. |
Back cover of Another Time. From left to right, Eddie Gomez, bass, Jack DeJohnette, drums, and Bill Evans, piano. |
Jazz pianist Bill Evans’ career has been thoroughly
chronicled, both through the many recordings he made during his lifetime, and also
the numerous recordings that have surfaced since his death in 1980. And yet,
like so many other great musicians, more music by Bill Evans just keeps
surfacing. 2017’s Another Time: The
Hilversum Concert features Evans with bassist Eddie Gomez and drummer Jack
DeJohnette. For many years, it was thought that this particular trio had only
made one recording together, the live concert Bill Evans at the Montreux Jazz Festival, recorded on June 15,
1968. However, in 2016 another recording featuring the trio was released, Some Other Time: The Lost Session from the
Black Forest, recorded on June 20, 1968. Another Time was recorded just two days after the session for Some Other Time. Both albums were
released on the Resonance label, which has done a superb job of packaging these
recordings, including informative liner notes, interviews with both Gomez and
DeJohnette, and rare photos.
Eddie Gomez worked with Evans for 11 years, from 1966 until
1977, and made many recordings with him. DeJohnette, on the other hand, was
with Evans for just six months—he left the group later in 1968 to
join Miles Davis, and he was featured on Davis’ landmark fusion albums Bitches Brew and Jack Johnson.
One of the things that made Evans’ trios so interesting was
the way that he allowed the bass player to act as a second soloist with him.
This was the case from his best-known trio, with Scott LaFaro on bass and Paul
Motian on drums, until the end of Evans’ life.
While many piano trios of the time were meant to focus specifically on
the piano player, Evans sought a more equal musical partnership. Although Evans
worked in many different groups throughout his career, the majority of his work was in the piano trio format.
Although there is some overlap in song selection between the
three albums featuring Evans, Gomez, and DeJohnette, all told, the trio takes
on 31 different songs across the albums. Even though there is some repetition,
with players of this quality it doesn’t really matter, since they’re able to
make the songs sound fresh each time.
The concert on Another
Time was recorded by the Netherlands Radio Union, and the sound quality is
excellent. The music is sprightly and bright. Although some of the songs like “Emily”
and “Nardis” will be very familiar to Evans fans, they are done so well that
it’s hard to quibble with having another version of them.
Bill Evans had a superb sound at the piano. His playing was
always melodic, and deceptively easy-sounding, but never veering into
easy-listening or clichéd cocktail jazz, and his sound was never heavy or jarring. In
the liner notes, there’s a great quote from Evans explaining his style of
playing, from a 1978 interview with Bert Vuijsje: “I try to play good things
that are beautiful to me and then I think other people will find them beautiful
too.”
The critical rap on Evans early in his career was that he “couldn’t
swing.” This was a frequent criticism of white jazz players during the 1950’s
and 1960’s, probably due to the fact that so many white players like Dave
Brubeck, Paul Desmond, Gerry Mulligan, Stan Getz, Chet Baker, and Evans
himself, were often lumped into the “West Coast Jazz” scene, which was often
seen as the opposite of the African American players in New York City, who came
out of the bebop school and later branched off into hard bop, soul jazz, modal
jazz, and a dozen other things. But all of those white players learned from
bebop—they
were simply moving in another direction, and they all could swing when they
needed to, Evans included.
Eddie Gomez is an inventive accompanist and soloist, and his
playing compliments Evans’ style very well. Gomez was only 22 years old when he
joined Evans, and he was 23 when Another
Time was recorded, but he plays with an assurance belying his young age. Jack
DeJohnette was 25 at the time of this recording, but he was already a marvelously
swinging drummer. DeJohnette could swing as hard as needed, but it never feels
like he’s pushing the music. He never overpowers the other players, and he’s quite
adept at brush work.
The concert starts with the expressive exuberance of “You’re
Gonna Hear From Me,” a title that is especially apt for a concert opener, since
that’s exactly what the audience gets to do for the next 48 minutes—hear
from Bill Evans. “Very Early” starts out softly, delicately, with Evans stating
the melody before DeJohnette comes in on brushes. Then it gains steam and a
minute in there’s a joyful release as Evans starts his swinging solo. “Very
Early” also features Eddie Gomez’s first solo of the concert. Gomez never loses
the bright, easily swinging feeling of the song.
The Leslie Bricusse and Anthony Newley show tune “Who Can I
Turn To?” is next. The song was a hit for Tony Bennett, and Evans and Bennett
recorded the song during sessions for their second album Together Again, but the song wasn’t released until years later when
the album was put on CD. When sung, the song is always a big ballad, but here
it quickly turns swinging after Gomez and DeJohnette enter. Gomez turns in
another nice solo, and Evans lays out for a while as Gomez solos, with just
DeJohnette keeping time behind him.
“Alfie,” by Burt Bacharach and Hal David, is another show
tune—almost.
It was inspired by the 1966 film of the same name that made Michael Caine a
household name in the United States, but the song wasn’t actually included in
the UK version of the film. (It was added to the end credits of the US version
of the film.) It was a hit for Cilla Black, Dionne Warwick, and Cher, and
recorded by many other singers, including Jack Jones, Andy Williams, and Tony
Bennett. “Alfie” is the closest the concert comes to having a ballad, and it’s
filled with Evans’ romantic, expressive playing.
“Embraceable You” is Gomez’s solo feature, just as it was a
week earlier at the Montreux concert. In the liner notes Gomez says, “Quite
honestly, I never felt comfortable with ‘Embraceable You’…I didn’t feel like I needed
a feature.” From listening to the song, Gomez certainly doesn’t sound
uncomfortable with the song.
Next we have “Emily,” written by Johnny Mandel and Johnny
Mercer for the 1964 film The Americanization
of Emily. The song was recorded by Frank Sinatra, Jack Jones, Andy
Williams, and, you guessed it, Tony Bennett. First recorded by Evans in 1967
for his second album of overdubbed solo piano, Further Conversations with Myself, the song became a staple of his concerts.
The three note phrase that begins Evans’ version, “Em-i-ly,” repeats throughout
his version, just as it does in non-jazz versions of the song. The song always
seemed to bring out Evans’ lyrical romanticism, and this lovely version of “Emily”
is one of the highlights of the album for me.
“Nardis” was another staple of Evans’ live performances.
Written by Miles Davis for Cannonball Adderley, and never recorded by Davis, it
was a song that Evans returned to repeatedly with his various trios over the
years. The song was a chance for the trio to stretch out, and at eight and a
half minutes it’s the longest song of the concert. “Nardis” features DeJohnette’s
only solo of the concert, a rumbling exploration that still manages to hold the
listener’s interest throughout.
“Turn Out the Stars” was another song that Evans often performed
live. An Evans original, it came out of a solo improvisation during his 1966
concert Bill Evans at Town Hall. Like
much of the rest of this concert, it’s lightly swinging, and you can hear on
this song how in sync Evans and Gomez were.
Written by Evans for his first album, “Five” was a song
closely associated with him, although I haven’t heard many live recordings of
it. A brief concert closer, listen closely for Evans’ quotes from Miles Davis’ “The
Theme” and Sonny Rollins’ “Oleo.”
If you’re a fan of Bill Evans, you should pick up Another Time—it’s full of excellent music,
and it gives us another look at a short-lived trio of his.
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