eMusic Review
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.