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» Bill Evans

Bill Evans
Born: August 16, 1929 in Plainfield, Ne
Died: September 15, 1980 in New York, Ne
Active: '50s-'80s Major
Styles: Modal Music, Post-Bop, Cool
Instrument: Piano Representative
Albums: "The Complete Fantasy Recordings", "The Complete Riverside Recordings", "Waltz for Debby" Representative
Songs: "Waltz for Debby", "Turn Out the Stars", "Someday My Prince Will Come"

UPC Type Title
4988002514434 (i) CD 3 On 1
075992738729 (i) CD Affinity
4943674103416 (i) SACD Affinity
4547366054644 (i) CD Album
731458931928 CD Alone
042283380127 CD Alone
4988005651471 (i) CD Alone
4988005392213 (i) Vinyl Alone
025218679527 CD Alone (Again)
602498840320 (i) CD Alone (Again)
4988005506122 (i) CD Alone (Mini Lp Sleeve)
4988005644251 (i) CD Alone (Shm-Cd)
8808678314793 (i) CD Art Of Duo: Conversations With Myself & Further Co
4988005330338 (i) CD At Montreux Jazz Festival
025218626323 CD At Shelly's Manne-Hole
4988005504388 (i) CD At Shelly's Manne-Hole Hollywood C (Mini Lp Sleeve
731453975828 CD At The Montreux Jazz Festival
4988005506115 (i) CD At The Montreux Jazz Festival (Mini Lp Sleeve)
4988005639677 (i) CD At The Montreux Jazz Festival (Shm-Cd)
4988005651334 (i) CD At The Montreux Jazz Festival
4260019713643 (i) Vinyl At The Montreux Jazz F
4988005372239 (i) SACD At The Montreux Jazz Festival
4988005378583 (i) CD At The Village Vangaurd Aug 18 1967
025218301725 (i) CD At The Village Vanguard
4988005378576 (i) CD At The Village Vanguard Aug 17 1967
042283127128 CD At Town Hall
4988005652409 (i) CD At Town Hall
789368460120 CD Autumn Leaves
8712177009275 (i) CD Autumn Leaves
4988002487714 (i) CD Best
4943674098606 (i) CD Best Of 1977-80
025218351225 CD Best Of Bill Evans
731453382527 (i) CD Best Of Bill Evans Live On Ver
731452790620 CD Best Of On Verve
4988005292445 (i) CD Bill Evan's Finest Hour
025218444323 CD Bill Evans: Complete Village
025218919524 CD Bill Evans: Vol. 2-Solo Sessions
630263000822 CD Bill Evans: Vol. 1-Very Early-1943-49
602498621462 CD Bill Evans For Lovers
075597983173 CD Bill Evans: Turn Out The Stars/The Fin
025218001823 CD Bill Evans: Complete Riverside Recordings
731454967525 CD Bill Evans' Finest Hour
025218101226 CD Bill Evans: Complete Fantasy Recordings
8436028692422 (i) CD Bill Evans: Complete Live At Ronnie Scott's 1980
886975693627 (i) CD Bill Evans Album
042282198327 (i) CD Bill Evans Trio With Symphony Orchestra
731451982125 (i) CD Bill Evans: Vol. 5-Verve Jazz Masters
8436028692811 (i) CD Bill Evans Trio: Complete Balboa Jazz Club Perform..
4988005652553 (i) CD Bill Evans Trio 'Live'
4988005404404 (i) CD Bill Evans 25-Verve
025218918527 CD Blue In Green
8436028692149 (i) CD Brandeis Jall Festival
608917450729 CD Brilliant
025218924924 CD But Beautiful
602498625729 CD Californiaher
025218443623 CD Consecration
731452140920 CD Conversations With Myself
4988005331076 (i) CD Conversations With Myself
4988005652232 (i) CD Conversations With Myself
025218671828 CD Cross Currents
888072327634 CD Definitive Bill Evans
724352867226 CD Edition 1-Paris Concert
724352867325 CD Edition 2-Paris Concert
025218681421 CD Eloquence
5013929312128 (i) CD Emergence
042283775725 (i) CD Empathy/Simple Matter
888072314283 CD Essential Standards
888072301825 CD Everybody Digs Bill Evans
8436028691845 (i) CD Everybody Digs Bill Evans (Incl. 6 Bonus Tracks)
4988005504319 (i) CD Everybody Digs (Mini Lp Sleeve)
4988005524690 (i) CD Everybody Digs (Shm-Cd)
025218106818 Vinyl Everybody Digs Bill Evans
8013252888205 Vinyl Everybody Digs Billevans
8436006494697 (i) Vinyl Everybody Digs Bill Evans
888072328426 CD Explorations
8436028699636 (i) CD Explorations
025218603720 (i) CD Explorations
8436028699988 (i) Vinyl Explorations
025218733465 SACD Explorations
4988005640550 (i) SACD Explorations
4988005655004 (i) CD From Bill Evans With Love
731455745122 CD From Left To Right
4988005384003 (i) CD From Left To Right
4988005690364 (i) CD From Left To Right (Shm-Cd)
4988005651969 (i) CD From Left To Right
025218706926 (i) CD From The 70's
025218933629 CD Getting Sentimental
4988005504890 (i) CD Green Dolphin Street (Mini Lp Sleeve)
025218928229 CD Half Moon Bay
025218929127 CD Homecoming-Live At Southeaster
025218636926 CD How My Heart Sings
4988005504272 (i) CD How My Heart Sings! (Mini Lp Sleeve)
025218036917 Vinyl How My Heart Sings
4988005655042 (i) SACD How My Heart Sings
025218676120 CD I Will Say Goodbye
5051442481525 (i) CD Incontournables
025218630825 CD Interplay
888072470668 CD Interplay Sessions
4988005504135 (i) CD Interplay (Mini Lp Sleeve)
4988005655059 (i) SACD Interplay
025218647021 CD Intuition
