Back when I was a college student I tried to learn to play the guitar. I tried, I really did. I failed. I wanted to play jazz. But the desire did guide my jazz collecting. I bought Guitar Player magazine, and just when I purchased my first decent stereo system GP had a review of a number of jazz guitar releases by Verve. I only remember two of them now: one by Tal Farlow, and another by Bill Evans and Jim Hall. I loved the Farlow album, and I am going to have to find it again. But the Evans/Hall album was something on a higher shelf.
Bill Evans left behind a magnificent body of work. I continue to think that he is the greatest genius on the keyboard in the history of modern jazz. Most of his work is contained on three box sets: The Complete Bill Evans on Riverside, the Complete Bill Evans on Verve, and the Complete Fantasy Recordings. I now have the latter two, and I am waiting on the third. Evans was better than anyone else at taking a basic melody and squeezing out every last drop of honey. You don't want to listen to Evans unless you are prepared to be confronted with the unvarnished muscle of his and your own heart. It doesn't matter what you are doing when you put this music on: all the pretension gets stripped away and you are left with the simple fact of what your heart desired and what it did or didn't get.
Most of Evans recordings are piano trios. His famous Village Vanguard Recordings are his magnum opus, with the beautiful Scott LaFaro on bass. LaFaro died ten days after that famous date, and I don't think Evans ever got over it. Sorry, I got off track. Evans and Jim Hall did this duet that is very different from the trio format. Hall and Evans play together with some much consonance that it almost like the left and right hand on the piano. It is arresting in its beauty.
Here is a sample from the Complete Verve:
Bill Evans and Jim Hall/I've Got You Under My Skin/Intermodulation
http://drop.io/hidden/dssmd0pmfltagm/asset/MTAtMDEtaS12ZS1nb3QteW91LXVuZGVyLW15LXNraW4tbXAz
And here is another, even more breathtaking:
Bill Evans and Jim Hall/My Man's Gone Now/Intermodulation
http://drop.io/hidden/dssmd0pmfltagm/asset/MTAtMDItbXktbWFuLXMtZ29uZS1ub3ctbXAz
And here, just for something completely different, is a cut from another guitar album that I worshiped back in the day. Al DiMeola is a fusion virtuoso, and this album kept me going through many a dark time. It is a spy movie soundtrack in search of a movie, and I like spy movies. Elegant Gypsy might be my favorite fusion album. It is a good contrast with the moody introspection of Evans' music. Prepare to soar.
Al DiMeola/Flight Over Rio/Elegant Gypsy
http://drop.io/hidden/dssmd0pmfltagm/asset/MDEtZmxpZ2h0LW92ZXItcmlvLW00YQ
Have fun, buy the discs, and post a comment.
http://jazznotesdp.blogspot.com/
Saturday, September 19, 2009
Jazz Guitar, Bill Evans, Al Dimeola, and Memory
Posted by jazzofilo at Saturday, September 19, 2009
Labels: Al Dimeola, Bill Evans
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