Ballads (Paul Bley album) explained

Ballads
Type:Album
Artist:Paul Bley
Cover:Ballads (Paul Bley album).jpg
Released:1971
Recorded:March 31 and July 28, 1967
Studio:New York City
Genre:Jazz
Length:32:37
Label:ECM
ECM 1010 ST
Producer:Manfred Eicher
Chronology:Paul Bley
Prev Title:Paul Bley with Gary Peacock
Prev Year:1970
Next Title:Improvisie
Next Year:1971

Ballads is an album by Canadian jazz pianist Paul Bley recorded on March 31 and July 28, 1967 and released on ECM in 1971.[1] The sessions' trios feature rhythm sections Mark Levinson and Barry Altschul on side B, and Gary Peacock and Altschul on side A, respectively.

Reception

The AllMusic review by Eugene Chadbourne states:

Ballads, which really seems to make ballads out of ballads, has been considered both worthy of hanging on the museum wall alongside the other masterpieces and being accorded special merit as the jazz record most used for background music... What all this adds up to, when not shoved to the background of the listener's psyche, is a beautiful sound indeed, this album being one of several that helped establish the entire concept of the divine "ECM sound," despite actually being one of Bley's own productions... Surely it was fun making this album, but it has not proven to be an album that is that much fun to really listen to. Perhaps the music's magic is marred by the excessive echo and pristine recording quality, or maybe the playing is simply pretentious. A decision can be made at the end of the recording, if the listener is still awake.[2]

Personnel

Musicians

March 31, 1967

July 28, 1967

Technical personnel

Notes and References

  1. http://www.ecmrecords.com/Catalogue/ECM/1000/1010.php ECM discography
  2. Chadbourne, E. Allmusic Review accessed August 29, 2011