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Gil Evans

 

Biography

Gil Evans is best known as an influential jazz composer and arranger who worked closely with Miles Davis during the '50s. He also supervised the film score of Absolute Beginners (1986), and he and his band were featured in three concert films between 1987 and 1991. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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Gil Evans

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Composer, arranger

Abrilliant self-taught composer, orchestrator, and arranger, Gil Evans has an indelible mark on the course of modern*jazz. His work of the 1940s helped harness the raw-edge and fast-paced tempos of bebop and distill them into rich orchestral scores that reflected the influence of Duke Ellington, Fletcher Henderson, and European modernist composers. Though Evans lacked formal pianisitic training and resisted a systematic study of keyboard scales and exercises, he possessed a natural analytical ability which enabled him to pursue a visionary path of self-study. His talent for writing, orchestrating, and arranging exemplified a genius attentive to both the musical score and the proper accompaniment for the soloist—a talent exemplified in his work with Miles Davis, Kenny Burrell, Atrud Gilberto, and other exploratory music, stage, and film projects.

Gil Evans was born Ian Ernest Gilmore Green—the son of parents of Scotch-Irish stock—on May 13, 1913 in Toronto, Canada (he later adopted his stepfather’s surname). Evans later claimed that his father, a gambler, and his mother, a nursemaid and folk mandolinist,

were married in Australia and then arrived in New Jersey before settling in Canada. Raised by his mother, as a child he lived in British Columbia; Spokane, Washington; and Stockton, California, where he attended secondary school. The family’s large jazz record collection of artists such as Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington exposed Evans to the sounds of mainstream jazz. While in San Francisco in 1927 he saw the Duke Ellington Orchestra at the Orpheum Theatre. "I will never get over it!" he told Brian Priestly in Jazz Journal International. "I wasn’t even into music then. I was just buying records and going to high school." From recordings Evans studied music and the art of composition and arrangement—a process he would continue throughout his life. In Stockton he played in high school bands and formed his first group.

In 1933 Evans co-led the Briggs-Evans Orchestra and, three years later, formed a band which became the Rendezvous Ballroom’s house band in Bilboa Beach. The unit eventually fell under the leadership of singer Skinnay Ennis who, in 1938, landed the ensemble a job on Bob Hope’s NBC radio program in Hollywood. For nearly three years, Evans worked on the Hope broadcast as the band’s staff arranger. "By about 1941 I began to realize that I wasn’t really technically equipped to handle that kind of work," admitted Evans in Down Beat. "It took too much to do it. Besides the producer of the show was always calling me the poor man’s Stravinksy … because he could never figure out what key we were playing in." The show’s producer also brought in pianist Claude Thornhill to write some arrangements for the program. Evans considered Thornhill a first-rate arranger and fine pianist with a perfect sense of timing. When Thornhill decided to go to New York and start his own band he hired Evans in 1941. After Thomhill’s induction into the military, Evans enlisted in the army in 1942.

With the Band Of Claude Thornhill
Returning to New York after military service in 1946, Evans joined Thornhill’s newly-reformed orchestra. An inventive arranger, Thornhill divided the band into unconventional sections and introduced the French horn into a dance band setting. "It was a conservatory band in a way," explained Evans in Down Beat. "The pitch was perfect, the blend was just built in. At the time I needed a workshop to hone my craft. I had never written for French horns, for example, Thornhill had two, and later three, flutes in addition to the saxophones we already had." The band’s non-vibrato horn section sound required Thornhill to lower registers of the instruments. As Evans related in Ira Gilter’s Swing to Bebop, "There was a French horn lead, one and sometimes two French horns playing in unison or a duet depending on the character of the melody. The clarinets doubled the melody, also playing lead. Below were two altos, a tenor, and a baritone, or two altos and two tenors. The bottom was normally a double on the melody by the baritone or tenor. The reed section sometimes went very low with the saxes being forced to play in subtone and very soft."

