Who Was Bill Evans?
Bill Evans, one of the most influential and tragic figures of the
post-bop jazz piano, was known for his highly nuanced touch, the clarity of
the feeling content of his music and his reform of the chord voicing system
pianists used. He recorded over fifty albums as leader and received five
Grammy awards. He spawned a school of "Bill Evans style" or "Evans
inspired" pianists, who include some of the best known artists of our day,
including Michel Petrucciani, Andy Laverne, Richard Beirach, Enrico
Pieranunzi and Warren Bernhardt. His inescapable influence on the very
sound of jazz piano has touched virtually everybody of prominence in the
field after him (as well as most of his contemporaries), and he remains a
monumental model for jazz piano students everywhere, even inspiring a
newsletter devoted solely to his music and influence.
Yet Bill Evans was a person who was painfully self-effacing,
especially in the beginning of his career. Tall and handsome, literate and
highly articulate about his art, he had a "confidence problem" as he called
it, while at the same time devoted himself fanatically to the minute
details of his music. He believed he lacked talent, so had to make up with
it by intense work, but to keep the whole churning enterprise afloat he
took on a heroin addiction for most of his adult life. The result was
sordid living conditions, a brilliant career, two failed marriages (the
first ending in a dramatic suicide), and an early death.
Origins
Bill Evans was born in Plainfield, New Jersey, in 1929, of a devout
Russian Orthodox mother and an alcoholic father of Welsh origins, who
managed a golf course. Evans' Russian side accounts for the special feeling
many of his Russian fans have for him that he is one of them. Bill received
his first musical training in his mother's church; both parents were highly
musical. He also held a lifelong attachment to the game of golf.
Bill began studying piano at age six, and since his parents wanted
him to know more than one instrument, he took up the violin the following
year and the flute at age 13. He became very proficient on the flute,
although he hardly played it in his later years. Proficiency at these
instruments in which great emphasis is laid on tonal expressiveness, might
have encouraged Evans to seek the similar gradations of nuance on piano. He
did, of course, thereby extending the expressive range of jazz piano.
Evans' older brother Harry, two years his senior, was his first
influence. Harry was the first one in the family to take piano lessons, and
Bill began at the piano by mimicking him. He worshipped his older brother
and tried to keep up with him in sports too, and was devastated by his
death in 1979 at the age of 52.
By age 12 he was substituting for his older brother in Buddy
Valentino's band, where at one point he discovered a little blues phrase by
himself during a stock arrangement performance of "Tuxedo Junction." It was
only a Db-D-F phrase in the key of Bb, but it unlocked a door for him, as
he said in an interview, "It was such a thrill. It sounded right and good,
and it wasn't written, and I had done it. The idea of doing something in
music that somebody hadn't thought of opened a whole new world to me." This
idea became the central one of his musical career.
Also, by the late 40s Evans considered himself the best
boogie-woogie player in northern New Jersey, according to an interview with
Marian McPartland on the radio show Piano Jazz. That was the musical rage
at the time; later, however, Evans rarely played blues tunes in his
performances or on his recordings.
Evans' Reading Habits
Evans' mother was an amateur pianist herself and had amassed piles
of old sheet music, which the young Bill read through, gaining breadth and
above all speed at sight reading. This enabled him to explore widely in
classical literature, especially 20th century composers. Debussy,
Stravinsky, notably Petrouschka, and Darius Milhaud were particularly
influential. He found this much more interesting than practicing scales and
exercises, and it eventually enabled him to experience broad quantities of
classical music. As he told Gene Lees, "It's just that I've played such a
quantity of piano. Three hours a day in childhood, about six hours a day
in college, and at least six hours now. With that, I could afford to
develop slowly. Everything I've learned, I've learned with feeling being
the generating force." (Lees, Meet Me, p. 150). And as he later told Len
Lyons, playing Bach a lot helped him gain control over tone and to improve
his physical contact with the keyboard (Great Jazz Pianists, 226).
