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| Born Ian Gilmore Ernest Green, May 13, 1912, in Toronto, Canada; married Anita Evans; children: Noah and Miles Evans (musician). 1933 co-led the Briggs-Evans Orchestra; led a unit which eventually fell under the leadership of singer Skinny Ennis; 1938 served as staff arranger on Bob Hope’s NBC radio program; joined the band of Claude Thornhill; enlisted in military 1942; rejoined Thornhill 1946; after resigning from Thornhill’s band in 1948, Evans served as arranger with Miles Davis’ Nonet; in early 1950s performed as a pianist with various groups; arranged Miles Davis’ 1957 album Miles Ahead; in same year, recorded first solo LP Gil Evans and Ten; continued collaborations with Davis Porgy and Bess 1958 and Sketches of Spain 1959-1960; recorded solo album Out of the Cool; worked as an arranger with Kenny Burrell and singer Astrud Gilberto 1965; worked as arranger on Davis’ 1968 LP Filles de Kilimanjaro; recorded solo effort, Ampex in 1971; There Comes a Time: The Music ofJimi Hendrix 1974; Svengali 1973; Priestess 1977; Anti Heroes 1983; continued to record and perform with the Gil Evans Orchestra until 1988. Awards: Won Down Beat Reader and Critic’s polls as arranger in 1966 and 1974; named founding artist of John F.Kennedy Center For Performing Arts; Guggenhi-em Fellowship in Composition in 1968; New York State Council on the Arts Composer Commission in 1974; inducted into American Jazz Hall of Fame 1996. |
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Gil Evans |
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Gil Evans |
| Gil Evans | |
|---|---|
With Ryo Kawasaki at Sweet Basil in New York City,1982 |
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| Background information | |
| Born | May 13, 1912 |
| Died | April 20, 1988 (aged 75) |
| Genres | Jazz, third stream |
| Occupations | Composer |
| Years active | 1933–1988 |
| Labels | Impulse!, Prestige Records, Verve Records |
| Notable instruments | |
| Piano | |
Gil Evans (13 May 1912, Toronto, Canada – 20 March 1988, Cuernavaca, Mexico) was a jazz pianist, arranger, composer and bandleader, active in the United States. He played an important role in the development of cool jazz, modal jazz, free jazz and jazz fusion, and collaborated extensively with Miles Davis.[1]
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Born Ian Ernest Gilmore Green, his name was changed early on to Evans, the name of his stepfather. His family moved to Stockton, California where he spent most of his youth. After 1946, he lived and worked primarily in New York City, living for many years at Westbeth Artists Community.[1]
Between 1941 and 1948, he worked as an arranger for the Claude Thornhill Orchestra. Evans' modest basement apartment behind a New York City Chinese laundry soon became a meeting place for musicians looking to develop new musical styles outside of the dominant bebop style of the day. Those present included the leading bebop performer Charlie Parker himself, as well as Gerry Mulligan and John Carisi. In 1948, Evans, with Miles Davis, Gerry Mulligan, and others, collaborated on a band book for a nonet. These ensembles, larger than the trio-to-quintet "combos", but smaller than the "big bands" which were on the brink of becoming economically unviable, allowed the arrangers to have a larger pallette of colors by using french horns and tuba. Evans knew tubist Bill Barber (musician) from Thornhill's band, and Barber was a stalwart in Evans' early ensembles. The group was booked for a week at the "Royal Roost" as an intermission group on the bill with the Count Basie Orchestra. Capitol Records recorded 12 numbers by the nonet at three sessions in 1949 and 1950. These recordings were reissued on a 1957 Miles Davis LP titled Birth of the Cool.
Later, while Davis was under contract to Columbia Records, producer George Avakian suggested that Davis work with any of several arrangers. Davis immediately chose Evans. The three albums that resulted from the resulting collaboration are Miles Ahead (1957), Porgy and Bess (1958), and Sketches of Spain (1960). Another collaboration from this period, Quiet Nights (1962) was issued later, against the wishes of Davis, who broke with his then-producer Teo Macero for a time as a result. Although these four records were marketed primarily under Davis's name (and credited to Miles Davis with Orchestra Under the Direction of Gil Evans), Evans's contribution was as important as Davis's. Their work coupled Evans's classic big band jazz stylings and arrangements with Davis's solo playing. Evans also contributed behind the scenes to Davis' classic quintet albums of the 1960s.
The demands of the score for Porgy and Bess were legendary, including the very first note for the lead trumpet, so that the limited time allotted for rehearsals revealed that the ability to read scores was not consistent among jazz musicians. Yet the recording is now regarded by many as one of the greatest reinterpretations of Gershwin's music, in any musical style, because Evans and Davis were each devoted to going outside the "mainstream" of commercial expectations for jazz musicians. Evans was a great influence on Miles Davis's interest in "non-jazz" music, especially orchestral music. Unfortunately, Evans' orchestral scores from the Porgy and Bess sessions were apparently lost, and Quincy Jones attempted to reconstruct these for one of Miles Davis's final concerts at Montreux.
From 1957 onwards Evans recorded albums under his own name. Among the featured soloists on these records were Lee Konitz, Jimmy Cleveland, Steve Lacy, Johnny Coles and Cannonball Adderley. In 1965 he arranged the big band tracks on Kenny Burrell's Guitar Forms album.