794881895120 (i) CD Jazz Characters
747313901357 DVD Jazz Icons: Bill Evans
025218915120 (i) CD Jazzhouse
025218443029 CD Last Waltz: Final Recordings
8436028691265 (i) CD Legendary Sessions
724101961526 CD Live At Art D'Lugoff's Top O
724101961410 Vinyl Live At Art D'Lugoff's Top O
8427328603904 (i) CD Live At The Birdland
8436019582145 (i) CD Live In Europe 1965
8436028694853 (i) CD Live In Koblenz 1979
8436028693665 (i) CD Live In Nice 1978
8436028692309 (i) CD Live In Paris 1972
8436028693245 (i) CD Live In Paris 1974
8436019582893 (i) CD Live In Paris 1965
8436028692293 (i) CD Live In Rome 1979
8436028692323 (i) CD Live In Switzerland 1975
4547366054668 (i) CD Live In Tokyo
4547366054675 (i) CD Living Time
025218920025 CD Loose Blues
090204053391 (i) CD Loose Blues
8436019587683 (i) CD Lund 1975/Helsinki 1970
8436028696758 (i) Vinyl Lyrical Trumpet Of Chet Baker
8436017760323 (i) DVD Monterey Jazz Festival 75
074644521924 (i) CD Montreux
4988003330873 (i) CD Montreux 2
4988003378691 (i) CD Montreux 2 (Shm-Cd)
025218664424 CD Montreux Iii
4988005378644 (i) Vinyl Montreux Jazz Festival
888072337183 CD Moon Beams
025218643429 CD Moon Beams
025218643412 Vinyl Moon Beams
753088942860 SACD Moonbeams
4988005655035 (i) SACD Moonbeams
4988005319609 (i) CD My First Jazz
4520879004924 (i) CD Nardis
090431787120 CD New Conversations/We Will Meet Again
081227313425 (i) CD New Conversations
4943674084036 (i) CD New Conversations (Shm-Cd)
025218602525 CD New Jazz Conceptions
4988002505753 (i) CD New Jazz Conceptions (Mini Lp Sleeve)
8013252888076 Vinyl New Jazz Conceptions
8436019586754 (i) Vinyl New Jazz Conceptions
081227375126 (i) CD Nirvana
025218923521 CD On Green Dolphin Street
025218901420 CD Original Jazz Classic Jazz
016351633095 DVD Oslo Concerts
4988005672872 (i) CD Out Of The Cool (Shm-Cd)
075596260626 (i) CD Paris Concert Edition One
075596260725 (i) CD Paris Concert Edition Two
886972396323 CD Piano Player
8436019581933 (i) CD Play The Arrangements Of Jimmy Giuffre
025218902625 CD Plays For Lovers
602517613577 CD Plays Theme From The V.I.P.S & Other Great Songs
888072306783 CD Portrait In Jazz
8436028696659 (i) CD Portrait In Jazz
4988002457533 (i) DVD Portrait In Jazz
025218108812 Vinyl Portrait In Jazz
725543841810 Vinyl Portrait In Jazz
4988005606525 (i) SACD Portrait In Jazz
025218669825 CD Quintessence
025218674928 CD Re-Person I Knew
888072300712 CD Riverside Profiles
5060143499128 (i) CD Riverside Years
8436028695157 (i) DVD Rome Concert 1979
8713545212051 CD Sesjun Radio Shows
5060143491412 (i) Vinyl Sharp Notes
8427328604567 (i) CD Sideman Years
025218662222 CD Since We Met
090204070480 (i) CD Since We Met
025218917025 CD Solo Sessions Vol. 1
8436019582909 (i) CD Stockholm 1965
888072305090 CD Sunday At The Village Vanguard
025218614023 CD Sunday At The Village Vanguard
5060143494376 (i) CD Sunday At The Vanguard
8436028699568 (i) CD Sunday At The Village Vanguard
888072309487 Vinyl Sunday At The Village Vanguard
8436028699919 (i) Vinyl Sunday At The Village Vanguard
753088937668 SACD Sunday At The Village Vanguard
4988005655028 (i) SACD Sunday At The Village Vanguard
025218931724 CD Tenderly
025218478328 CD Time Remembered
8013252203121 CD Time Remembered
025218634526 CD Tokyo Concert
731453905825 (i) CD Trio '64
4988005652133 (i) CD Trio '64
731451980824 CD Trio '65
4988005651877 (i) CD Trio '65
4988005516695 (i) CD Trio '65 (Shm-Cd)
4988005690333 (i) CD Trio '65 (Shm-Cd)
4988005364449 (i) CD Trio Live
8436028690886 (i) DVD Trio Umbria Quartet Hamburg
4988005655097 (i) CD Ultimate Bill Evens
731455753622 CD Ultimate Collection
7798093710328 (i) CD Very Best Of
8808678314465 (i) CD Very Best Of Bill Evans
600753113387 (i) CD Very Best Of Jazz
8436028696253 (i) CD Very Last Performance
8436542010924 (i) CD Village Vanguard Sessions
4988005506054 (i) CD W/Symphony Orchestra (Mini Lp Sleeve)
888072323261 CD Waltz For Debby
8004883533718 CD Waltz For Debby
8436019581568 (i) CD Waltz For Debby-Complete 1969 Pescara Festival
025218621021 (i) CD Waltz For Debby
5060143494420 (i) CD Waltz For Debby
8436028699551 (i) CD Waltz For Debby
025218621014 Vinyl Waltz For Debby
753088000911 Vinyl Waltz For Debby
8436028699902 (i) Vinyl Waltz For Debby
753088939969 SACD Waltz For Debby
4988005655011 (i) SACD Waltz For Debby
805520021692 (i) CD Way To Play
4943674083992 (i) CD We Will Meet Again (Shm-Cd)
5051011150722 (i) CD We Will Meet Again: The Anthology
4988005516534 (i) CD What's New (Shm-Cd)
8436019584255 (i) CD What´S New
081227371920 CD You Must Believe In Spring
075992350495 (i) CD You Must Believe In Spring
4943674103409 (i) SACD You Must Believe In Spring
025218916424 CD You're Gonna Hear From Me

