Track 3 excerpt
Track 1 excerpt
Simon says :
This was a fairly recent re-post at OIR, but I thought it should be up, should be heard, and should be here! Simply put, it's a beautiful piece of music and the best use of a fender rhodes in an orchestral setting. Jan Stevens' review below nails it, so I'll hand you over and then add some more albums at the end on which Bill Evans plays the Rhodes.
Jan Stevens writes :
"Symbiosis" is a beautiful and vastly overlooked album in Bill Evans’ prolific canon, yet one that needs to be seriously reckoned with. Claus Ogerman, who had worked with Bill on two previous albums in 1963 and in 1966 ("Bill Evans Trio With Symphony Orchestra") , composed an adventurous and often hauntingly gorgeous work in two parts. In the third section of the first movement, working over a slow and gentle jazzy swing, Bill plays long and fast-moving lines on electric piano that catch your ear with their shimmering beauty and complexity. Ogerman writes lush but never maudlin strings (and a few flutes) here in dense, often whole-tone and poly-chordal fashion underneath - creating a perfect cushion for the pianist’s swirling right-hand lines.
The Rhodes fits in well here, as it does sparingly in and out through Symbiosis’ framework. It is often used as punctuation at the end of a written ensemble phrase, or as an ensemble texture. Evans’ choices as to when to use the Rhodes or the Steinway are wise indeed, and not without great sensitivity, integrating seamlessly within the composition. Claus Ogerman as composer-arranger succeeds marvelously here with a work of great harmonic expression and rhythmic interest that showcases Evans’ lyrical expression and his obviously inherent classical strengths, yet within a composition that represents much of what jazz is about. (Ogerman would later do the same for tenor sax virtuoso Michael Brecker for his "Cityscape" album.)
If we consider the aural comparisons to the other albums Bill did with orchestral accompaniment, it is far and away the most superior achievement, and may represent his best use of the electric keyboard in context. “Symbiosis” is far too important to be neglected as often as it has when jazz writers discuss Bill Evans albums.
As biographer Keith Shadwick noted: “Evans brings to the work the consummate artistry and sensitivity that occurs when he is stretched and stimulated. His rubato playing in the opening and second movement sometimes alone, sometimes in unison with the strings, is both moving and immensely accomplished in a way that few jazz or classical pianists could have countenanced."
TRACKLIST
1st Movement (Moderato, Various Tempi) - 24:58
Track 1 (a) 7:58
Track 2 (b) 5:17
Track 3 (c) 11:43
2nd Movement (Largo- Andante - Maestoso - Largo) - 15:55
Track 4 (a) 9:11
Track 5 (b) 6:44
PERSONNEL
Piano [Steinway & Fender-rhodes] - Bill Evans
Composed By, Arranged By, Conductor - Claus Ogerman
Concertmaster - David Nadien
Bass - Eddie Gomez
Bassoon - Wally Kane
Clarinet, Clarinet [Bass] - Danny Bank , Ron Janelly
Congas - Ralph McDonald
Contrabassoon - Donald MacCourt
Drums - Marty Morell
Flute - Bill Slapin , Don Hammond , Hubert Laws
French Horn - Al Richmond , Brooks Tillotson , Earl Chapin , James Buffington , Pete Gordon (2) , Ray Alonge
Oboe - George Marge , Phil Bodner
Percussion - Dave Carey , Doug Allen , George Devens
Saxophone [Alto] - Harvey Estrin , Jerry Dodgion , Phil Woods , Walt Levinsky
Trombone [Bass] - Paul Faulise , Tommy Mitchell
Trombone [Tenor] - Urbie Green
Trumpet - Bernie Glow , Johnny Frosk , Marky Markowitz , Marvin Stamm , Mel Davis , Victor Paz
Tuba - Don Butterfield
PRODUCTION DETAILS
Recorded on February 11, 12 and 14th 1974 at Columbia Recording Studios, New York City.
MPS Records Catalogue # 15402
Producer - Helen Keane
Recorded By - Frank Laico
Photography - Raymond Ross
Cover Design - Ulrich Eichberger + MPS-Atelier
Hubert Laws courtesy of CTI Records.