College and After
Evans received a music scholarship to Southeastern Louisiana
College (now Southeastern Louisiana University) in Hammond, Louisiana,
where he majored in music, graduating in 1950. There is an archive there
now dedicated to him administered by Ron Nethercutt. His professors faulted
him for not playing the scales and exercises correctly, although he could
play the classical pieces perfectly with ease. In college he discovered the
work of Horace Silver, Bud Powell, Nat King Cole and Lennie Tristano, who
was to have a profound influence on him. He also participated in jam
sessions with guitarist Mundell Lowe and bassist Red Mitchell. After
college he joined reedman Herbie Fields' band. It was in this last position
that he learned to accompany horn players. After that he spent 1951 to 1954
in the army, during which he managed to gig around Chicago. Upon his
discharge he decided to pursue a jazz career and settled in New York. There
he worked in the dance band of clarinetist Jerry Wald and saxophonist Tony
Scott, and became known as an exceptional player in musicians' circles. His
first professional recording was made accompanying singer Lucy Reed in
1955, and in 1956 he joined George Russell's avant-garde band and began
studying Russell's Lydian Chromatic Concept.
First Recording as Leader
In 1956 Mundell Lowe called Orrin Keepnews at Riverside and
prevailed upon him and his partner Bill Grauer to listen to a tape of Evans
over the phone. This was highly unusual, but Keepnews and Grauer heard
enough to convince them they had to record Evans. But first they had to
convince him! The very self-effacing Bill Evans didn't believe he was ready
to record, and Keepnews and company had to persuade him to the contrary.
The atmosphere in the studio was relaxed. Evans had chosen Paul Motian, his
drummer with Tony Scott, and Teddy Kotick, an excellent young bassist, who
had already worked with Charlie Parker and Stan Getz. They recorded 11
pieces in a single day in September of 1956-it was Riverside's money saving
policy-including four Evans originals: "Five," "Conception," "No Cover, No
Minimum," and the eventual classic "Waltz for Debbie." This last tune was
one of three short (under 2 minutes) piano solos Evans recorded after the
other members were dismissed. The album, entitled "New Jazz Conceptions"
was a critical success, winning Evans very positive reviews in Down Beat
and Metronome (by Nat Hentoff). But it only sold 800 copies in a year.
Gaining Experience
As a sideman that year and the next he also recorded with
trombonist Bob Brookmeyer, trumpeter Art Farmer, and reedmen Lee Konitz and
Jimmy Giuffre, vibest Eddie Costa, and avant-garde conductor-composer
(-pianist) George Russell, whose Lydian harmonic system Evans had found
very useful. That year he also met Scott LaFaro, while auditioning him for
a place in an ensemble led by trumpeter Chet Baker. Evans was impressed by
the young bassist, whom he found overflowing with almost an uncontrolled
energy and creativity. When Evans later chose LaFaro for his own trio he
found that LaFaro had his talents under better control.
During a concert at Brandeis University in 1957, which combined
written-out classical style music and jazz improvisation (before Gunther
Schuller had founded the "third stream" movement, which claimed to do just
that) Evans distinguished himself during a long solo on George Russell's
"All About Rosie." Schuller and Russell were part of the event, along with
jazz bassist Charles Mingus, Jimmy Giuffre and composers Milton Babbitt and
Harold Shapiro. The solo constituted the announcement of the arrival of a
new major talent, which his subsequent recordings would soon confirm.
Miles Hires Him
Evans' big break, though, came when Miles Davis hired him shortly
thereafter, putting him in a rhythm section behind John Coltrane and
Cannonball Adderley in addition to himself. Miles' former pianist, Red
Garland, had walked out on him, and Miles needed someone more versatile
anyway. He was looking for a player who could handle modal playing, and
Evans was it. He had met Evans through George Russell, with whom Evans was
studying.
A performance of the Ballet Africaine from Guinea in 1958 had
originally sparked Miles' interest in modal music. Miles had very big ears
and was always listening for new musical currents, both inside himself,
from his past, and to new sources fellow musicians brought him. This
African music, which featured the finger piano or kalimba, was the kind of
music which stayed for long periods of time on a single chord, weaving in
and out of consonance and dissonance. It was a very new concept in jazz at
the time, which was dominated by the chord-change based music of bebop,
which was really an extension of the American popular song. Miles realized
that Evans could follow him into modal music. Moreover, Evans introduced
Miles to Rachmaninoff, Ravel and Khachaturian, revealing new scales to him
and generally expanding his appreciation for classical music.
Miles found Evans a very quiet, self-effacing person, so he wanted
to test Evans' musical integrity. After all, Evans was the only white guy
in a powerful, prominently black band. Miles needed to see if he would be
musically intimidated, so he said to Evans one day,
"Bill, you know what you have to do, don't you, to be in this
band?"
