Music : Last Waltz: The Final Recordings Live
List Price: $124.98Amazon.com's Price: $112.49 You Save: $12.49 (10%)Prices subject to change.
Availability: unknown
This item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping.
Binding: Audio CD
EAN: 0025218443029
Format: Box set, Live
Label: Milestone
Manufacturer: Milestone
Number Of Discs: 8
Publisher: Milestone
Release Date: October 10, 2000
Sales Rank: 35359
Studio: Milestone
Related Items:
Editorial Review:
Amazon.com: This eight-CD set was recorded at San Francisco's Keystone Korner between August 31 and September 8, 1980, just a week before Evans's death on September 15. With Evans were bassist Marc Johnson and drummer Joe LaBarbera. It was an unusually well-balanced rhythm team for the pianist, perhaps the best combination of talents since he first developed his trio style with Scott LaFaro and Paul Motian two decades before. They provide Evans with responsive support that can shift from the quietest underpinnings to aggressive stimulation. There's often a characteristic movement here from introspective solo passages to vigorous trio dialogues that shows just how hard Evans could swing when he had the right drummer.
Largely a final encounter with Evans's key repertoire, the set includes multiple versions of his favorite pieces, like the ballads "But Beautiful," "My Foolish Heart," and "Emily," and his own "Letter to Evan" and "Turn Out the Stars," perennial stimulants for his profound harmonic imagination. But there are also then-recent compositions that never reached the recording studio, like "Yet Ne'er Broken," the repeating "Your Story" with its subtle underlying movement, and "Knit for Mary F." The signature "Nardis" is heard in six different versions, each of them compelling and each a distinct exploration, from a crisp seven-minute version to a concluding performance that stretches to nearly 20. Evans introduces the third version: "We've learned from the potential of the tune, and every once in a while a new gateway opens and it's like therapy." Each of the longer versions is a structure for extended solos by each trio member. Evans's own improvisations are concentrated in extended unaccompanied introductions, stretching to a sublime seven minutes on the final version.
The set is a treasure trove for Evans enthusiasts, inviting close and extended listening and rewarding it with the subtlest inventions and variations. There are rare depths here that represent some of his greatest recorded work. --Stuart Broomer
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
How could hours and hours of recordings from a dying man's last gig be so inventive, so satisfying, so consistent, so full of life?
How can this band bring something new and fascinating to each rendition? Some songs here are repeated (up to 6 times) over the course of the box set, but I'd be perfectly happy to listen to them back to back (and have!).
It may lack the intense sense of discovery and invention from his early work, but this has all the wonderful interplay and sensitivity of Evan's great trio works from the past, and clearly shows he had plenty of great music left in him when he passed away.
Rating: -
This recording was made in 1980 about a week before Bill Evan's untimely death. He may have new it was coming because he is really at his best in this recording. Every track is incredible!
I particularly like the recording because of the chemistry of the group. Marc Johnson really brings out the best in Bill Evans. I think it was a sound he was looking to create ever since the untimely death of Scott LaFaro.
There is an intensity to Bill Evan's playing a poignancy that is not to be missed. The tone production on this set of albums is also very good.
I'm a Bill Evan's fan and own most of what he has recorded. I have never regretted laying out the cash for this set of albums.
Rating: -
I first heard him solo in Conversations with Myself in an old record now scratched beyond recognition and have forever been listening out of the corner of my ear for him on albums - trios, groups, sideman - and always feel that he has been playing in a way that tells us who he is and what it is he wants us to remember. And these CD's, are what I think he wants us to remember. They are truly a thank you - to the people then and the people who would come - and a way of thinking of Bill Evans that will always be in whatever parts of our minds are moved and thrilled by music, skill and art. I can't imagine anyone who puports to love music not wanting these CD's.
I was going to go hear Bill Evans for the first time in Boston at the gig after this one - and he died. At least I have these.
Rating: -
I held off buying this box set for months, asking the same questions I'm sure those considering purchasing "The Last Waltz" want answered. Loving Bill Evans' art as I do, will I like what I hear on these surreptitiously taped performances when the man was literally dying as he was playing that poignant eight-night gig - his last - at San Francisco's Keystone Korner? Do these performances do justice to Evans' musical legacy or was he gasping to the finish, running on creative fumes, rather than drawing from a newly tapped reservoir of inspiration?
Let me allay any concerns and state outright that these recordings represent Bill Evans at his most lyrically imaginative, romantically inspired, and emotional. Make no mistake - these performances are better than anything previously released by Evans. Notwithstanding the synergistic brilliance of the 1961 Village Vanguard recordings with Scott LaFaro and Paul Motian, they do not match the majesty, musical maturity, and emotional effusiveness of the playing memorialized on these discs. Nor could they, as "The Last Waltz" represents Bill Evans at the end of a life's journey filled with tragedies and bittersweet triumphs.
Evans' gorgeous pianism displays a breadth of experience and wisdom that could not have been possible twenty years earlier. His playing is much more confident, vibrant, and full-bodied. Evans' was always regarded as the Chopin of jazz, and as true as that statement is, what these performances ... Read More
Rating: -
I've heard Evans play on records, once in person and on CD's for over 40 years. I have all his early stuff and in recent years have been getting more and more of this last trio. I didn't expect much from this box set as I'd heard that it was unauthorized and that Bill didn't think it warranted release. I don't know about the authorization, but I do know that if he did say it wasn't good enough then I'd chalk that up to his being overly critical of himself. As one other reviewer said, there may be some sloppiness (infrequently), but it's due to him reaching for chords and runs that were far beyond what most anyone else could pull off. I've been very happy hearing these renditions of mostly his same old favorites. As I always knew of his playing, he could play the same song a hundred times and each time it would be different. In other words, he played each song the only way every time he played it. Amazing musician. For my money he's the best jazz piano that ever lived. Tatum could play more notes, but Bill had the never ending cascade of musical ideas. If there's a heaven, he's there, and I'll bet he's still spinning out new renditions. I'd like to note that some of the solos here are ones Thibaudet used in his album, "Conversations with Bill Evans".
Browse for similar items by category:
|