In 1956, when guitarist Mundell Lowe recommended Bill Evans to Riverside, neither had yet made an impact on jazz, but that would soon change.
Evans had been on the scene for a few years and played with some impressive musicians, but he was still largely unknown; Riverside was a fledgling, barely three-years-old label running on little more than its founders' love for the music, which was huge, though somewhat retro. The pianist went on to record for Riverside until 1963, creating a reputation for both himself and the label in the process.
|
|
Track Listing :
Blue in Green; Waltz for Debby; Isn't It Romantic; My Man's Gone Now; How My Heart Sings; Israel; Re: Person I Knew; Speak Low; Interplay; Peace Piece.
|