Biography: With the passage of time, Bill Evans has become an entire school unto himself for pianists and a singular mood unto himself for listeners. There is no more influential jazz-oriented pianist -- only McCoy Tyner exerts nearly as much pull among younger players and journeymen -- and Evans has left his mark on such noted players as Herbie Hancock, Keith Jarrett, Chick Corea, Brad Mehldau. Borrowing heavily from the impressionism of Debussy and Ravel, Evans brought a new, introverted, relaxed, lyrical, European classical sensibility into jazz -- and that seems to have attracted a lot of young conservatory-trained pianists who follow his chord voicings to the letter in clubs and on stages everywhere. Indeed, classical pianists like Jean-Yves Thibaudet have recorded note-for-note transcriptions of Evans' performances, bringing out the direct lineage with classical composers. In interviews, Evans often stressed that pianists should thoroughly learn technique and harmony so that they can put their inspiration to maximum use. Since he already had those tools in hand, he worked very hard on his touch, getting the special, refined tone that he wanted out of a piano. He also tried to democratize the role of the bassist and drummer in his succession of piano trios, encouraging greater contrapuntal interplay.

Bespectacled, shy, soft-spoken, and vulnerable, Evans was not a good fit into the rough-and-tumble music business. In part to shield himself from the outside world, he turned to drugs -- first heroin, and later, cocaine -- which undoubtedly shortened his life. In interviews, though, he sounds thoroughly in control, completely aware of what he wanted from his art, and colleagues report that he displayed a wicked sense of humor. Nowadays, Evans seems to be immune from criticism, but there was a time when he was accused of not being able to swing, or pilloried for an "effete" approach to jazz that was alien to its African sources. However, there are plenty of Evans recordings which show that he could indeed flash the technique and swing as hard as anyone when he wanted to, especially early in his career. He simply chose a different path for himself, one entirely reflective of his inward personality -- and that's what seems to touch listeners inside and outside jazz the most. Indeed, the cult for Evans' recordings is big enough to justify the existence of six large, expensive boxed sets of his output: four from Fantasy's archives, one from Warner Bros., and the biggest one from Verve. A newcomer, though, would be better-advised to sample Evans in smaller doses. Since the bulk of his recordings were made with the same piano-bass-drums instrumentation, and his career was not marked by dramatic shifts in style, prolonged listening to hours upon hours of his trio recordings can lead to monotony (after all, you can even overdose on Bach, as great as he was).