Evans’s first arrangements for Thornhill were Russian composer Modeste Moussorgsky’s Pictures At an Exhibition and Arab Dance. Though a fine arranger, Thorn-hill’s ambition to write waned during the post war years, allowing Evans to gain valuable experience. "He leaned on me, and he didn’t want to," stated Evans in Swing to Bop. "I let him because I wanted the experience. He liked modern jazz, but it wasn’t what he wanted to play." A follower of bebop and the music of Charlie "Bird" Parker, Evans introduced Parker’s "Anthropology" and Miles Davis’s "Donna Lee,"—a quintet tune expanded by Evans into a seventeen-piece big band arrangement—into Thornhill’s band book. Evans’s arrangement of "Donna Lee," recorded by the Thornhill band in 1947, featured trumpeter Red Rodney, clarinetist Danny Polo, and saxophonist Lee Konitz. "It was a beautiful band," related Konitz in Ira Gitler’s Jazz Masters of the Forties. "Gil Evans wrote the better arrangements in the book, and it was a good group of musicians. Gil tried to teach them … how to play bebop. He was bringing in Bird’s lines and teaching these cats—and a lot of them were older—how to inflect the lines." In The Swing Era, Gunther Schuller described Evans as "creating sublime arrangements for Thornhill" that, as he added, "represent some of the more glorious moments in jazz history."

Evans’ 55th Street Jazz Salon
In the summer of 1948 Evans resigned from Thornhill’s band. From his downstairs cramped midtown Manhattan apartment on 55th Street, he created a gathering place for modernist jazz musicians. The apartment, described as a jazz salon by Miles Davis’s biographer Jack Chambers, became the meeting place for a coterie of musicians such as Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Gerry Mulligan, and John Lewis. Furnished with only a piano, lamp, and a bed that took up most of the apartment’s floor space, Evans left the door open for visiting musicians. The discussions held among Evans and his guests have become famous in the annals of jazz history. Another visitor, Miles Davis, noted in his autobiography Miles, "During this time I was going over to Gil Evans’s a lot, listening to what he was saying about the music. Gil and I hit it off right away. I could relate to his musical ideas and he could relate to mine. With Gil, the question of race never entered; it was always about music." From the discussions held at Evans’s 55th Street gathering spot came the idea to assemble a nine piece ensemble to be placed under Davis’s leadership.

In September of 1948 The Miles Davis Nonet was booked for two week engagement at the Royal Roost— an ensemble consisting of saxophonists Lee Konitz, Gerry Mulligan, trombonist Michael Zwerin, French hornist Junior Collins, tubaist Bill Barber, bassist Al McKibbon, drummer Max Roach, and vocalist Kenny Hapgood. In tribute to the gathering of talent, Davis urged the Royal Roost’s owner to display on the club’s street sign: "Miles Davis Nonet; Arrangements by Gerry Mulligan, Gil Evans, and John Lewis," marking the first time jazz arrangers were bestowed such recognition. Though the band evoked mixed reactions from listeners and critics, it drew the attention of Pete Rugolo of Capitol Records who, through Davis’s intercession, decided to record the nonet. The ensemble’s second session featured "Boplicity," a composition co-authored by Evans and Davis (credited to Davis’s mother Cleo Henry) and Evans’s arrangements of "Moon Dreams" and "Darn That Dream." The series of 78’s were finally issued as the ten-inch disc Birth of the Cool. The nonet’s music gave rise to a jazz movement known as cool or west-coast jazz. But as Pete Welding observed in the liner notes to Birth of the Cool, "Let’s reaffirm something here: catchy as the album title notwithstanding, the music of the Miles Davis Nonet was, is anything but cool … Among these twelve performances is to be found some of the most arresting, resourceful, richly textured and abidingly creative small-ensemble writing in all of jazz history." In his book West Coast Jazz, Ted Gioia credited Evans as the midwife of the cool jazz sound that, in its effort to refine the sounds of bebop, inspired imitations among jazz musicians throughout the world.

During the 1950s Evans appeared as a pianist with Gerry Mulligan at New York’s Basin Street and with drummer Nick Stabulas in Greenwich Village. In May of 1957, after nearly nine years since their last collaboration, Evans and Miles Davis were reunited to record the critically acclaimed album Miles Ahead. "The new project was far removed from the youthful experiments conceived in the grimy 55th Street basement," wrote Chambers in Milestones I. "It involved a nineteen-piece orchestra, and it was backed by the corporate weight of Columbia Records." The album included a version of Delibes’s "Maids Of Cadiz" and Evans’s original composition "Blues For Pablo." The collaboration proved an artistic and critical success. In his autobiography Miles, Davis expressed his appreciation for Evans’s abilities: "As usual, I loved working with Gil because he was so meticulous and creative, and I trusted his musical arrangements completely."

