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Ryan Truesdell / Gil Evans Project: Shades Of Sound
ByRyan Truesdell
composer / conductor
Gil Evans
composer / conductor1912 - 1988
Evans was one of the greatest composer arrangers in jazz. Harrison coined a new phrase for him, describing what he did as re-composition.
Evans embodies the paradox of a man with real creative power of great imaginative resource, who was unable to produce an original theme. He could, as it were, make the sturdiest oak trees tower above us, yet he had to be given an acorn first, once this had set his imagination going, the Invention mysteriously overflowed... It seemed to matter little whether his found object was a beautiful melody or a piece of commonplace figuration. Disconcertingly complete transformation would take place, turning the banal into the magical, uncovering relationships between passages of music that had seemed to be of utterly different character... Recomposition amounts to a piece being deconstructed and its elements being reassembled at a higher level of integration so that the whole takes on new and more complex meanings (Harrison in Kenny, Jazz Views, 2022).
"Spoonful" starts with space and

Frank Kimbrough
piano1956 - 2020

Willie Dixon
bass, acoustic1915 - 1992

Howlin' Wolf
vocals1910 - 1976

Donny McCaslin
saxophone, tenorb.1966

Jay Anderson
bassb.1955

Lewis Nash
drumsb.1958
Truesdell's work is important because he takes the work of one of the greatest artists and reminds us what a great writer Evans was and how writing for the jazz orchestra can be created with textures that are subtle and beautiful and also can inspire great improvisers. Repertory music can, in addition, move people back to the originals. After all, Evans was not afraid to look back for inspiration from the past. Never content with the way of writing for the jazz orchestra, Evans rethought the melody of the Kurt Weill piece, "The Barbara Song," from The Threepenny Opera.
Truesdell's "Barbara Song" goes straight into the magic of woodwind sounds with Kimbrough's sensitive piano. Evans always denigrated his own pianistic ability but, here, there is economy and carefully considered dissonance against the woodwinds and flutes. The sensitive rhythm, in the steps of the original drummer,

Elvin Jones
drums1927 - 2004

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023

Ryan Keberle
tromboneb.1980
"Neetie's Blues" is a 'found piece,' never played before. Truesdell found a sketch amongst Evans' papers and worked out the orchestration. There is a beautiful rocking rhythm, with backgrounds voiced appropriately. The solo is from

Tom Christensen
saxophone, tenorTruesdell includes some vocal pieces and Evans did at times write for vocalists. There were albums over time, featuring Marcy Lutes,

Astrud Gilberto
vocals1940 - 2023

Helen Merrill
vocalsb.1929

Wendy Gilles
vocals
Claude Thornhill
vocals1909 - 1965
To finish the album, there is "Buster's Last Stand," a piece that Evans wrote for Thornhill. It is the oldest piece, and goes back to the 1940s, showing that even when Evans was being conventional, he was able to be creative. It is interesting to hear the orchestra finding the right registers for the 1940s solos.
Evans' work can be separated into three phases: the pre-

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
All power to Ryan Truesdell on Shades of Sound, the companion to his earlier Evans-related Lines of Color (Blue Note, 2015). ">
Track Listing
Spoonful; The Ballad of the Sad Young Men; Laughing at Life; Neetie’s Blues; I Had Someone Else Before I Had You; Barbara Song; It’s the Sentimental Thing to Do; Buster’s Last Stand.
Personnel
Ryan Truesdell
composer / conductorSteve Kenyon
saxophoneSteve Wilson
saxophoneDave Pietro
saxophone, altoDonny McCaslin
saxophone, tenorScott Robinson
saxophone, tenorBrian Landrus
saxophone, baritoneTom Christensen
saxophone, tenorAlden Banta
woodwindsAdam Unsworth
french hornDavid Peel
french hornAugie Haas
trumpetGreg Gisbert
trumpetMat Jodrell
trumpetRyan Keberle
tromboneMarshall Gilkes
tromboneGeorge Flynn
tromboneMarcus Rojas
tubaJames Chirillo
guitarFrank Kimbrough
pianoAdditional Instrumentation
Jay Anderson: bass; Lewis Nash: drums; Lois Martin: viola; Wendy Gilles: voice.
Album information
Title: Shades of Sound | Year Released: 2025 | Record Label: Outside in Music
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About Ryan Truesdell
Instrument: Composer / conductor
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