He looked at me puzzled and shit and shook his head and said, "No
Miles, what do I have to do? I said, "Bill, now you kow we all brothers
and shit and everybody's in this thing together and so what I came up with
for you is that you got to make it with everybody, you know what I mean?
You got to f... the band." Now I was kidding, but Bill was real serious,
like Trane [John Coltrane].
He thought about it for about fifteen minutes and then came back
and told me, "Miles, I thought about what you said and I just can't do it,
I just can't do that. I'd like to please everybody and make everyone happy
here, but I just can't do that. I looked at him and smiled and said, "My
man!" And then he knew I was teasing. (Davis, 226)
So Evans passed the test. Here's why Miles liked Bill's playing:
Bill had this quiet fire that I loved on piano. The way he
approached it, the sound he got was like crystal notes or sparkling water
cascading down from some clear waterfall. I had to change the way the band
sounded again for Bill's style by playing different tunes, softer ones at
first. Bill played underneath the rhythm and I liked that, the way he
played scales with the band. Red's [Garland] playing had carried the rhythm
but Bill underplayed it and for what I was doing now with the modal thing,
I liked what Bill was doing better. (Davis, 226)
Evans made 10 albums with Miles in less than a year they were
together, February to November, 1958. But Evans was uncomfortable in the
group after seven months. He wanted to form his own-so did Adderley and
Coltrane. They would all eventually become leaders in the field, and Miles'
group, despite the fact that it was at the top of the jazz field, was
hemming them in. In addition, Evans disliked all the travelling, and the
harrassment he was getting from black fans about being the only white
musician in the group was getting to him-it was disturbing to Miles too.
There was also the annoying criticism that he didn't play fast enough or
hard enough, that his playing was too delicate.
Evans' Second Album as Leader
Evans had his second outing as a leader, once again for Riverside,
in December 1958. He had officially left Miles' group by that time. For
this recording he chose Miles' drummer Philly Joe Jones, with whom he
worked many times after that, and Dizzy Gillespie's bass player Sam Jones
(no relation), who went on to a longterm relationship with Cannonball
Adderley. The influence of his stay in Miles' band is clear from his
driving version of "Night and Day" as well as his choice of and performance
on the hard bop tunes "Minority" by Gigi Gryce and "Oleo" by Sonny Rollins.
The real classic during that session is his original "Peace Piece,"
which was originally conceived as an extended introduction to Leonard
Berstein's standard "Some Other Time." It became a jazz standard, and he
performs it during a 6 minute 41 second piano solo on the album. The tune
is based on a succession of scales, which the player extends at will before
going onto another scale, a new kind of balance at the time between
structured and free (although similar in concept to Indian ragas) The tune,
therefore, would never be played the same way twice.This is the nature of a
free piece: the structure as well as the melody is unique to each
individual performance occasion.
Along with the more driving swing in this album came a more
personal, more nuanced touch. Evans was moving away from the dominant
influences of his jazz formation-Bud Powell, with his extended horn lines,
and Horace Silver, with his bluesy percussive approach-and toward the sound
that would characterize his mature years. It testifies to a large amount of
exploration and growth in the 26 months between the two recording sessions,
including the assimilation of the influence of Lennie Tristano's long
flowing lines into his playing.
Since the stint with Miles had only benefited Bill's reputation,
Keepnews decided to title the album Everybody Digs Bill Evans and put
testimonials from Davis, George Shearing, Ahmad Jamal and Cannonball
Adderley on the cover. Issued in May, 1959, it sold much better than the
first one.
Miles Davis' Kind of Blue
Nonetheless, Evans played on Miles' breakthrough Kind of Blue
album (recorded in March-April 1959), even though he had been replaced by
Wynton Kelly by then. Miles had planned the session around Evans' playing.
According to Miles, Wynton Kelly combined what he liked in Evans with what
he had liked in Red Garland, and Kelly actually played on one tune on this
album, "Freddy Freeloader." The album grew, as did so many of Miles'
projects, out of a musical impression floating in Miles' mind, in this case
that Ballet Africaine, mentioned above, combined with some gospel music he
had heard as a six year-old in Arkansas.
