UPC: 8435395503065
Format: LP
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Personnel: Bill Evans (piano); Eddie Gomez (bass); Jack DeJohnette (drums).
Engineers: Pierre Grand-Jean, Jean-Claude Martin.
Recorded at the Montreux Jazz Festival, Switzerland on June 15, 1968. Originally released on Verve (8762). Includes liner notes by Brian Priestly and Gene Lees.
All tracks have been digitally remastered.
This is part of Verve's Master Edition series.
Personnel: Bill Evans (piano); Eddie Gomez (bass); Jack DeJohnette (drums).
Engineers: Pierre Grand-Jean, Jean-Claude Martin.
Recorded live at the Montreux Jazz Festival, Casino De Montreux, Montreux, Switzerland on June 15, 1968. Originally released on Verve (8762). Includes liner notes by Gene Lees.
Digitally remastered by Dennis Drake (Polygram Studios) and Gert Van Hoeyen (Polygram Sound Lab, Baarn, The Netherlands).
Bill Evans' 1968 release, At the Montreux Jazz Festival, marks the beginning of stylistic changes for the legendary pianist. Only one year earlier, his At Town Hall release found his approach generally more introspective and brooding. In contrast, this set is more lively, playful, and experimental. Much of this is down to the active and intense drumming of Jack DeJohnette, who had joined the trio only a short time before this concert was recorded; longtime bandmate Eddie Gomez is also featured on this album. His energetic soloing adds veracity to tunes such as "Embraceable You" and "A Sleeping Bee." DeJohnette, too, is given several opportunities to display his drumming skills. His lengthy solo on "Nardis" displays his technical prowess and four-way coordination; such acumen would later cause jazz fans and critics alike to hail DeJohnette as one of the world's premier jazz drummers. Evans, famous for a soft-spoken pianistic touch, seems driven to new vistas on this album. He experiments more with harmonic dissonance and striking rhythmical contrasts, making this his most extroverted playing since his freshman release, New Jazz Conceptions.
Engineers: Pierre Grand-Jean, Jean-Claude Martin.
Recorded at the Montreux Jazz Festival, Switzerland on June 15, 1968. Originally released on Verve (8762). Includes liner notes by Brian Priestly and Gene Lees.
All tracks have been digitally remastered.
This is part of Verve's Master Edition series.
Personnel: Bill Evans (piano); Eddie Gomez (bass); Jack DeJohnette (drums).
Engineers: Pierre Grand-Jean, Jean-Claude Martin.
Recorded live at the Montreux Jazz Festival, Casino De Montreux, Montreux, Switzerland on June 15, 1968. Originally released on Verve (8762). Includes liner notes by Gene Lees.
Digitally remastered by Dennis Drake (Polygram Studios) and Gert Van Hoeyen (Polygram Sound Lab, Baarn, The Netherlands).
Bill Evans' 1968 release, At the Montreux Jazz Festival, marks the beginning of stylistic changes for the legendary pianist. Only one year earlier, his At Town Hall release found his approach generally more introspective and brooding. In contrast, this set is more lively, playful, and experimental. Much of this is down to the active and intense drumming of Jack DeJohnette, who had joined the trio only a short time before this concert was recorded; longtime bandmate Eddie Gomez is also featured on this album. His energetic soloing adds veracity to tunes such as "Embraceable You" and "A Sleeping Bee." DeJohnette, too, is given several opportunities to display his drumming skills. His lengthy solo on "Nardis" displays his technical prowess and four-way coordination; such acumen would later cause jazz fans and critics alike to hail DeJohnette as one of the world's premier jazz drummers. Evans, famous for a soft-spoken pianistic touch, seems driven to new vistas on this album. He experiments more with harmonic dissonance and striking rhythmical contrasts, making this his most extroverted playing since his freshman release, New Jazz Conceptions.