Evans was explicitly influenced by Spanish composers Manuel De Falla and Joaquín Rodrigo, and by other Latin and Brazilian music, as well as by German expatriate Kurt Weill. His arrangements (many already well known to some listeners from their original cabaret, concert hall or Broadway stage arrangements) revealed aspects of the music in a wholly original way, sometimes in an unexpected contrast to the original atmosphere of the piece, and sometimes taking a dark ballad such as Weill's "Barbara Song" into an even darker place. The personnel list for The Individualism of Gil Evans (1964), not only features Bill Barber and hornists James Buffington and Julius Watkins (along with two others), but each section features the cream of the younger (some more classically trained) musicians who were making their names in jazz. The presence of four of the most acclaimed young bassists (Richard Evans, Paul Chambers, Ron Carter, and Ben Tucker) along with veteran Milt Hinton would ordinarily indicate that each is used individually for separate tracks, but Evans' scores usually required at least two bassists on any given track, some playing arco (with the bow) and some pizzicato (plucking with fingers, the standard jazz method). These arrangements frequently featured greatly slowed-down tempos with polyrhythmic percussion and no prevailing "beat." To his by-now standard french horns and tuba, Evans' scores included alto and bass flutes, double reeds, harp; orchestral instruments not associated with "swing" bands, providing a larger pallette of orchestral colors, and allowing him to attain the ethereal quality heard in his arrangements during his Thornhill days. He frequently wrote a part for the tenor violin of Harry Lookofsky. Yet, this album featured an orchestral arrangement of "Spoonful" by bluesman Willie Dixon, an early indication of Evans' breadth and a hint of things to come.
In 1966 he recorded an album with Brazilian singer Astrud Gilberto, Look To The Rainbow. He was discouraged by the commercial direction Verve Records was taking with the Gilberto sessions, and he went into a period of hiatus.
During this period while he was somewhat depressed about the commercial and logistical difficulties of his previous scoring requirements, his wife suggested that he listen to the guitarist Jimi Hendrix. Evans developed a particular interest in the work of the rock guitarist. Evans gradually built another orchestra in the 1970s, with none of the coloration instruments from his past arrangements. Working in the free jazz and jazz-rock idioms, he gained a new generation of admirers. These ensembles, rarely more than fifteen and frequently smaller, allowed him to make more contributions on keyboards, and with the development of truly portable synthesizers, he began using these to provide additional color. Hendrix's 1970 death made impossible a scheduled meeting with Evans to discuss having Hendrix front a big band led by Evans. In 1974, he released an album of his arrangements of music by Hendrix, with guitarist Ryo Kawasaki. From that date on, Evans' ensembles featured electric guitars and basses, including a notable collaboration with bassist Jaco Pastorius. In contrast to his intricate scores for large ensembles, which usually required precision orchestral playing wrapping around the "traditional" solo "break," his later arrangements might feature (more or less) unison playing by the entire ensemble, such as on Hendrix's "Little Wing," with improvisational touches added throughout by the musicians completely ad libitum. Live recordings demonstrate that entire pieces were collaborative efforts, and Evans can be heard giving cues from the keyboard (behind the band) to guide the band into a new section. Before the 1970s, his keyboard playing was sparse on recordings, because the intricacy of his music required that he conduct, but after the 1970s, he gradually moved from the front of the band back "into" the band.
Where Flamingos Fly (recorded 1971, released 1981)) demonstrated his ability to attract the most accomplished musicians, with veterans Johnny Coles, Harry Lookofsky, Richard Davis and Jimmy Knepper (who played the solo on "Where Flamingos Fly" track on 1961's Out of the Cool) alongside young multi-instrumental phenomenon Howard Johnson (jazz musician), synthesizer player Don Preston (at that time still a member of the Mothers of Invention), and Billy Harper.
In April 1983, the Gil Evans Orchestra was booked into the Sweet Basil jazz club (Greenwich Village, New York) by jazz producer and Sweet Basil owner Horst Liepolt. This turned out to be a regular Monday night engagement for Evans for nearly five years and also resulted in the release of a number of successful albums by Gil Evans and the Monday Night Orchestra (produced by Horst Liepolt). Evans' ensemble featured many of the top-call musicians in New York, many of whom were also in the NBC Saturday Night Live Band and there were many conflicts, so their "deputies" for the night might be other world-class musicians. Yet Evans was also known to let newcomers "sit in" occasionally, and the band also performed arrangements by band members, current and past. Stalwarts in this ensemble were Lou Soloff, Marvin Peterson, Tom "Bones" Malone, George Adams, David Sanborn, Hiram Bullock, Mark Eagan, Bill Evans (saxophonist) (no relation) and Gil Goldstein. In 1987, Evans recorded a live CD with Sting, featuring big band arrangements of songs by and with The Police. In the same spirit of introducing new talent in his bands, he collaborated with Maria Schneider (musician) as an apprentice arranger on this and other final projects.
In 1986, Evans produced and arranged the soundtrack to the film of the Colin MacInnes book Absolute Beginners, thereby working with such contemporary artists as Sade Adu, Patsy Kensit's Eight Wonder, The Style Council, Jerry Dammers, Smiley Culture, Edward Tudor-Pole, and, notably, David Bowie.
He also arranged the music for the 1986 Martin Scorsese film The Color of Money.
Evans married following the 1949 Birth of the Cool recording sessions and was survived by his second wife and two children. His son Miles played trumpet in his Monday Night Orchestra.
Evans died in the same Mexican city as Charles Mingus, Cuernavaca.[1]
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
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