In the fall of 1957 Evans made his recording debut as pianist and leader of a ten-piece band with the album Gil Evans and Ten. The LP featured former Thornhill members—trumpeters Louis Mucci and Jake Koven and saxophonist Lee Konitz—as well as drummer Nick Stabulas and bassist Paul Chambers. The next year, Evans continued his musical association with Davis, recording George Gershwin’s folk opera Porgy and Bess. Within the modern interpretive score, Evans wrote the piece, "I Loves You Porgy" for Davis. "Miles and Gil do not merely flirt with show music tunes," observed Charles Edward Smith in liner notes to Porgy and Bess, "they do a job on this greatest of operettas related to American black folk music and jazz. In working from the original vocal score, Gil is aware of both literary and musical relationships."

Evans&Davis
In two session periods held in November of 1959 and March of 1960, Evans and Davis once again joined forces for the recording of Sketches of Spain. After hearing Spanish composer Joaquin Rodrigo’s adagio movement, "Concierto de Aranjuez for Guitar and Orchestra," Davis approached Evans with the idea of recording the piece. Evans and Davis then decided to record an entire album of Spanish themes. The difficult arrangement of "Coincerto de Arnjuez" took a twenty-piece studio orchestra eight sessions to complete. To prepare himself for the recordings, as Chambers noted in Milestones 2, "Evans spent the interval listening to recordings of Spanish folk music and logged several hours in the library reading books on flamenco music." Taken from a theme from Maneul de Falla’s 1915 ballet score El amor brujo, Evans scored "Will O’ the Wisp," and from traditional folk tunes and Andulasian melodies he created the remaining arrangements "Pan Piper," "Saeta," and "Sola."

In November and December of 1960, Evans recorded his solo effort, Out of the Cool, which included his original composition "La Nevada" (snowfall in Spanish). In 1961 Davis recorded with the Gil Evans Orchestra at Carnegie Hall, and in the following year recorded a project together for Columbia in a large orchestra with jazz vocalist Bob Dorough. Evans and Davis too recorded a bossa nova session which produced the number "Quiet Nights" (now available on the recently released CD box set Miles Davis&Gil Evans). While in Los Angeles in 1963 Evans and Davis composed and recorded a score for the play Time of the Barracuda at Columbia’s Hollywood studio. Though the score was abandoned for the short-lived stage production, Evans utilized the score’s jointly written material for the 1964 recording "Barracuda" (listed as "Time of the Barracuda" on later reissues) which appeared on the LP Gil Evans Orch., Kenny Burrell&Phil Woods. Driven by Elvin Jones’s propulsive drumming and featuring guitarist Kenny Burrell, "Barracuda" has been considered as one of Evans’s finest solo efforts of the 1960s. Evans’s work from 1963-64 has appeared on the LP The Individualism of Gil Evans which featured his impressionistic blues composition "Las Vegas Tango."

In 1965 Evans appeared as the arranger on Burrell’s acclaimed Verve release Guitar Forms. "I had a great time with Gil Evans on Guitar Forms," recalled Burrell in the liner notes to Kenny Burrell, Jazz Masters 45. "I selected the tunes … the only input I had with the arrangements was our discussion of some of the harmonies—not necessarily how we would voice them but just what changes we would use at certain points. I made suggestions; he was always open to suggestions. He was incredible as an orchestrator and a harmonizer." Evans then orchestrated and arranged the music for singer Astrud Gilberto’s 1965 Verve album Look to the Rainbow. In 1968 Evans appeared as an arranger on Miles Davis’s album Filles de Kilimanjaro.

Electronic Explorations
In 1971 Evans recorded his album Ampex (his work from 1969 and 1971 also appears on the Enja LP Blues in Orbit). Though Ampex featured acoustic and electric piano, earlier that year Evans had begun to incorporate the synthesizer into his live performances. Around this same time, he too explored the music of Jimi Hendrix, whom he had met in the studio while mixing the Ampex album. In Jazz Journal International, Evans told Robert Palmer how Hendrix "was a really good guitar player… innovative… [and] a bright spirit." Though Evans planned to record with Hendrix after the guitarist’s return from England in 1970, the project came to an end with Hendix’s death in the fall of that year. In 1974 Evans’s orchestra played a Carnegie Hall concert dedicated to Hendrix’s music and later that year paid tribute to the guitarist with the 1974 album There Comes a Time: The Music of Jimi Hendrix (re-released in 1988).

