Bill Evans' 'Easy To Love' plus bonus track pressed on limited edition
180g orange vinyl, includes a unique sticker
Compiled from early sessions for Riverside during 1956, 1958 and 1962, this
elease presents pianist Bill Evens unaccompanied, apart from one trio
performance with bassist Teddy Kotick and drummer Paul Motian. Produced by
Orrin Keepnews, these are among the earliest recordings of Bill Evans under his
own name.
Suche:the evens
- A1: Deep Under
- A2: Dagdraumur
- A3: The Northern Sky
- A4: Wandering I
- A5: Vetur Genginn I Garth
- A6: Fyrir Mikael
- B1: Wandering Ii
- B2: Circulation
- B3: Innsti Kjarni Og Tilbrigthi
- B4: Naeturdogg
- B5: Midnight Moon
- B6: Brotin
- B7: Bylur
- C1: Dagdraumur (Janus Rasmussen Remix)
- C2: Wandering Ii (Ed Carlsen Rework)
- C3: Circulation (Uele Lamore Rework)
- C4: Midnight Moon (Remix)
- D1: Wandering Ii (Paddy Mulcahy Remix)
- D2: Fyrir Mikael (Slow Meadow Rework)
- D3: Wandering I (Thylacine Remix)
YLUR ist das Debüt-Album der isländischen Pianistin und Post-Klassik-Komponistin EYDÍS EVENSEN beim Label XXIM Records
Limited to 300 copies. Vinyl green bottle
Originally released in 1973 on Philips. One of the best UK Folk albums ever. Highly recommended if you like Heron, Syd Barrett, Nick Drake, Simon & Garfunkel.
Evensong's self-titled album is a high-prized UK folk-pop artifact. The duo's fragile, harmony-drenched songs are given instrumental muscle by seasoned session players Clem Cattini, B. J. Cole and Herbie Flowers, and ornate string arrangements courtesy of former Spencer Davis Group guitarist Ray Fenwick.
- A1: The Fellowship (From "The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring")
- A2: The Prophecy (From "The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring")
- A3: Concerning Hobbits (From "The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring")
- B1: The Shadow Of The Past / A Knife In The Dark (From "The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring")
- B2: The Bridge Of Khazad Dum (From "The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring")
- B3: May It Be (From "The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring")
- C1: The Riders Of Rohan (From "The Lord Of The Rings: The Two Towers")
- C2: Evenstar (From "The Lord Of The Rings: The Two Towers")
- C3: Forth Eorlingas / Isengard Unleashed (From "The Lord Of The Rings: The Two Towers")
- D1: Gollum's Song (From "The Lord Of The Rings: The Two Towers")
- D2: Hope And Memory / Minas Tirith (From "The Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King")
- D3: The White Tree (From "The Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King")
- D4: Twilight And Shadow (From "The Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King")
- E1: The Fields Of Pelennor (From "The Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King")
- E2: The Return Of The King (From "The Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King")
- F1: Into The West (From "The Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King")
- F2: Gollum's Song (From "The Lord Of The Rings: The Two Towers")
- F3: May It Be (From "The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring")
- F4: Into The West (From "The Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King")
Take a trip through the Middle Earth with the soundtrack of the Lord of the Rings trilogy, played by the City of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra on this limited edition triple album.
Sarah Davachi presents her masterpiece, Gave In Rest. Her most fully studio-recorded album ever, she collaborates with Montreal heavyweights to create an album that uses both modern minimalism and early church music as departure points.
Sarah Davachi has quickly risen in prominence since her first release five years ago, and Gave In Rest represents her highest artistic achievement. By infusing her compositional style within a predilection for medieval and Renaissance music, Davachi unearths a new realm of musical reverence, creating works both contemplative and beatific, eerie yet essentially human. Gave In Rest is a modern reading of early music, reforming sacred and secular sentiments to fit her purview and provide an exciting new way to hear the sounds that exist around us.
Between January and September of 2017, Sarah Davachi lived in flux; storing her belongings in Vancouver, she spent the summer in Europe, occasionally performing in churches and lapidariums and seeking respite from her transitional state while surrounded by such storied history. This latest album echoes that emotional state of solitude and ephemerality, reaching towards familiar musical landscapes but from oblique perspectives.
'I named each track after a particular time of day as a way of expressing my experiencing different moments of quietude, how morning and night are both independent and interconnected entities in this regard,' she says. Her titles evoke canonical phrases referring to morning or evening prayers, as well as Latin and German phrasings for metaphors about the time of day. 'From my perspective, there is a lot of loneliness on this record, and I think it is as much about beginnings as endings,' she continues. 'In a way, it's about the prospect of the unknown as it manifests alongside a very inward form of grieving—really the essence of what constitutes a period of transition.
Davachi has mined a bottomless landscape where listeners can witness music's participation in their solitudes. Gave In Rest lends a voice to her personal exploration with a firm, intuitive stance.
Tracklisting





