Home » Jazz Musicians » Bill Evans

Bill Evans

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.

Read more

Tags

11
Album Review

Bill Evans: In Norway: The Kongsberg Concert

Read "In Norway: The Kongsberg Concert" reviewed by Ian Patterson


The release of In Norway: The Konsberg Concert coincides with the sixtieth anniversary of the Konsberg Jazz Festival. Double cause for celebration. The steady flow of archival Evans recordings shows no signs of abating, with In Norway: The Konsberg Concert, recorded in 1970, coming hot on the heels of the previously unreleased Bill Evans: Behind The Dikes: The 1969 Netherlands Recordings (2021), Bill Evans: Treasures: Solo, Trio and Orchestra Recordings from Denmark (1965-1969) (2023) and Tales: Live in Copenhagen (1964) ...

13
Album Review

Bill Evans: In Norway

Read "In Norway" reviewed by Dan McClenaghan


Pianist Bill Evans' career lasted from the late 1950s until his passing in 1980, but beginning around about 20 years into the 21st century CD releases under Evan's name have been rolling along at a brisk clip, thanks to the Resonance, Elemental and Ess- thetics Record labels. Zev Feldman, often called “The Jazz Detective," has played a big part in this steady release of mostly laudable recordings, uncovering lost or shelved tapes of Evan's concerts, resulting in albums like Bill ...

4
Readers Poll Results

Your Favorite Legacy Jazz Pianists

Read "Your Favorite Legacy Jazz Pianists" reviewed by Michael Ricci


Member votes were tabulated and this list represents our favorite legacy jazz pianists. Fully transparent and easily verifiable, All About Jazz's favorite legacy pianists poll was conducted during the 2023-2024 calendar year and ran up through June 28, 2024. We want to thank every member who participated in creating this impressive list for the next generation of jazz enthusiasts to discover. 1Bill Evans2Thelonious Monk3Oscar Peterson4McCoy Tyner5Bud Powell6Duke Ellington7Chick Corea8Art Tatum9Ahmad Jamal10Horace Silver11Dave Brubeck12Jelly Roll Morton13Count Basie14Red Garland15Erroll Garner16Wynton ...

17
Album Review

Bill Evans: The Legendary Trio At Birdland 1960 Revisited

Read "The Legendary Trio At Birdland 1960 Revisited" reviewed by Glenn Astarita


Bill Evans' The Legendary Trio at Birdland 1960 is a seminal recording that captures a fleeting moment of jazz brilliance, immortalizing the profound synergy of Evans with bassist Scott LaFaro and drummer Paul Motian. Recorded live at the iconic Birdland Jazz Club in New York City, this album is a vivid snapshot of a group at the peak of its creative powers, navigating the complexities of jazz standards and original compositions with unparalleled grace and fluidity. The trio's ...

8
Album Review

Bill Evans: The Legendary Trio At Birdland 1960 Revisited

Read "The Legendary Trio At Birdland 1960 Revisited" reviewed by John Eyles


Keen-eyed Bill Evans aficionados will know that this album is the pianist's third in the Revisited series by ezz-thetics, following At The Village Vanguard 1961 Revisited and the double-CD Duos with Jim Hall & Trios '64 & '65 Revisited, both released in 2023. “The Legendary Trio" refers to the threesome of Evans, bassist Scott LaFaro and drummer Paul Motian, the same group that recorded at the Village Vanguard in 1961. The Legendary Trio was brought to a tragic end ten ...

16
Multiple Reviews

More OJC Magic: Masterpieces from Bill Evans and Dave Brubeck

Read "More OJC Magic: Masterpieces from Bill Evans and Dave Brubeck" reviewed by C. Andrew Hovan


Although they might have been one of the last concerns to significantly ramp up their release schedules when the vinyl renaissance hit its stride, Concord has been making up for lost time with several series now part of their Craft imprimatur. At the end of 2023, they announced a new audiophile reissue series titled after the legendary catalog started by Fantasy in 1983. These new Original Jazz Classics (OJC) start with everything that was loved about the original series while ...

7
Liner Notes

Bill Evans: The Legendary Trio At Birdland 1960 Revisited

Read "Bill Evans: The Legendary Trio At Birdland 1960 Revisited" reviewed by Chris May


Thank you, Boris Rose. The obsessive New York jazz maverick set out to record every musician of note who performed in the city's clubs from the mid 1940s through the mid 1970s. He must have come close to succeeding. His vast accumulated horde of tapes--today presumed more or less safe, stacked floor to ceiling in a sizeable Bronx basement under the guardianship of his daughter Elaine--is a treasure beyond mere monetary value. Annotated but uncatalogued, there are many hundreds, perhaps ...

