Together Again is a 1977 studio album by singer Tony Bennett and jazz pianist Bill Evans. It was originally issued on Bennett's own Improv Records label, which went out of business later that year, but was subsequently reissued on Concord.
On November 8, 2011, Sony Music Distribution included the CD in a box set entitled The Complete Collection.[1]
Repertoire
The album opens with a brief solo by Evans on David Raksin's theme "The Bad and the Beautiful" from the film of that title.
As with the previous collaboration, this one features a song by Leonard Bernstein, "Lucky to Be Me," that Evans had previously recorded solo for the album Everybody Digs Bill Evans (1958). He had also previously recorded a vocal version of it with Monica Zetterlund in 1964. And as with its predecessor, it contains one Evans original, in this case, "The Two Lonely People," which Evans had first presented on The Bill Evans Album (1971), although earlier live recordings of it were later issued.[2]
Bennett had made the original recording of the song "Maybe September" back in 1966 for The Movie Song Album.[3] The new collaboration was rounded out by four other jazz standards.
The AllMusic reviewer William Ruhlman wrote, "If anything, Evans dominates this encounter more than he did the first, but it's still a good showcase for Bennett, too."[4] Evans biographer Peter Pettinger said, "the two artists produced a recording at least as relaxed and mutually in tune as their first" and singled out the "hushed rendering of one of Michel Legrand's finest songs, 'You Must Believe in Spring.'"[8]