That feeling had got in my creative blood, my imagination, and I had
forgotten it was there....So I wrote about five bars of that and recorded
it....But you write something and guys play off it and take it someplace
else through their creativity and imagination, and you just miss where you
thought you wanted to go. I was trying to do one thing and ended up doing
something else. (Davis, 234)
Miles wrote only sketches for the session, in order to tap into his
musicians' spontaneity, and with no rehearsals. It worked so well that
everything was accepted on the first take. Evans applied his deep musical
integrity and imagination to the task, as Miles said, "Bill was the kind of
player that when you played with him if he started something, he would end
it, but he would take it a little bit farther. You subconsciously knew
this, but it always put a little tension up in everyone's playing, and that
was good" (Davis, 234).
Yet the collective result did not correspond with Miles' original
inspiration. The album was acclaimed as a masterpiece, but Miles told
people he had missed getting what he wanted. Perhaps he got more; perhaps
he never could have gotten it given the degree of freedom he gave his
powerful sidemen. Recognizing his articulateness about music, Miles had
Evans write the liner notes for the album. Evans summarizes the spontaneous
process in the purest possible light, an ironic contrast to Miles' mix of
intentions, realization and frustration:
There is a Japanese visual art in which the artist is forced to be
spontaneous. He must paint on a thin stretched parchment with a special
brush and black water paint in such a way that an unnatural or interrupted
stroke will destroy the line or break through the parchment. Erasures or
changes are impossible. These artists must practice a particular
discipline, that of allowing the idea to express itself in communication
with their hands in such a direct way that deliberation cannot interfere.
The resulting pictures lack the complex compositions and textures
of ordinary painting, but it is said that those who see well find something
captured that escapes explanation.
Every procedural and structural element in this description has its
analogue in jazz, and this statement could well stand as Evans personal
artistic manifesto. "Ordinary painting" could well refer to classical
music.
Bill Evans on His Own Development
Evans was extremely aware about every factor in his music and
musical development, making him one of the most articulate jazz musicians
on the scene. Throughout his career he did numerous interviews, which not
only document his views on a variety of musical subjects, but offer us his
eloquent thinking voice. One of the clearest messages he gave dealt with
his own development, its difficulties and the rewards of those
difficulties:
I always like people who have developed long and hard, especially
through introspection and a lot of dedication. I think what they arrive at
is usually...deeper and more beautiful...than the person who seems to have
that ability and fluidity from the beginning. I say this because it's a
good message to give to young talents who feel as I used to. You hear
musicians playing with great fluidity and complete conception early on, and
you don't have that ability. I didn't. I had to know what I was doing. And
yes ultimately it turned out that those people weren't able to carry their
thing very far. I found myself being more attracted to artists who have
developed through the years and become better and deeper musicians.
(Williams, n. p.)
Evans once told Gene Lees right out that he didn't think he had
much talent, and later that he had to work on his harmonic concept so much
because he "didn't have very good ears" (Lees, Meet Me, 151-2).
Evans' Chord Voicings
Although he rarely talked about them, Evans was the main person
responsible for reforming jazz voicings on piano. A voicing is the series
of notes used to express a chord. Up until that time chords had been
expressed either by spelling the chord, with root, 3rd, 5th, 7th and
sometimes 9th, or with a selection of these notes. Bud Powell had pioneered
the so-called "shell" voicings or alternations between outer and inner
notes of a chord, that is root-7th or 3rd-5th or 3rd-7th.
Evans abandoned roots almost entirely to develop a system in which
the chord is expressed as a quality identity and a color, with the root
being left to the bass player, or to the left hand on another beat of the
measure, of just left implied. The system has become quite widespread, and
a student can find it explained in any number of books on jazz piano theory
and technique. But Evans had to derive them from composers like Debussy and
Ravel and make a standard system out of them so they could be used
unconsciously, automatically, and in doing so he transformed jazz piano.
The Piano Trio Concept: Equality of Instrumental Voices
From there Evans launched into a career characterized mostly by
trio recordings. His concept of the trio was a much more egalitarian one
than the one prevalent at the time. Evans gave the bassist and drummer more
active roles than most rhythm section sidemen in trios, with a resulting
greater degree of interplay among the musicians. He made a series of live
recordings at the Village Vanguard in 1961, embodying this principle. These
remain among his best recordings, featuring Scott LaFaro on bass and Paul
Motian on drums. Evans, who was normally very critical of himself was quite
pleased with these recordings. In them he also reveals his prediliction for
the waltz, which would be a constant throughout his career.