Born and raised in New Jersey, Evans was recruited for Southeastern Louisiana University on a flute scholarship, where he received a thorough background in theory, played in the marching band, and also led his football team to a league championship as a quarterback. Graduating as a piano major in 1950, he started to tour with the Herbie Fields band, but the draft soon beckoned, and Evans was placed in the Fifth Army Band near Chicago. After three years in the service, he arrived in New York in 1954, playing in Tony Scott's quartet and undertaking postgraduate studies at Mannes College, where he encountered composer George Russell and his modal jazz theories. By 1956, he had already recorded his first album as a leader for Riverside, New Jazz Conceptions, still enthralled by the bop style of Bud Powell but also unveiling what was to become his best-known composition, "Waltz for Debby," which he wrote while still in the Army.

In spring 1958, Evans began an eight-month gig with the Miles Davis Sextet, where he exerted a powerful influence upon the willful yet ever-searching leader. Though Evans left the band that autumn, exhausted by pressured expectations and anxious to form his own group, he was deeply involved in the planning and execution of Davis' epochal Kind of Blue album in 1959, contributing ideas about mood, structure, and modal improvisation, and collaborating on several of the compositions. Although the original release gave composition credit of "Blue in Green" to Davis, Evans claimed he wrote it entirely, based on two chords suggested by Davis (nowadays, they receive co-credit). In any case, Kind of Blue -- now the biggest-selling acoustic jazz album of all time -- contains perhaps the most moving performances of Evans' life.

Evans returned to the scene as a leader in December 1958 with the album Everybody Digs Bill Evans, which included the famous "Peace Piece," a haunting vamp for solo piano that sounds like a long-lost Satie Gymnopedie. Evans' first working trio turned out to be his most celebrated, combining forces with the astounding young bassist Scott LaFaro and drummer Paul Motian in three-way telepathic trialogues. With this group, Evans became a star -- and there was even talk about a recording with Davis involving the entire trio. Sadly, only ten days after a landmark live session at the Village Vanguard in June 1961, LaFaro was killed in an auto accident -- and the shattered Evans went into seclusion for almost a year. He re-emerged the following spring with Chuck Israels as his bassist, and he would go on to record duets with guitarist Jim Hall and a swinging quintet session, Interplay, with Hall and trumpeter Freddie Hubbard.

Upon signing with Verve in 1962, Evans was encouraged by producer Creed Taylor to continue to record in more varied formats: with Gary McFarland's big band, the full-orchestra arrangements of Claus Ogerman, co-star Stan Getz, a reunion with Hall. The most remarkable of these experiments was Conversations With Myself, a session where Evans overdubbed second and third piano parts onto the first; this eventually led to two sequels in that fashion. In his only concession to the emerging jazz-rock scene, Evans dabbled with the Rhodes electric piano in the 1970s but eventually tired of it, even though inventor Harold Rhodes had tailored the instrument to Evans' specifications. Mostly, though, Evans would record a wealth of material with a series of trios. Through his working trios would pass such players as bassists LaFaro (1959-1961), Israels (1962-1965), Gary Peacock (1963), Teddy Kotick (1966), Eddie Gomez (1966-1977), and Marc Johnson (1978-1980); and drummers Motian (1959-1962), Larry Bunker (1962-1965), Arnie Wise (1966, 1968), Joe Hunt (1967), Philly Joe Jones (1967, 1977-1978), Jack DeJohnette (1968), John Dentz (1968), Marty Morell (1968-1975), Eliot Zigmund (1975-1977), and Joe La Barbera (1978-1980). After Verve, Evans would record for Columbia (1971-1972), Fantasy (1973-1977), and Warner Bros. (1977-1980). The final trio with Johnson and La Barbera has been considered the best since the LaFaro-Motian team -- Evans thought so himself -- and their brief time together has been exhaustively documented on CDs.

Though Evans' health was rapidly deteriorating, aggravated by cocaine addiction, the recordings from his last months display a renewed vitality. Even on The Last Waltz, recorded as late as a week before his death from a hemorrhaging ulcer and bronchial pneumonia, there is no audible hint of physical infirmity. After Evans' death, a flood of unreleased recordings from commercial and private sources has elevated interest in this pianist to an insatiable level. ~ Richard S. Ginell, Rovi