David Nadien courtesy of the New York Philarmonic Orchestra.
1970 "From Left to Right" at Sing My Body Electric / alternate
1971 "The Bill Evans Album" at Blues and Cats
1972 "Living Time" (with George Russell) at Etnik Cafe
1974 "Intuition" (with Eddie Gomez) at Jazzt music
1974 "Symbiosis" in comments here
1976 "Montreaux Vol. 3" at DJ Vilson Professor Groove / alternate1978 "New Conversations" at Las Cintas Recuperadas / FLAC version
1978 "Affinity" (with Toots Thielemans) at Soundological Investimigations
1979 "We Will Meet Again" at musica que cuelga
Claus Ogerman
website on Claus Ogerman
1980 'Claus Ogerman & The London Symphony Orchestra with Gidon Kremer' at Scoredaddy's
1982 "Cityscape" - Michael Brecker & Claus Ogerman - rapidshare 1 2
2008 'Across The Crystal Sea' - Danielo Perez & Claus Ogerman at sunline-muzic
Beautiful album - thanks for the share!
ReplyDeletethanks simon.
ReplyDeletemediafire's working great!
Great post, thanks!
ReplyDeleteSimon,
ReplyDeleteI love your erudite commentary, and the scholarly links to related recordings. Your blog has opened my eyes and ears, and this post is no exception. Thanks so much!
A great record that I never had a chance to hear. Thanks so much
ReplyDeleteThanks, I love Bill Evans.
ReplyDeletebtw... i hope you don't mind, I put a link to your blog on mine.
cheers,
Ruud :)
hey ruud, no problem at all. Enjoy the album!
ReplyDeleteGreat site!
ReplyDeleteHi Simon, I had not heard much of his material after the 60s. Gotta say not the biggest Bill Evans fan but enjoy this LP.
ReplyDeleteAlso thought I'd let you know that I found a copy of Affinity while hunting today and will rip it this week. I wouldn't have bought it if you hadn't posted this, so thanks for opening me up to new possibilities!
hi cheeba -
ReplyDeleteyeah it's a great album, stands quite separately from the rest of his output ..
Have added bloglinks for the albums "Affinity" and "We Will Meet Again" (within the discography) and "Bill Evans Trio With Symphony Orchestra" (in the post section)
ReplyDeleteMan, are you ever on top of things! Thanks again!
ReplyDeletemany thanks simon,missed this baby at OIR & YOUR REPOST!
ReplyDeleteBIG THANKS M8!
APPRECIATED!
No problems Alex :)
ReplyDeleteI actually got a nice vinyl copy of this last week, so hang tight a week or so and I'm going to add a WAV rip ...
Post update :
ReplyDeleteAdded a link to "We Will Meet Again" (1979) in the "Bill Evans on the fender rhodes" discography section.
Also a section on Claus Ogerman - not comprehensive - with links to three albums.
Hi all,
ReplyDeleteAdded a link to "New Conversations" (1978) in the "Bill Evans on the fender rhodes" discography section - which I think is now complete.
Been a Bill Evans fan for a long time, but never heard this one before. Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much, this is wonderful!
ReplyDeleteHi guys -
ReplyDeleteAdded a link in the "Bill Evans on Fender Rhodes" discography :
FLAC version of "New Conversations" (1978) :
http://avaxhome.ws/music/bill_evans_new_conversations_1978_flac.html
Thanks for the post. This came up as a single track in a Horace Silver playlist on Rdio. Listening to the entire album.
ReplyDeleteIt's like orchestral free jazz funk.
Thanks very much for Symbiosis. I've been listening to it on YouTube but now I can listen to it on my iPod when I run :)
ReplyDeletethanks for this missing title for my Bill Evans collection!
ReplyDeleteHi Simon,
ReplyDeleteMany thanks for the re-uo ...
Thanks Jonathan, Wade and the various anonymous-es for the comments :)
ReplyDeleteThanks very much. I really appreciate this. Great site, and love your selection of music.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteHi there, i invite you to listen to me playing "Waltz for Debby" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yUjZvinAGXQ
Thankyou for that, Pablo!
ReplyDeleteThanks for that. This is an excellent piece of music. I really appreciate this.
ReplyDelete