When bassist Scott LaFaro died tragically later that year in a car
accident at age 23, these recordings took on even more significance as his
memorial. Evans did not record for almost a year while mourning for LaFaro.
During the rest of his career Evans searched for LaFaro's equals on bass.
He may have found them later in Eddie Gomez and Marc Johnson.
Awareness of His Stylistic Identity and Its Influence
Evans maintained that he was not aware of the importance of his
influence on jazz piano, although he finally believed it, after hearing it
so many times. He saw his own style as simply the necessary one to express
what he wanted to express. Here's how he explained it:
First of all, I never strive for identity. That's something that
just has happened automatically as a result, I think, of just putting
things together, tearing things apart and putting it together my own way,
and somehow I guess the individual comes through eventually....I want to
build my music from the bottom up, piece by piece, and kind of put it
together according to my own way of organizing things....I just have a
reason that I arived at myself for every note I play (Enstice and Rubin,
139-140).
Evans on One's Personal Sound
As a corollary to a musician's stylistic identity, one eventually
develops one's own unique sound. This may be very difficult to define,
although easily recognizable by ear. Not everyone has one. "I think having
one's own sound in a sense is the most fundamental kind of identity in
music," said Evans.
But it's a very touchy thing how one arrives at that. It has to be
something that comes form inside, and it's a long-term process. It's a
product of a total personality. Why one person is going to have it and
another person isn't, I don't know why exactly. I think sometimes the
people I seem to like most as musical artists are people who have had
to-they're like late arrivers....They've had to work a lot harder...to get
facility, to get fluency...Whereas you see a lot of young talents that have
a great deal of fluidity and fluency and facility, and they never really
carry it any place. Because in a way they're not aware enough of what
they're doing. (Enstice & Rubin, 140)
Bill Evans' Mature Style
Evans' mature style has been such a pervasive influence in jazz
piano over the past thirty years that in many ways it is almost
undetectable. We can speak of his highly nuanced touch, his melodic shapes,
and his chord voicings and still be at a distance from the essence of his
sound. To clarify this essence it is useful to isolate and describe the
elements of his style, which other pianists have picked up with different
degrees of fidelity to Evans, and then see what is left to Evans alone.
At the most general level, jazz pianists today tend to sound more
like Evans than they do like his two great piano predecessors and
influences, Bud Powell, and Lennie Tristano. Like Evans and unlike Powell
and Tristano, the contemporary style utilizes a greater proportion of
shaped phrases than continuous lines; it utlizes a greater proportion of
chromaticism and non-major scale modes than Powell certainly; and it
utilizes Evans' chord voicings as a point of departure for its harmonic
conception. After this, approaches to touch, harmony, and melodic shape are
highly individualized.
At closer stylistic proximity to Evans are the members of his
"school," mentioned above, whose playing makes direct reference to his
style. In the work of these pianists you will hear more frequently such
typical Evans traits as moving inner voices, fleet block chord melodies,
rhythmically truncated melodic lines which leave the listener in mid-air,
scalar passages-especially diminished scales-in thirds, and his poignant
harmonies, including reharmonizations and original tunes with harmonic
structures similar to those Evans used.
Yet when you listen closely to the recordings of Evans himself you
hear things not present even in his closest followers, for example, the
fine gradation of touch that offers up emotional nuance at a truly
surprising level of sensitivity. Any of Evans' external figures can be
imitated, even nuances of touch, but that's just the surface structure of
his music. The key to the uniqueness of his sound which is immediately
identifiable and has never been perfectly duplicated by anyone, lay deep
within his aesthetic consciousness. Putting into perspective how he arrived
at his sound offers a clue to the nature of this consciousness, this
emotional intention expressed musically, which is the deep engine of his
music and accounts for its uniqueness.
Evans' Internal Musical Engine
We know Evans disliked exercises, avoided playing them; that he
read quickly and accurately an enormous amount of classical (and other)
printed music, and performed it perfectly; that he stressed that he played
nothing without feeling; and that he felt he had arrived at his mastery and
hallmark sound the long way around, not by imitating anything, or by any
method other than the assimilation of enormous amounts of music. From this
perspective a finger exercise would be an unacceptable short-cut, since it
would remove the player from the emotional potential of music by
unacceptably isolating technique from feeling. By taking the time to refuse
to do this during his entire formation Evans recreated jazz piano for
himself, and by extension for the rest of the field.
