Portrait in Jazz

by Ojc

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Sales Rank:29340 (lower is better)
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Release Date:1991-07-01
Label:Ojc
UPC:025218608824
Binding:Audio CD
Published By:Ojc
ASIN:B000000Y59
Category:Music

Tracks on Portrait in Jazz by Ojc

  1. Come Rain or Come Shine - Bill Evans, Arlen, Harold
  2. Autumn Leaves - Bill Evans, Prevert, Jacques
  3. Autumn Leaves - Bill Evans, Prevert, Jacques
  4. Witchcraft - Bill Evans, Leigh, Carolyn
  5. When I Fall in Love - Bill Evans, Heyman, Edward
  6. Peri's Scope - Bill Evans, Evans, Bill [Piano]
  7. What Is This Thing Called Love? - Bill Evans, Porter, Cole
  8. Spring Is Here - Bill Evans, Rodgers, Richard
  9. Someday My Prince Will Come - Bill Evans, Churchill, Frank
  10. Blue in Green - Bill Evans, Davis, Miles
  11. Blue in Green - Bill Evans, Davis, Miles

Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions

Album Description

Japanese only SHM-CD (Super High Material CD - playable on all CD players) pressing includes four bonus tracks. Universal. 2008.
Amazon.com

Lyric and thoughtful, pianist Bill Evans proved an urbane bridge between the early bop style of Bud Powell and playful funk of Horace Silver, and the later, modern approach of pianists like Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea, and Keith Jarrett (indeed, Jarrett went as far as to record with Evans's backup band of drummer Paul Motian and bassist Gary Peacock). Evans's second album as a leader, Portrait in Jazz combines a pair of originals--"Blue in Green" and "Peri's Scope"--with a handful of show tunes and standards, including a version of "Someday My Prince Will Come" that pre-dates Miles Davis's adaptation. With a preference for irregular phrasing and a taste for unusual chord spellings, Evans was frequently able to recast old chestnuts and tired warhorses into new gems and spirited charges, as he does here with "Witchcraft," "Spring Is Here," and "When I Fall in Love." And although he recorded in many different formats throughout his career, including duets with himself, the power and beauty of Evans's trios helped him lay a special claim to that grouping. --Fred Goodman

Customer Reviews

Subtle and swinging - Reviewed on 2008-11-20
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I'll be brief: Bill Evans is, in my esteem, the most devastatingly moving piano player ever to walk this earth. He is at his absolute best here, full of subtle, deep emotional expression and swinging hard with the rhythm section, often at the same time. Evans, LaFaro and Motian are simply unmatched in their cohesiveness and supreme ability to listen and respond instantly to one another's improvisational threads and evolving harmonic and melodic ideas. "Portrait in Jazz" is an absolute necessity for anyone who loves Bill Evans, or anyone who wants to understand why so many of us do.
Beyond category - Reviewed on 2008-03-05
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2 customers found this review helpful, 1 did not.

Most of Bill Evans' work is great and timeless. Much of it, like this record, transcends jazz or any other stylistic category. It is simply gorgeous, intelligent music. As some writers have said, he seemed to distill beauty and nostalgia out of thin air.
Desert island, here we come - Reviewed on 2008-01-19
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This is, for me, the quintessential Bill Evans album. Bill's trio finally had settled into their groove, and man, could they swing! This has lots of classic jazz standards and despite being recorded in the early days of stereo, the sound is terrific. If you need to delve deeper into what Bill was doing at the time, The Complete Village Vanguard Recordings, 1961 is a must buy companion, but this album a cornerstone of any serious jazz collection.
Wow! - Reviewed on 2007-04-16
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1 customer found this review helpful, 1 did not.

This is my seventh Evans recording and it is like I am getting to know him all over again. This album has energy, freshness and joy that just isn't there on later recordings. The recording quality is more than satisfactory. The group's playing is smart and engaging with a skillful balance between technical skill and understated musicality. The playfulness brought to standards like Witchcraft is a welcome contrast to many of his later more brooding works. LaFaro and Motian provide their legendary support and interplay with their typcial flair. This was definitely a high point for Evans, before drugs, bad health and personal problems got in the way. No Evans collection would be complete without this recording.
Expressive playing! - Reviewed on 2007-03-09
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The artistic greatness of Bill Evans resides in his spelling treatment of the piano. He not only plays the keyboard; he plays with the instrument and certainly he would seem to establish with it a sort of spiritual connection making of it an extension this inner thoughts and moods.

That's why there have been so many versions about his compositions and however, just a few have been able to perform and express with such kind of feeling and inspiration the core of his compositions.

This is at least to my view, the main reason I recognize in him the essence of the genius. As Midas King all what he played it was pure gold.
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