Live Recording at Midnight Concert in November of 1964 at The Royal Concertgebouw in Amsterdam featuring 8 Never-Before-Heard Song Interpretations Plus Newly Discovered Original Song!
There are certain musical artists who have transcended genre limitations, crossing over into other areas of audience appeal. But in very rare cases there are artists who cross over in an entirely different way, becoming iconic and beloved figures to the broader spectrum of humanity by their very existence and essence of their being as universal messengers of love and spirit. Legendary pianist/composer Erroll Garner stands tall among those individuals. A new addition to his brilliant manifestation of artistry and jubilant expressiveness is always a treat, but when it's at such a majestic peak as in Octave Music/Mack Avenue Records' spectacular new Garner release, Nightconcert, it's a revelation. Nightconcert presents Garner at the peak of his genius, recorded at a midnight concert in November 1964 at The Royal Concertgebouw in Amsterdam with an audience of 2000 highly enthusiastic and enraptured people of all ages. Also notable is that the album features 8 never-before-heard Garner song interpretations, including a newly discovered original.
Beginning with the immortal 1955 album Concert by the Sea – the best-selling jazz album of its era – Garner consistently proved that there is nothing to match that magical essence of transcendent artistry shared in the same air with a totally connected audience. On this night, the pianist's consummate artistry is further enhanced by his rhythm section of bassist Eddie Calhoun and drummer Kelly Martin, with whom he'd been playing for nearly a decade – proving another unquestionable truth, that jazz is never better expressed than by an ensemble of musicians who have played together long enough to develop that telepathic synergy demanded by the music at its highest level. Accompanying Garner demanded that substance in exponential form. As his longtime manager Martha Glaser wrote in the concert program notes, "one of Garner's outstanding qualities is his unpredictability and spontaneity," which followed "the individual selections which Mr. Garner will play have not been listed" – and neither of his accompanists were informed either. But there's no way one could tell, as they match the master at every twist and turn as though it was just the way they rehearsed it. In fact, they never rehearsed. Their performances were pure magic through mutual awareness.
True to his singularly personal style, each piece begins with Garner's sumptuous and often impressionistically rubato explorations before exposing the theme of the actual song he's about to play, further stamping his personal ownership of the piece, no matter how familiar or how many other people may have interpreted it before. Each song is a unique entity, even in comparison to other interpretations that he may have done at another time – a most special talent and a mark of utter originality and immediacy. The repertoire on this album is pure Garner, heavily drawn from the Great American Songbook with a nice infusion of originals. There are three Cole Porter classics: "Easy to Love," "Night and Day" and "What Is This Thing Called Love;" and two gems from Rodgers & Hart: "My Funny Valentine" and "Where or When." The Gershwins are represented by "'S Wonderful;" Irving Berlin by "Cheek to Cheek;" and Harold Arlen by "Over the Rainbow." A couple of lesser luminaries are included with Einar Aaron Swan's "When Your Lover Has Gone" and Clay Boland's "Gypsy in My Soul." Two great 1940s songs, immortalized by both being the title songs of terrific films and interpreted by scores of heavyweight artists are Bronislaw Kaper's "On Green Dolphin Street" and David Raksin's "Laura" – which can now add two more remarkable versions to their storied history.
Another outstanding title song from a film is one of three Garner originals, the exquisite "Theme from ‘A New Kind of Love' (All Yours);" along with the jaunty "That Amsterdam Swing" and the touching "No More Shadows." A brief taste of Ralph Rainger's "Thanks for the Memory" provides the digestif to close this most delightful repast. Nightconcert is an exhilarating journey through a comprehensive history of jazz piano: smooth stride, rollicking barrelhouse, unfettered swing, loping bop lines, Cecil Taylor-like chord clusters; spiced by potent touches of Debussy/Satie-like impressionistic flair. In other words, pure Erroll Garner: marvelously imaginative, richly lyrical, full of unexpected surprises, and utterly captivating. Presented on double-vinyl, Nightconcert comes beautifully packaged with excellent artwork by White Bicycle, on-site photographs by Nico van der Stam/Maria Austria Instituut and The Erroll Garner archive – housed at the University of Pittsburgh – historical artifacts, and informative notes by renowned writers Nate Chinen and Robin D. G. Kelley.
- Where Or When
- Easy To Love
- On Green Dolphin Street
- Theme From "A New Kind Of Love" (All Yours)
- Night And Day
- Cheek To Cheek
- My Funny Valentine
- Gypsy In My Soul
- That Amsterdam Swing
- Over The Rainbow
- What Is This Thing Called Love
- Laura
- When Your Lover Has Gone
- No More Shadows
- 'S Wonderful
- Thanks For The Memory