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The Artist in Profile: Bill Evans

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This article written for Listen In, Newsvine's premier music group.

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Bill Evans was a quiet giant. This shy, innovative savant literally shaped the face of jazz: Miles Davis, Herbie Hancock, and a host of other iconic jazz artists have cited Evans as a formative influence on their music. Bill Evans' relatively short life was fraught with pain, but his legacy is embodied by the sparkling beauty of the precise, fluid lines that typify his work at the keyboard.


The music… ahh, the music. Bill Evans is hands-down my favorite jazz artist, though his work reaches a level at which it is impossible to make anything but a preferential judgment. Listening to a recording of the original Bill Evans Trio is like having a conversation with a good friend that flows effortlessly from witty banter to wistful remembrance to good-natured philosophical debate without raised voices, misunderstanding, or interruption.

Every performance is shot through with the sort of joy at being purely in one's element that simply cannot be imitated. This is the sort of fleeting perfection that anyone feels lucky to capture for even an instant. His most famous song, Waltz for Debbie, is a convenient example.

Evans' playing is simultaneously meticulous and effortless. His flowing improvisational lines reveal an underlying method and coherence that can only be achieved by a true master. Each time Bill Evans sat down at the keyboard, it was with a purpose in mind – with something to say.

Evans wrote most of his music for small ensembles that he led himself. The chemistry exemplified in his best recordings seems to imply that each part was written for the individual performer. Though he branched out into recordings with larger instrumentation (with uneven results) in the 1970's, Evans was always at his best either by himself or with a few trusted, handpicked accomplices.

If you have a chance, listen to each of the following albums from the early 1960's. Each is a classic in its own right from one of the most productive periods in jazz:

  • The Bill Evans Trio - Sunday at the Village Vanguard: This album, recorded in 1961 just 10 days before the tragic death of Evans' bassist and close friend, the brilliant Scott LaFaro, is unquestionably one of the greatest recordings of live jazz ever produced. Excellent sound quality, an intimate atmosphere, and inspired performances make this album a timeless snapshot of perfection – and perhaps my favorite record.
  • Bill Evans and Jim Hall - Undercurrent: A 1963 duet with iconic jazz guitarist Jim Hall (another of my favorites), this is the first record released by Evans after the death of LaFaro, and is widely considered to be one of the finest jazz duet records of all time.
  • Bill Evans - Conversations with Myself: This pioneering 1963 solo album is an early example of over-dubbing, a technique in which multiple recordings of the same performer are layered over one another to create a more complex sound than is possible in real time. Conversations won Evans his first Grammy award.

One of the best ways to get insight into the makeup of such a personally enigmatic musician is to listen to takes that didn't meet his standards for release. Evans was a fastidious composer, arranger, and performer who would not be satisfied with anything less than perfection. Great artists would have been ecstatic to release some of the recordings that were not up to Evans' standard. He worked his ensembles hard and himself harder, without ever seeming to realize the significance of what he accomplished.


Evans got his start gigging with greats like Charles Mingus and Miles Davis during the 1950's - contributing heavily to Davis' seminal release Kind of Blue - but by the end of the decade he was a band leader in his own right.

He benefited from the help of a dedicated manager, Helen Keane, who was able to keep his career afloat in spite of his destructive lifestyle, but his musical output in the late 1960's was uneven as he struggled to recapture the chemistry of the original Trio and dealt with his drug addiction. Experimentation with orchestral and big band arrangements during this time was largely unsuccessful, and some albums were never released because they did not meet Evans' demanding standard.

During the 1970's Evans got back to his small-ensemble roots, recording important works like But Beautiful with his trio plus Stan Getz in 1974 and The Paris Concert with the final Bill Evans Trio in 1979. His compositional work grew more and more sophisticated and his tone darker, drawing comparisons to Shostakovich, Rachmaninov, Ravel, and other greats.

For almost his entire adult life, Bill Evans was an addict. He didn't battle addiction so much as he immersed himself in it, and his health, finances, and career all suffered as a result. Evans spent most of the 1950's and 1960's addicted to heroin, and after kicking it in the early 1970's he spent the last years of his life on cocaine. Eventually, his unhealthy lifestyle proved to be fatal, as he died in 1980 of a bleeding ulcer, cirrhosis, and bronchial pneumonia.

Ultimately, Bill Evans is a mysterious figure. He was an introverted, quiet, and unassuming man in public who always let his music speak for him.


Evans is still regarded as one of the all-time great jazz musicians, and always will be. He is, in my mind, one of those personally flawed masters whose work and life compel deep questions with no easy answers. With his body of work, he expanded the jazz world's understanding of what was possible in composition and improvisation, leaving behind a legacy that is a central piece of the insoluble puzzle that is jazz music.


Cross-posted to the new ListenInMusic.com.

Read more artist profiles from Listen In on Newsvine.

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{"commentId":1288694,"authorDomain":"emix"}

This is a hastily produced and wholly insufficient profile of one of the greatest human beings ever to touch an instrument. I didn't have time for a hell of a lot of research, so most of this is done from memory. If you notice a factual inaccuracy, please point it out so I can correct it.

Enjoy the videos (seriously, do it).

{"commentId":1288694,"threadId":"192045","contentId":"1176343","authorDomain":"emix"}
  • 2 votes
Reply#1 - Thu Dec 20, 2007 8:38 AM EST
{"commentId":1290706,"authorDomain":"pobox522rlyeh"}

This is a really great profile. I'm for a fan of Dave Brubeck, but Conversations with Myself is one of my favorite albums.