Personal students of Evans say that he would never spell out
anything he did for them: chord voicings, fast passages, whatever-you just
had to figure it out if you really wanted it. But Evans wasn't just being
difficult: he was insisting on the same standards of authenticity for his
student as he claimed for himself. But that leaves us with a paradox. If it
is impossible through mere imitation for anyone to recreate Evans' style
without his internal engine which invested every musical gesture with his
emotional content; then by taking Evans' route, by playing no music without
an investiture of emotion, the student would necessarily formulate a unique
musical personality different from that of Evans.
Of course, this is what Evans, the teacher, wanted. We didn't need
any more Bill Evanses. His teaching approach challenged the student to be
as deep and as original as he was.
Effects of Evans' Style
But having said this, what can Bill Evans' music accomplish, given
its expansive emotional charge and infinitely fine nuances of touch? In a
word: intimacy. His music manages to address an attentive listener's inmost
private thoughts, so close to the thinking and feeling organ that you are
not sure if you are producing the effects or if the music is. When you
emerge from the intense and delicate reverie the music has induced the rest
of jazz piano may sound unbearably coarse-even Evans' followers. It may
take you a while to reset in order to be able to appreciate the separate
musical personality of a different player. But you will have felt the power
of Evans' aesthetic purity, and when appreciated under the proper
conditions, it is awesome.
Many people have had this experience and become devoted fans,
wondering all the while if anyone else knew what they were experiencing.
Yet this is the paradox of music that achieves intimacy. It offers the
illusion that it is addressing itself solely to you. Lees describes it at
the beginning of his article.
Evans Meets His Long-Term Manager
Jazz writer Gene Lees, a personal friend of Evans, was in 1962
leaving an editorial post at Down Beat. He had recently met manager Helen
Keane and formed a strong personal relationship with her, insisting that
she hear Bill Evans. But Evans already had managerial contracts, in fact,
two of them, which constituted an official mistake by the musicians' union.
First Lees brought Keane to hear Evans. He was playing at the Village
Vanguard. Marlon Brando and Harry Belafonte owed their starts to her, and
Lees realized Keane could work wonders on Evans' career. As soon as she
heard the first few seconds she said, "Oh, no, not this one! This is the
one that could break my heart." But she was willing to do it.
Then Lees set up lunch with the president of the union, a personal
friend of his, and presenting the conflict, asked him to cancel both of the
existing contracts.
His Drug Habit
Evans had been sinking into a heroin habit in the late 50s, and by
the time Helen Keane entered his life in 1962 it was in full bloom. He was
married, and his wife Ellaine was an addict too. Evans habitually sought to
borrow money from friends, every day calling a string of his friends in his
address book from a telephone booth on the street outside his apartment,
since his phone had been disconnected. Many became infuriated at being
contacted again and again for money. One day when Lees blew up at him,
saying he didn't even have enough for himself to eat, Evans called back an
hour later to say he now had enough for both of them to eat.
His friends were afraid to withhold all money from him, because
then he'd go to the loan sharks who'd threaten to break his hands if he
didn't pay. At one point his friends, including Lees, Helen Keane, Orrin
Keepnews, and his new producer Creed Taylor decided to withhold cash from
him, while directly paying his bills, and they appointed the reluctant Lees
to break the news to Evans.
Lees found Evans in his apartment, where the electricity had been
shut off, but he got around that by running an extension cord from a
hallway light under the front door. Evans was furious at his friends'
scheme and angrily described the importance of his habit to him, as Lees
relates:
"No, I mean it," he said. "You don't understand. It's like death
and transfiguration. Every day you wake in pain like death and then you go
out and score, and that is transfiguration. Each day becomes all of life in
microcosm" (Lees, Meet Me, 156).
It was an elegant, aestheticized account of the process that was
destroying him. Lees says that later after Evans was clean he claimed to
have learned something valuable from his addiction: tolerance and
understanding for his father's alcoholism. This leaves volumes unsaid, of
course, namely the devastating effect on Bill's confidence of having an
alcoholic father, and the unmet childhood needs which resulted in his own
self-destructive addiction. At least he didn't have children during the
time he was hooked.