Read more articles

Video / DVD

Bill Evans: Here's That Rainy Day

Bill Evans: Here's That Rainy Day

Source: JazzWax by Marc Myers

I've always loved Bill Evans's solo interpretation of Here's That Rainy Day from Alone in 1968. He opens with enormous sensitivity and delivers a measured ballad reading, followed by rising intensity and swing as the tempo quickens. The master take that appears on the album never fails to thrill me. Yet despite his beauty, Evans didn't bother to hold onto it like some other songs. Perhaps he felt that the Alone version was as good as he was ever going ...

1

Birthday

Jazz Musician of the Day: Bill Evans

Jazz Musician of the Day: Bill Evans

Source: Michael Ricci

All About Jazz is celebrating Bill Evans' birthday today!

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 ...

Video / DVD

Bill Evans: Soundcheck in Paris, 1979

Bill Evans: Soundcheck in Paris, 1979

Source: JazzWax by Marc Myers

Forty-three years ago, on November 26, 1979, pianist Bill Evans, bassist Marc Johnson and drummer Joe LaBarbera were booked to perform at Theatre de la Ville at Espace Cardin in Paris. The concert that evening was recorded for broadcast, and the two subsequent live albums would become known as The Paris Concert/Edition One and The Paris Concert/Edition Two. Earlier that day in 1979, Evans visited the concert space with Marc, Joe and pianist Walter Davis Jr., who was on tour ...

Recording

Backgrounder: Bill Evans - 'Solo Sessions, Vol. 1'

Backgrounder: Bill Evans - 'Solo Sessions, Vol. 1'

Source: JazzWax by Marc Myers

In January 1963, producer Orrin Keepnews brought Bill Evans into the studio to record solo. It's unclear whether Orrin did this to bank away Evans tapes prior to him signing with Verve or whether this was done because Evans needed cash and Keepnews decided to record him early in order to advance him payment. Either way, the material wasn't released until 1984, when the tracks were included in Bill Evans: The Complete Riverside Recordings in 1984 and, again in 1989, ...

2

Birthday

Jazz Musician of the Day: Bill Evans

Jazz Musician of the Day: Bill Evans

Source: Michael Ricci

All About Jazz is celebrating Bill Evans' birthday today!

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 ...

Video / DVD

Backgrounder: Bill Evans in Rio, 1979

Backgrounder: Bill Evans in Rio, 1979

Source: JazzWax by Marc Myers

Bill Evans recorded a studio duet album only once—The Ivory Hunters (1959), when he and Bob Brookmeyer both played pianos. He also recorded multiple piano overdubs for Conversations With Myself (1963) and Further Conversations With Myself (1967). And then there was From Left to Right, on which he played two different keyboards—the piano and the Fender Rhodes electric piano. The only time he was recorded live playing a duet was in 1979, during his South American tour that included the ...

Video / DVD

Bill Evans: My Bells

Bill Evans: My Bells

Source: JazzWax by Marc Myers

The car-crash death of bassist Scott LaFaro in July 1961 left Bill Evans despondent. Thrilled with the evolution of his conversational trio featuring LaFaro and Paul Motian on drums, Evans felt the group had made a major breakthrough during its run at the Village Vanguard in June. Then the bottom fell out. In the months following LaFaro's death, Evans eased his anxiety and depression with an accelerated use of heroin. By early 1962, Evans was in a jam. Desperate for ...

Music Industry

Bill Evans: Switzerland, 1975

Bill Evans: Switzerland, 1975

Source: JazzWax by Marc Myers

Before I share with you a beautiful recording by Bill Evans, my apologies for the broken links in yesterday's email blast of my Phil Schaap post. The service I use—Feedblitz—screwed up. According to a member of their trouble-shooting team, the link was incorrectly classified by the service's anti-abuse systems. What set off alarms was the use of “index.php" in the target URL (Phil's page), which is very rarely used by real-world web sites but often used by spammers trying to ...

Birthday

Jazz Musician of the Day: Bill Evans

Jazz Musician of the Day: Bill Evans

Source: Michael Ricci

All About Jazz is celebrating Bill Evans' birthday today!

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 ...

7

Recording

Bill Evans' Behind The Dikes: The First Official And Complete Release Of The 1969 Netherlands Recordings On Elemental Music Records

Bill Evans' Behind The Dikes: The First Official And Complete Release Of The 1969 Netherlands Recordings On Elemental Music Records

Source: Elemental Music

The first official release of three extraordinary live performances by jazz legend Bill Evans, will be available for the second drop of Record Store Day on July 17th for the 3-LP SET edition and on July 23rd for the deluxe 2-CD SET. Remastered from the original tape reels housed at the Nederlands Jazz Archief, this limited edition comes in a triple gatefold LP Jacket, 180-gram audiophile vinyl set. It includes an extensive 12 pages LP insert for the vinyl (32 ...

