Last edited by Russell_Street (2009-02-12 03:05:59)
A piece that has bugged me since I read it:
http://www.bagatellen.com/archives/frontpage/001240.html
Back to the man and the one that got away. My local used record shop had the Complete Bill Evans on Verve box (http://www.amazon.com/Complete-Bill-Evans-Verve/dp/B0000047DA/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&s=music&qid=1234452223&sr=1-3), which I didn't notice until I had already walked up to the counter w/ my already absurdly large pile of albums. Figuring that it would be there the next time I visited (the place is literally around the corner from my house), I decided to pass.
Needless to say it wasn't there the next time I passed. I have since downloaded it, which serves as only a painful reminder of how awesome the actual set must be (like many downloads, not all the songs are tagged properly, some are missing, etc.).
Anyway, Evans is a hero, both stylistically and musically. Great look and great music.
Last edited by Russell_Street (2009-02-13 01:20:16)
I recently picked up a 10cd Chet set for $20 from my local record shop. I was expecting to get dinged on the price before he quoted me a price. He said the label was shit so don't expect the definitive Chet or anything. I'm planning to put it all on the ipod this weekend.
I wonder if people weren't mentioning Chet out of a wee bit of snobbiness. I've read stuff where jazz-heads (being perhaps even more unreasonable than clothing junkies) getting a bit snooty about him. Maybe, everyone liked it but didn't want to admit it. I can't admit to understanding what they didn't like. What I've heard of his work w/ Mulligan is boss stuff.
I'm not surprised to hear they all liked the cool stuff, but nothing a little wilder? Where's the Ornette or the Mingus?
Elsewhere JS has name-checked Bird, Mister Chet & the MJQ. He also famously loved/loves the West Coast school, but I was talking to Ian & John Lally.
Agreed on Chet & Mulligan together.
The wilder stuff... Not sure. It was either hard or cool I think back in the day. Nothing too experimental maybe?
Must drag myself up into the attic...
Some more stuff on that Chet Baker debate.
From allmusic guide: "Baker was hailed by fans and critics and he won a number of polls in the next few years. In 1954, Pacific Jazz released Chet Baker Sings, an album that increased his popularity but alienated traditional jazz fans; he would continue to sing for the rest of his career."
It's a shame I can't find the David Thompson piece that sparked off the following editorial. Thompson's a very divisive critic period. I really like his movie writing but his colleagues like to take turns bashing him for his biographical dictionary of film and his Welles biography. He has a tendency to take strong opinions on issues that more reasonable people would feel call for a more balanced view (as reasonable people are apt to do). His book on Hollywood and why it is the beast that it is--The Whole Equation--is solid reading.
http://www.jazz.com/jazz-blog/2008/5/12/could-chet-baker-play-jazz
Also, another piece of interest.
http://www.bfi.org.uk/sightandsound/feature/49455
On a side note, here is the box set I mentioned in a previous post. Super cheap off 'bay.
http://cgi.ebay.com/CHET-BAKER**MY-FUNNY-VALENTINE**10-CD-SET_W0QQitemZ110350783571QQcmdZViewItemQQimsxZ20090213?IMSfp=TL090213121002r9060
Might be a good way for those who want to dip their feet in. I had a chance to listen to the first disc (his stuff w/ Mulligan) and the quality's alright (I was admittedly in the Giant vibrator banging around w/ the dishes so I can't say I was doing the whole audiophile thing).
Last edited by Decline & Fall (2009-02-14 10:09:32)
I see that all of a sudden Evans has appeared on Chensvold's Facebook page. He's never mentioned him before...
I wonder if he ever reads our stuff?
Last edited by Russell_Street (2009-02-14 10:57:30)
http://images.uulyrics.com/cover/b/bill-evans/album-riverside-profiles.jpg
Interesting posts from Decline & Fall there (he's gone quiet?), I've read Ted Gioia's book on West Coast Jazz, well worth a read, shame its not in more depth though.
I was listening to Bill Evans stuff with Miles over the weekend, maybe if Richard Twardzik had not over dosed he would have delivered some equal works of merit. Twardzik never had that junky genius cool though, I've seen one photo of him, he looked like the devil with heavy eye lids and wasted. Whereas Bill Evans, looked like a clean living nerd. The rumour is that Twardzik was Chet's lover.
He looked great. I bought an old Village Gate 10x8 b/w publicity photo of him just over a year ago. They were flogging their archive stuff on Ebay. Shame I missed out on the Coltrane, though. Later, like Mulligan, he looked crap - like a hippy. Miles looked no better. Evans might have appeared nerdy, but it's a look that appeals to me enormously.
Both Evans and Mulligan grew beards and did a lot of coke. Mulligan in the end eschewed creativity and decided to go full on classical musician style, by concentrating on ever more perfect versions of his previous works. I've got the rerecording of Birth of the Cool, one of his last recordings, pointless, a vanity project by a faded genius.
Just put some Mulligan on, 'Line for Lyons' live at the Haig in 1952 with Chet Baker, Carson Smith and Chico Hamilton.
Few musicians can keep the muse of genius throughout their careers, even Miles lost it after 1981.
Yes. Bill Evans - always loved his look - he manages to walk that thin line between uber-cool and, to those not ITK, seeming nerdishness. If I tried that, I'd just look like a geography teacher, but Bill - as cool as.....
It's that intense intellect, mixed with pure feeling and emotion, which to me marks out his jazz - and his look kind of mirrors that.
Oh, and four words - On Green Dolphin Street.
The poppier side of jazz does make you want to groan a bit - all those film themes from the 60s - Alfie etc. etc. Brubeck bores me to tears. I can see why Strachan and Lally might have shrugged over Lee Morgan. Coltrane becomes more like a religious experience.
To be honest I love it all - whether it's Brubeck, a Quincey Jones film score, or Ornette Coleman (that's a spectrum right there). But, yes - some things are just beyond and in another stratosphere as an experience.
Dave Brubeck wanted to classicize jazz and his music is heavily indepted to Baroque counterpoint - and that's what his distractors always argue, that his music is not jazz.
I'm reading 'Black Nationalism and the Revolution in Music' by Frank Kofsky, a Marxist interpretation of 'Trane. All white musicians are dismissed as banal practictioners of third-stream and the West Coast school is dismissed as utterly effete and talentless. Contemporary and Pacific Jazz labels are similarly disregarded.
The one exception is Bill Evans, who he regards as the only white musician to create music of significance and influence in jazz.
Coltrane went all the way, into the mystic, something that no rock musician has ever achieved.
Mmmmm, mysticism and Marxism - interesting..............
Kofsky, eh? Is he black? Marxists aren't wrong about every issue in economics, but when it comes to cultual analysis... sheesh...
No, he's a crazy mixed up Jewish kid.
There's even a chapter on the nefarious activities of the critics who wrote those essays on the back of jazz albums in the 1950's. An evil lot.
if youre on a communist jazz theory kick, hobsbawm's Uncommon People-rebellion, resistance, and jazz has a few interesting chapters on the subject, even touching on the ivy league crossover to an extent (mostly in the person of that producer whose name i forget). the man is a completely unreliable stalinist (and intentional liar it seems) as far as any political/historical analysis goes, but i find some of the cultural /anecdotal material to be pretty good. he also wrote an entire book on jazz, which i have not read.
I can't help wondering if Ian was being a bit uber.