Orrin Keepnews found it difficult to turn down Evans' request for
money because of "the sweetness of his nature and his immense moral
decency," unlike certain other musicians whose turpitude made him easy to
turn down. But Bill would just wait there in the Riverside office until
Keepnews would relent and give him some cash.
But when Helen Keane got Evans signed to Verve and negotiated a
large advance from producer Creed Taylor, Bill took the money and
meticulously paid back everyone what he owed them. He came by for Lees in a
cab and went from apartment building to apartment building, with Lees
holding the cab, armed with his cash and card file, and took care of all
his debts. At the end he reimbursed Lees $200 for pawning his record player
and some of his records. He had even went so far as to find Zoot Sims in
Stockholm and gave him $600, a sum which Sims had simply forgotten about.
Overdub Albums
In the winter of 1962-63 Evans came up with the idea for his first
multi-track solo piano album. Although overdubbing had been used before,
specifically by guitarist Les Paul and Mary Ford (Paul had also pioneered
the electric guitar), and by Patti Page, it had never been used quite like
this. Neither producer Creed Taylor, nor Lees or Keane-who constituted the
Evans inner circle at the time-knew quite what Bill had in mind. But Evans
knew exactly. Nowadays, overdubbing and digital editing are standard
procedure and are used to produce most popular music. Today the techniques
are used to build a piece bit by bit, permitting numerous takes of each
track and minute editing changes. But back then, with analogue tape running
at 30 ips, the artist had to have a complete global grasp of everything
before he laid it down. Evans was used to this level of conception. Once he
had the session the way he wanted it, his friends were amazed:
The four of us in the control booth-Ray [Hall, the engineer],
Creed, Helen, and I- were constantly openmouthed at what was going on. On
the second track Bill would play some strangely appropriate echo of
something he'd done on the first. Or there would be some flawless pause in
which all three pianists were perfectly together; or some deft run fitted
effortlessly into a space left for it. I began to think of Bill as three
Bills: Bill Left Channel, Bill Right, and Bill Center.
Bill Left would lay down the first track, stating the melody and
launching into an improvisation for a couple of choruses, after which he
would move into an accompanist's role, playing a background over which Bill
Center would later play his solo. His mind obviously was working in three
dimensions of them simultaneously, because each Bill was anticipating and
responding to what the other two were doing. Bill Left was hearing in his
head what Bill Center and Bill Right were going to play a half hour or so
from now, while Bill Center and Bill Right were in constant communication
with a Bill Left who had vanished into the past a half hour or an hour
before. The sessions took on a feeling of science-fiction eeriness.
When Bill had completed the first two tracks, Creed and Helen and I
all thought that he shouldn't do a third-that another one would only
clutter what he had already done. We were wrong.
As the end of the track neared, the "third" Bill took the opening
figure and extended it into a long fantastic, flowing line that he wove in
and out and around and through what the other two pianists were playing,
never colliding with these two previous selves. That final line seemed like
a magic firefly hurrying through a forest at night, never striking the
trees, leaving behind a line of golden sparks that slowly fell to earth,
illuminating everything around it. I think Helen and Creed were close to
tears when he completed that track. I know I was (Lees, Meet Me, 160).
Evans left for Florida, where he successfully kicked his habit for
a while, then returned to New York in time to receive a Grammy Award for
Conversations with Myself. Later Evans created two more overdub albums,
Further Conversations in 1967, also on Verve, produced by Helen Keane, and
New Conversations in 1978 on Warner Brothers, which opens with his tribute
"Song for Helen," includes a tribute to his second wife Nenette ("For
Nenette"), reinforced by the Cy Coleman standard "I Love My Wife," and the
Ellington rarity "Reflections in D." It is generally considered to be the
best of the three.
Evans' Fortunes on the Rise
Evans became better known and sold more records as the decade went
on. He was soon making enough money for him and his wife to move out of
Manhattan to a comfortable section of the Bronx called Riverdale. Meanwhile
Creed Taylor had left Verve and started his own label CTI, and it fell to
Helen Keane to take on the role of producer. Gene Lees helped set up the
Montreux Jazz Festival and arranged for Evans to play in it in 1968 and
thereafter, recording his performances from that year and 1970. When Evans
left Verve he spent some time briefly recording for Columbia, but did not
consider it very productive. At one point its president, Clive Davis, tried
to get him to make a rock album, which Evans flatly turned down.