Ray Reach
piano
Gabriele D'Angela
guitar, electric
Joe Baione
vibraphone
Nina Beck
piano
Maria Schneider
composer / conductor
Harry Skoler
clarinet
Chuck Israels
bass, acoustic
Lyle Mays
keyboards
Lisa Rich
vocals
Todd Mosby
guitar
Lee Barbour
guitar
Eldad Tarmu
vibraphone
David Witham
keyboards
Fred Haas
saxophone
Matt Finley
flugelhorn
Arne Hiorth
flugelhorn
Ken Brown
guitar
Oscar Penas
guitar
Billy Denk
guitar
Jacopo Ferrazza
bass, acoustic
Ed Johnson
guitar and vocals
Teri Roiger
vocals
Steve Homan
guitar
Pete Sklaroff
guitar, electric
Pepa Niebla
vocals
Niebla
vocals
Rotem Sivan
guitar
Tim Fox
piano
Chris Hall
trumpet
Johnny Padilla
saxophone
Majamisty TriO
band / ensemble / orchestra
Thomas Dahl
guitar
John Pietaro
percussion
Benny Weinbeck
keyboards
Ed Roth
arranger
Chet Chwalik
trumpet
Brenda Earle Stokes
piano and vocals
Christian Doering
guitar, electric
Jon Dreyer
bass, acoustic
Álvaro Dinzey
arranger
Dominik Schürmann
bass, acoustic
Gary Kelly
bass, electric
Paula Maya
piano and vocals
Tim Peck
piano
Emi Takada
vocals
LJ Folk
guitar and vocals
Jesse Dietschi
bass, acoustic
Ramon Climent
organ, Hammond B3
PLS.trio
piano
Julian Hartwell
keyboards
Klecha-Fauré
vibraphone
Katy Jungmann
saxophone
Paul Tafoya
trumpet
Jenny Maybee
piano and vocals
Jean Lenke
vocals
Ryan Baker
vocals
Ultrafaux
band / ensemble / orchestra
Noa Levy
vocals
Ulli Juenemann
saxophone, alto
Tim Bruer
piano
Jun Iida
trumpet
Wilma Baan
vocals
Bruce Phares
bass, acoustic
Mike De Masi
bass, acoustic
Michael Neff
trumpet
David Post
vocals
Paul Ward
piano
Vin Venezia
guitar
Shambhu
guitar, acoustic
Tal Klein
piano
Mavis Pan
piano
José Canha
bass, acoustic
Pete Coco
bass, acoustic
Richard Pavlidis
saxophone, tenor
Adam Ahuja
keyboards
roman gomez
bandoneon
Jazz Interlude
band / ensemble / orchestra
Mary Amaral
vocals
Jo Kaiat
piano
Uffe Steen
guitar, electric
Oleg Ivanov
guitar
Rick Kilburn
bass, acoustic
Josh Hou
accordion
Johan Grim
guitar
Daniel Tamayo
guitar, electric
Jared Forth
guitar
Nery Kim
piano
Tibor Debreceni
guitar, electric
Ken Krueger
guitar
Pat Metheny Group
band / ensemble / orchestra
Jabu Nkosi
keyboards
Bojh Parker
guitar
Or Shovaly
guitar
Joe Carson
vibraphone
Rohan Buch
saxophone
Lucas Amorim
vibraphone
John Hench
bass, acoustic
Randy Resnick
guitar, electric
Darin Brown
piano and vocals
Hallgrim Bratberg
guitar, electric
German Lema
organ, Hammond B3
Gerhard Daum
composer / conductor
Dave Salvator
saxophone
Clara Green
vocals
J. Garza
guitar
Ines Velasco
composer / conductor
Astrakan
band / ensemble / orchestra
Ruth Saphir
vocals
Gustavo Cysne
piano and vocals
Jazztopia
band / ensemble / orchestra
Alex Dante
guitar, electric
Veli Mert
drums
Christopher Boscole
multi-instrumentalist

Photos

Music

Recordings: As Leader | As Sideperson

Tales: Live in...

Elemental Music
2024

buy

In Norway: The...

Elemental Music
2024

buy

Treasures: Solo, Trio...

Elemental Music
2023

buy

At The Village...

Ezz-thetics
2023

buy

Complete Trio...

Fingerpoppin' Records
2023

buy

Videos

Similar

Get more of a good thing!

Our weekly newsletter highlights our top stories, our special offers, and upcoming jazz events near you.