The Meaning Of The Blues
Little Wing
The Gil Evans Orchestra
Live In Germany
Produced by Rudolf Kreis
Recorded live in Germany, October 1978
Licensed by Circle Records, W. Germany
Thanks to Gabriele Kleinschmidt
Front cover photograph: Alois Maul
Back cover photograph: Daniel Lubej
Album design: Randy Vieth
Inner City IC1110
1981
Gil Evans - Electric Piano
Bob Stewart - Synthesizer
Don Pate - Electric Bass
Rob Crowder - Drums
Terumasa Hino - Trumpet
Lewis Soloff - Trumpet and Piccolo Trumpet
George Adams - Tenor Sax, Flute, Percussion
Gerru Niewood - Alto Sax, Soprano Sax, Flute
From the back cover: GIL EVANS is his own man - although he is demonstrably one of the most influential arrangers in American jazz, he does not have a "five foot shelf" of albums to show for his forty years in jazz. Nevertheless, the years have produced some of the most imaginative and eclectic sounds from the pen of any single arranger currently active. The secret or perhaps merely one of the secrets – is that Evans is never stagnant. In the early 1940s, his arrangements made the Claude Thornhill band one of the most listenable and effective of its era. Later, he was in the forefront of new music with his arrangements for the landmark Birth of The Cool sessions, with Miles Davis an association which continued over the years and resulted in a number of fresh explorations: the Sketches of Spain and Miles Ahead albums as well as the big band Porgy and Bess and the + 19 sets. All reveal a mind in continual quest of new horizons, not content to repeat a formula.
The present set stems from a European tour made in the fall of 1978, which Evans recalls "began in Belgium and ended in Holland." Although some of the arrangements had been made expressly for this tour (and an earlier one that summer), others had been cut down from the original big band format for this nine-piece group.
The Hendrix piece, "Little Wing," for example, had been recorded before by the larger group for a long-unavailable RCA album, "There Comes A Time." But Evans' open ears are reflected in the range of sources here reproduced: Hendrix's electric and rock-oriented matrix is side by side with a piece by alto saxophonist Jackie McLean, whose strengths are rooted in bop, and by another from the pen of hip sophisticate Bobby Troup. – Maggie Hawthorne
Dr. Jeckyll (Jackie) - Jackie Mason
Solo: Niewood as: Hino tp; Pate b; Soloff piccolo tp
The Meaning Of The Blues - Bobby Trout & Lee Worth
Solo: Adams ts
Little Wing - Jimi Hendrix
Solo: Levin syn; Stewart tu; Soloff tp; Niewood ss; Crowder dr