Home » Jazz Articles » Liner Notes » Bill Evans: The Legendary Trio At Birdland 1960 Revisited
Bill Evans: The Legendary Trio At Birdland 1960 Revisited
By
Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980

Scott LaFaro
bass1936 - 1961

Paul Motian
drums1931 - 2011

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955
Many of Rose's recordings, such as these treasures from Symphony Sid Torin's live broadcasts on station WADO, were made with a reel-to-reel tape recorder, off the radio in Rose's East 10th Street apartment. Others were made in the clubs themselves, on a bulky pre-miniaturisation machine, its concealment no easy task. From 1946 onwards, Rose, who had a disc cutter at home, made a living selling acetates and, later, privately pressed LPs, to fellow collectors, from his apartment and through the mail. Specialist record stores stocked his albums. Rose released the material on this disc on two LPs, A Rare Original and Hooray For Bill Evans Trio, in the mid 1970s.
Obtaining artist permissions was not part of Rose's business model. Joe LaBarbera, the drummer in Evans' final trio, has said that Evans was outraged when he came across one of Rose's LPs in a European record store in 1979 or 1980. On one level, we empathiseon another, we are indebted to Rose.
This Birdland materialhere in its known entirety and, at long last, having received the state-of-the-art sound restoration it deservesrepresents a substantial portion of the paradigm shifting Evans/LaFaro/Motian trio's discography. Apart from fourteen minutes accompanying

Tony Scott
clarinet1921 - 2007
This Revisited disc chronicles the trio in transition. Formed in autumn 1959, the group recorded its debut album in December. Following a coast-to-coast tour, it opened at Birdland in March 1960, when the first five tracks here were recorded on two separate dates. By the time of the April and May recordings the trio was touching on the interactive magic heard on ezz-thetics' At The Village Vanguard 1961 Revisited, released in 2023.
It is possible that previously unreleased Evans/LaFaro/Motian live recordings may yet emerge from under the apocryphal late grandmother's bed, or more likely from the cellar in the Bronx. Simple arithmetic suggests that Rose must have recorded more material than he was able to include on just two LPs. At Birdland, the trio was not the headlinerthey played their set sometime between midnight and 1:00am on each of the Saturday a.m. sessions Rose taped, sandwiched by sets from the headlining artist. If the trio only played for half an hour on each occasion (a conservative estimate), that adds up to two hours of material, too much for two LPs. Somewhere in that Bronx basement, another forty-plus minutes may still be found.
The Birdland audience makes its presence felt; they can be heard in the background, having a good time. Most of them were there to hear the main attraction. In 1960, the club was the New York base for

Count Basie
piano1904 - 1984
But by 1960, Evans had become inured to inattentive club audiences. He was also used to insensitive staff. Recalling his first engagement at the Village Vanguard, in 1955, playing opposite the

Modern Jazz Quartet
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1952
By the time he told the story, Evans could see the humor in it. Maybe in 2023 he would see the upside of Boris Rose's activities as well.
Liner Notes copyright ? 2025 Chris May.
The Legendary Trio At Birdland 1960 Revisited can be purchased here.
Contact Chris May at All About Jazz.
Chris May is a senior editor of All About Jazz. He was previously the editor of the pioneering magazine Black Music & Jazz Review, and more recently editor of the style / culture / history magazine Jocks & Nerds.
Track Listing
Our Delight; Autumn Leaves; Beautiful Love; Autumn Leaves; Come Rain Or Come Shine; Come Rain Or Come Shine; Nardis; Blue In Green; Autumn Leaves; All Of You; Come Rain Or Come Shine; Speak Low.
Personnel
Album information
Title: The Legendary Trio At Birdland 1960 Revisited | Year Released: 2024 | Record Label: Ezz-thetics
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
