Gil Evans Out Of The Cool Rar

Gil Evans Out Of The Cool Rar

Gil Evans Out Of The Cool Rar Download

The Gil Evans Orchestra Out of the Cool: 2021 180g Vinyl LP All-Analog 180g Vinyl LP of The Gil Evans Orchestra's Out of the Cool Remastered from the Original Analog Tapes, Pressed at QRP, and Housed in Stoughton Gatefold Jacket If one album evokes the style, the ethos, and the vibe of Creed Taylor's Impulse! Label it is The Gil Evans Orchestra. Also available Gil Evans — Out Of The Cool. LP 14.99 We realize that there are many different interpretations of the standard grades used for pre-owned vinyl record albums & CD, so we thought we'd offer you the ones that we are working with, so you have an idea what we mean when we give the grade for a non-new item on our pages. Gil Evans: Out of the Cool is the comprehensive biography of a self-taught musician whom colleagues often regarded as a mentor. His innovative work as a composer, arranger, and bandleader—for Miles Davis, with whom he frequently collaborated over the course of four decades, and for his own ensembles—places him alongside Duke Ellington. Last winter an old audio biz friend of mine visited bearing a gift: a new Italian 45rpm pressing of Gil Evans' dark, brooding and oh so slinky 1960 recording of Out of the Cool originally issued in 1961 by the then new Impulse! Label created by producer Creed Taylor for parent company ABC-Paramount. The album was Impulse! The Gil Evans Orchestra Out Of The Cool (Verve Acoustic Sounds Series) 180g LP The Gil Evans Orchestra. Availability: Preorder In Stock: An In Stock item is available to ship normally within 24 business hours. Preorder: A Preorder is an item that has not yet been released.

Out

Gil Evans Discography

Artist: The Gil Evans Orchestra
Title: Out of the Cool
Year Of Release: 2010
Label: Analogue Productions, Impulse![CIPJ 4 SA]
Genre: Jazz, Post Bop
Quality: FLAC (tracks + .cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 37:39
Total Size: 319 MB(+3%)
WebSite: Album Preview
Gil Evans Out Of The Cool Rar
Tracklist
01. La Nevada [15:39]
02. Where Flamingos Fly [05:15]
03. Bilbao Song [04:13]
04. Stratusphunk [08:06]
05. Sunken Treasure [04:25]
personnel :
Gil Evans - piano
Billy Ray Barber - tuba
Raymond Beckenstein - flute, piccolo, alto saxophone
Eddie Caine - flute, piccolo, alto saxophone
Ron Carter - bass, trombone
Johnny Coles - trumpet
Ray Crawford - guitar
Budd Johnson - alto saxophone, soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone
Keg Johnson - trombone
Elvin Jones - percussion, drums
Jimmy Knepper - trombone
Charlie Persip - percussion, drums
Tony Studd - trombone
Phil Sunkel - trumpet
Bob Tricarico - flute, bassoon, piccolo

Gil Evans Out Of The Cool Rar

Out of the Cool

I’ve been taking it easy today, attempting to recover from a bout of sickness by loafing about and listening to old records. I don’t know why I haven’t listened to Out of the Cool by the Gil Evans Orchestra for a while, but at least that meant I came back to it relatively fresh.

Gil Evans Out Of The Cool Rare

Rar

Gil Evans Best Album

Gil Evans was one of the few composer/arrangers in Jazz to have successfully blended his own orchestral textures with solo improvisations in such a way that both complement each other; the scored passages he devised are complex and beautiful, but never so rigid that they inhibit the soloist’s imagination. He directed a number of albums that incorporated Jazz solos in classically-inspired orchestral settings, including Sketches of Spain and Porgy and Bess (with Miles Davis). This one is less famous than those, but in my opinion at least as good.

Gil Evans Arrangements

Trumpeter Johnny Coles (no relation) is particularly inspired by the imaginative surroundings constructed by Gil Evans on this album, and he responds by inventing beautiful solo lines on several tracks on this album. But the tonal spectrum he encompasses, his use of dynamics, and his distinctive play with inflection are best illustrated by his feature piece, Sunken Treasure, a mysterious, almost evanescent creation which he fashions out of Evans’ floating harmonies. I think this is the best track off a great album.