After that Evans went to Fantasy, which turned out to be a much
more fruitful association. He produced some of his most mature satisfying
work there. His fame only continued to grow as he acquired more fans among
music lovers and disciples among pianists everywhere. Lees tells the story
of a piano-playing Toronto dentist he had called when Evans had a
toothache there. Lees had been turned down by the nurse because the call
had come in after hours. When the dentist heard about it, he was appalled.
"What," he said, "Do you realize you turned down God?" and rushed down to
the Town Tavern where Evans was playing, tools in hand, to fix his ailing
tooth (Lees, Meet Me, 166).
Personal Tragedy
It was also around this time, 1970, that Evans' wife Ellaine
committed suicide by throwing herself under a subway train. As a result, he
went back on heroin for a while, then got into a methadone treatment
program, and stayed away from drugs for almost the last decade in his life.
He married again, to Nenette, and had a child by her, whom they named Evan.
His son became the inspiration for the beautiful tune "Letter to Evan." The
marriage did not last, however, and soon he was living by himself in Fort
Lee, New Jersey, right across the George Washington Bridge.
Last Decade of Recording
Evans' last decade of recording showed him growing even more as an
artist. His 1974 live LP, Since We Met, is one of his very best, containing
new versions of his ruminative ballad in memory of his father, "Turn Out
the Stars," his radically beautiful "Time Remembered," the Earl Zindars beauty "Sareen Jurer," performed
in both 3/4 and 4/4 time, and Cy Coleman's waltz "See-Saw," among others.
In 1979 he gave a magnificent concert in Paris which Helen Keane later
turned into two LP releases on Musician, called simply Paris Concert,
Edition I and II. They reveal him with an unmatched rhythmic drive,
summoning up all his stylistic resources, filling the entire musical space
with an expanding energy. He takes fruitful risks, such as when he opens
his classic "Nardis" with a solo piano improvisation, a kaleidoscopic
exploration of figures and forms, finally landing on the familiar
middle-Eastern sounding melody, bringing in the rest of the rhythm section
in a triumphant release of suspense. The audience was ecstatic.
Last Addiction and Death
In 1980 Bill Evans began using cocaine, the fashionable drug that
he imagined was "safe." But actually it demands replenishment in the
bloodstream every few hours rather than just once a day like heroin, and as
a stimulant, it wears you down that much faster. At the end of summer of
that year, Bill asked his drummer Joe LaBarbera to drive him to the
hospital, since he was having severe stomach pains. He calmly directed Joe
to Mount Sinai, checked in, and died there the 15th of September.
The tributes poured in, and by 1983 a double album had been
assembled with pianists who had been influenced or touched by Evans, each
contributing a single piece. His stature has only continued to grow, with a
newsletter devoted to his music and followers edited by Win Hinkle in North
Carolina, and now on the Internet. He has become, along with Oscar
Peterson, one of the major enduring forces in jazz piano.
by Joel Simpson
Bibliography
- Aiken, Jim. "Bill Evans." (Contemporary) Keyboard Magazine, June, 1980, pp.
44-55.
- Davis, Miles with Quincy Troupe. Miles: the Autobiography. New York: Simon
& Schuster, 1989.
- Enstice, Wayne and Paul Rubin. Jazz Spoken Here: Conversations with
Twenty-two Musicians. Baton Rouge, LA: LSU Press, 1992. (Bill Evans)
- Evans, Bill. "Improvisation in Jazz," liner notes on Kind of Blue, Columbia
PC 8163, starring Miles Davis, 1959.
- Keepnews, Orrin. "The Bill Evans Sessions." from Bill Evans: The Complete
Riverside Recordings, accompanying booklet. Berkeley, CA: Fantasy, 1984.
- Lees, Gene. Meet Me at Jim & Andy's: Jazz Musicians and Their World. New
York: Oxford U. P., 1988. (Bill Evans)
- Lyons, Len. The Great Jazz Pianists-Speaking of their Lives and Music. New
York: Quill, 1983. (Bill Evans)
- Lyons, Len and Don Perlo. Jazz Portraits: The Life and Music of the Jazz
Masters. New York: William Morrow & Co., 1989. (Bill Evans)
- Williams, Martin. "Homage to Bill Evans." from Bill Evans: The Complete
Riverside Recordings, accompanying booklet. Berkeley, CA: Fantasy, 1984.