Waltz For Debby

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ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 65:33

eMusic Review

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Fred Kaplan

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
The first-ever-recorded, completely democratic piano trio.
2001 | Label: Fantasy / Riverside

Maybe the greatest live jazz album ever, certainly the one that transformed the "piano trio" from the concept of a pianist accompanied by bass and drums to a truly equilateral trio — three musicians, none dominant. Bill Evans was the Ravel of jazz, a lyrical composer who coaxed tonal colors from the keyboard. Scott LaFaro pushed the bass beyond the role of timekeeper, plucking and bowing full harmony, counterpoint or new melodic lines that simply sounded right. Paul Motian played drums as a foil to LaFaro, gently comping or aggressively attacking, often with brushes. Recorded at the Village Vanguard in March, 1961, this is swinging, lyrical, romantic, haunting.

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Bill Evans - Waltz for Debby (1961)

misternau

Bill Evans leads a legendary trio in this spectacular live set of standards, recorded at the Village Vanguard. In the CD release, the grateful listener is treated to multiple distinct takes of three of the tunes and a bonus favorite. Every note of this amazing recording delivers an unforgettable time. Grade: A++ Original post: http://tinyurl.com/5dzt59

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Great Album!

walrusman

really classic evans album with the lefaro/motian trio, also 'waltz' is one of evans' best compositions. edit edit.

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best of his career.

elscorcho

since this album came out 2 years after 'Kind of Blue', it's hard to make the assumption that he wrote Blue in Green just on the recording of Some Other Time alone. that said, i thought it was common knowledge that Evans helped with several of the skeletal compositions that the rest of the band improvised onto. this album is pure gold. every jazz fan should own this.

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Good stuff

DJMc

I'm a jazz neophyte so don't take my review too seriously. A couple things that should be mentioned: Listening to this album makes you realize that Bill Evans probably did write "Blue in Green". If you've heard that song (who hasn't?) you know what to expect with this album. Also, there are many lengthy bass solos on this album. They're good solos, but some people hate bass solos so I had to warn you. All in all, I really enjoyed this album and I'm hard to please with jazz.

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They Say All Media Guide

Recorded at the Village Vanguard in 1961, shortly before Scott LaFaro’s death, Waltz for Debby is the second album issued from that historic session, and the final one from that legendary trio that also contained drummer Paul Motian. While the Sunday at the Village Vanguard album focused on material where LaFaro soloed prominently, this is far more a portrait of the trio on those dates. Evans chose the material here, and, possibly, in some unconscious way, revealed on these sessions — and the two following LaFaro’s death (Moonbeams and How My Heart Sings!) — a different side of his musical personality that had never been displayed on his earlier solo recordings or during his tenures with Miles Davis and George Russell: Evans was an intensely romantic player, flagrantly emotional, and that is revealed here in spades on tunes such as “My Foolish Heart” and “Detour Ahead.” There is a kind of impressionistic construction to his harmonic architecture that plays off the middle registers and goes deeper into its sonances in order to set into motion numerous melodic fragments simultaneously. The rhythmic intensity that he displayed as a sideman is evident here in “Milestones,” with its muscular shifting time signature and those large, flatted ninths with the right hand. The trio’s most impressive interplay is in “My Romance,” after Evans’ opening moments introducing the changes. Here Motian’s brushwork is delicate, flighty and elegant, and LaFaro controls the dynamic of the tune with his light as a feather pizzicato work and makes Evans’ deeply emotional statements swing effortlessly. Of the many recordings Evans issued, the two Vanguard dates and Explorations are the ultimate expressions of his legendary trio. – Thom Jurek

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