"Why Bill Evans' Music Proves We're in Iraq for Oil" - has a nice ring to it.

That would be a catchy headline. But for real top page quality, you need solid meta content as well as something designed to start a flame war.

How about:
"CIA replaces Britney Spears torture mix with Bill Evans Conversations with Myself. New mix proves ineffective until used on jfxgillis, who collapses sobbing and demands his copy of Bad by Michael Jackson back."

That would you get you some votes.

{"commentId":1290706,"threadId":"192045","contentId":"1176343","authorDomain":"pobox522rlyeh"}
  • 1 vote
#1.1 - Thu Dec 20, 2007 8:39 PM EST
{"commentId":1290855,"authorDomain":"aneckelmann"}

I still think McCoy Tyner could kick Bill Evans' ass in a piano duel. But McCoy Tyner is distracting to listen to when I do homework. If anyone could replace bad elevator music, I think that they should choose Bill Evans earlier work, which reminds me of a jazz nerd joke.

What did Kenny G say when he walked into an elevator?
Man, this is really good music!

Davis' seminal release Kind of Blue

Note that on one of the recordings Wynton Kelly, another pianist is in that sextet played on this album. That album sold over three million copies.

In my handy dandy jazz encyclopedia it said

An enormosly influential figue, (William Jorn) Evans seemingly sprang upon the jazz scene fully formed. He made his first solo album in 1956 shortly after joining Tony Scott, whome he rejoined briefly in 1959 following a crucial eight months with Miles Davis... Archie Shepp articulated a widely held view when saying, "I think Bill's best work was done with the Miles Davis quintet. A good deal of that energy seems to have gone by the way... I like the ballad material... but Debussy and Sative have already done those things"...individualistic keyboard artists from Herbie Hancock to Keith Jarrett absorbed aspects of his style.

I have to admit, you have done your homework on this article. If only more people published pieces like this.

You're right about how jazz isn't really a known subject on Newsvine. Maybe I'll write a few over winter break. But I'm not making promises.

{"commentId":1290855,"threadId":"192045","contentId":"1176343","authorDomain":"aneckelmann"}
  • 1 vote
#1.2 - Thu Dec 20, 2007 9:54 PM EST
{"commentId":1290983,"authorDomain":"emix"}

Kelly and Tyner are both great too. Certain artists, as I put it above, [reach] a level at which it is impossible to make anything but a preferential judgment.

You're right about how jazz isn't really a known subject on Newsvine. Maybe I'll write a few over winter break. But I'm not making promises.

Here's a promise: if you write 'em, I'll read 'em. :-)

{"commentId":1290983,"threadId":"192045","contentId":"1176343","authorDomain":"emix"}
    #1.3 - Thu Dec 20, 2007 10:43 PM EST
    Reply
    {"commentId":1288805,"authorDomain":"deatienza"}

    Great piece. After I'm all recovered from December Spending I'll probably hit a bunch of record stores looking to see if I can pick some of these up.

    {"commentId":1288805,"threadId":"192045","contentId":"1176343","authorDomain":"deatienza"}
    • 1 vote
    Reply#2 - Thu Dec 20, 2007 9:25 AM EST
    {"commentId":1289351,"authorDomain":"emix"}

    Thanks. It seems like jazz isn't a big-ticket item on Newsvine. Maybe I should re-title the piece with something about Iraq...

    "Why Bill Evans' Music Proves We're in Iraq for Oil" - has a nice ring to it.

    {"commentId":1289351,"threadId":"192045","contentId":"1176343","authorDomain":"emix"}
    • 2 votes
    #2.1 - Thu Dec 20, 2007 12:27 PM EST
    Reply
    {"commentId":1289592,"authorDomain":"acm"}

    A true original. The definition of greatness. Thanks for writing this.

    {"commentId":1289592,"threadId":"192045","contentId":"1176343","authorDomain":"acm"}
    • 1 vote
    Reply#3 - Thu Dec 20, 2007 1:51 PM EST
    {"commentId":1299020,"authorDomain":"jaggerjazz"}

    A nicely written tribute to the great Bill Evans -- great work. To me, Evans stands out for bringing a new level of sensitivity to the keyboard. His use of dynamics is always breathtaking. He also pioneered the regular use of "rootless" voicings. My favorite albums are "Portrait in Jazz" and "Live at Shelly's Manne Hole." His two versions of "Autumn Leaves" on "Portrait" send shivers up my spine they swing so damn hard. Thanks for the invite to the discussion group!

    Peace.
    Reid

    {"commentId":1299020,"threadId":"192045","contentId":"1176343","authorDomain":"jaggerjazz"}
    • 1 vote
    Reply#4 - Mon Dec 24, 2007 10:59 AM EST
    {"commentId":1442311,"authorDomain":"MarxistMonkey"}

    Bill Evans is one of the greats. I would want to mention his work with two great bass players as well: Eddie Gomez and Scott LaFaro. The Village Vanguard sessions showcase the work with LaFaro, and I can't remember the name of the duo record with Gomez, but it is sensuous and delicate.

    {"commentId":1442311,"threadId":"192045","contentId":"1176343","authorDomain":"MarxistMonkey"}
      Reply#5 - Wed Feb 6, 2008 5:18 PM EST
      {"commentId":1442351,"authorDomain":"emix"}

      Yeah, there's a link to a brief video of LaFaro up there in the article. What might've been...

      {"commentId":1442351,"threadId":"192045","contentId":"1176343","authorDomain":"emix"}
        #5.1 - Wed Feb 6, 2008 5:28 PM EST
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