Bill Evans - Some Other Time: The Lost Session From The Black Forest (Reel-to-Reel)
Piano - Bill Evans
Bass - Eddie Gomez
Drums - Jack DeJohnette
2xHD reel-to-reel
Numbered, Limited Edition - Only 100 Copies
1/4'' 15 ips IEC / CCIR EQ, sourced from a copy of the original analog master tape
For the 2xHD transfer of this recording, the original 1/4”, NAB master tape was played on a Nagra-T modified with high-end tube playback electronics, wired with OCC silver cable from the playback head direct to a Telefunken EF806 tube. The Nagra-T has one of the best transports ever made, having four direct drive motors, two pinch rollers and a tape tension head.
Stereo
Studio
Label : Fidelio 2xHD
Original Label : 2xHD
Recorded at MPS Studios in Villingen, Germany on June 20, 1968.
Produced by André Perry
Mastered by René Laflamme
Liner Notes by Friedhelm Schulz, Marc Myers, Zev Feldman
Photographyby German Hasenfratz
Originally released in 2021
Reissued in 2024
Tracks:
Reel 1:
1. You Go To My Head
2. Very Early
3. What Kind of Fool Am I?
4. I’ll Remember April
5. These Foolish Things
6. Some Other Time
Reel 2:
7. My Funny Valentine
8. Baubles, Bangles and Beads
9. Turn Out The Stars
10. It Could Happen To You
11. On Green Dolphin Street
12. In A Sentimental Mood
Awards:
Postive Feedback's Tape of the Year for 2022.
Reviews :
"The surprise discovery of a studio session by this unique trio means that, instead of just the famous live album at Montreux, their available output has more than doubled. To be sure, it has all the hallmarks of any Evans trio between 1959 and 1980, in particular the combined delicacy and resilience of the piano work. But Gomez, two years into his 11 -year stint with Bill, was so full of youthful virtuosity that, when heard live three weeks after this recording, he eclipsed the inspiration of Scott LaFaro. Similarly DeJohnette, previously associated with the hippie populism of Charles Lloyd and thus an unexpected choice, was able to play ‘for the group’ but also inject extra energy. He is less in evidence here than you might hope, due to the seemingly casual approach of the session, which includes a few solo piano tracks and duos without drums, some of them being obvious out– takes if an LP had been produced at the time. The long-forgotten circumstances of the date are discussed in our feature article (see p32), as is the sometimes surprising repertoire – all except ‘Very Early’ and ‘Walking Up’ are from the American Songbook, but many of them tunes Evans seldom played. Meanwhile, I hadn't remembered how breathtakingly inventive were Gomez's bass solos, and DeJohnette's playing (though often with brushes) is very much to the point. So, while this collection is not ‘Montreux times two’, it's a different insight into Evans and this particular line-up." Jazz Wise Review by Brian Priestley
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Ratings :
Discogs : '4.69 / 5