After recording his 1973 Atlantic album Svengali, Evans followed up his electronic explorations with the 1977 effort Priestess, featuring a fourteen-piece orchestra which included two tubas and a synthesizer. His 1980 acoustic piano and saxophone duo performance at NewYorkCity’s Green Street, Lee Konitz and Gil Evans: AntiHeroes, presented Konitz’s saxophone and Evans’s sparse yet haunting piano style in brilliant dialogue. In 1983 Evans arranged several pieces for Davis’s Star People album, and toured Japan with his orchestra on a double bill with Davis’s group. Three years later, he recorded with saxophonist Steve Lacy and continued to compose and arrange for his orchestra. Evans died of peritonitis on March 20, 1988, in Cuernavaca, Mexico. Evans’s 1996 induction into the American Jazz Hall of Fame and the release of the six-CD box set Miles and Gil Evans: The Complete Columbia Studio Recordings are but a few honors recognizing a man who ranks with the greatest minds of the twentieth century’s cultural avant garde. In the liner notes to Anti Heroes Lee Konitz stated, "Gil was not a composer in the usual sense of the word. He was not a piano player in the usual sense, either. In fact, Gil was not your usual kind of man. He was a poet all the way from morning till night."

Selected discography
Gil Evans&Ten, Prestige, 1957.
New Bottle, Old Wine, 1958.
Out of the Cool, Impulse, 1960.
The Individualism of Gil Evans, Verve.
Blues in Orbit, (1969) reissued on Enja, 1985.
There Comes a Time, The Music of Jimi Hendrix, re-released as The Gil Evans Orchestra Plays the Music of Jimi Hendrix, (1974) reissued on RCA, 1988.
Svengali, Atlantic, 1973.
There Comes a Time, RCA, 1975.
Priestess, 1977.
Gil Evans, Jazz Masters 23, Verve, 1994.

Arrangements With Claude Thornhill
"Early Autumn," 1947.
"Donna Lee," 1947.

With Miles Davis
"Boplicity" and "Moon Dreams" for Birth of the Cool, 1949.
Miles Ahead, Columbia, 1957.
Porgy and Bess, Columbia, 1958.
Sketches of Spain, Columbia, 1960.
Filles de Kilimanjaro, Columbia, 1968.
Star People, 1983.

With Others
(Gilberto Astrud) Look to the Rainbow, Verve, 1965.
Masabumi Kikuchi&Gil Evans, (released in Japan), 1972.
Kenny Burrell, Jazz Masters 45, Verve, 1995.
Lee Konitz and Gil Evans, Anti Heroes, Verve, 1991.

Sources
Books
Chambers, Jack, Milestones I and Milestones 2, Beech Tree Books, 1985.
Davis, Miles with Quincy Troupe, Miles: The Autobiography, 1990.
Gitler, Ira, Jazz Masters of the Forties, Collier Books, 1966.
Gitler, Ira, Swing to Bebop: An Oral History of the Transition of Jazz in the 1940s, Oxford University Press, 1985.
Gioia, Ted, WestCoast Jazz: Modern Jazz In California 1945- 1950, Oxford University Press, 1992.
Schuller, Gunther, The Swing Era: The Development in Jazz 1930-1945, Oxford University Press, 1989.

Periodicals
Billboard, May 18, 1996.
Balliet, Whitney, New Yorker, August, 26, 1996.
Palmer, Robert, Down Beat, May 23, 1974.
Priestly, Brian, Jazz Journal International, July and August 1978.
Additional information for this profile was obtained from liner notes by Pete Welding to Miles Davis, Birth of the Cool, Nat Hentoff to Sketches of Spain, Harvey Siders to Gil Evans, Kenny Burrell, and Phil Woods, David Demsey to Kenny Burrell, Jazz Masters 45, comments by Lee Konitz in Lee Konitz and Gil Evans Anti Heroes.
  • Genres: Jazz

Biography

One of the most significant arrangers in jazz history, Gil Evans' three album-length collaborations with Miles Davis (Miles Ahead, Porgy and Bess, and Sketches of Spain) are all considered classics. Evans had a lengthy and wide-ranging career that sometimes ran parallel to the trumpeter. Like Davis, Gil became involved in utilizing electronics in the '70s and preferred not to look back and re-create the past. He led his own band in California (1933-1938) which eventually became the backup group for Skinnay Ennis; Evans stayed on for a time as arranger. He gained recognition for his somewhat futuristic charts for Claude Thornhill's Orchestra (1941-1942 and 1946-1948) which took advantage of the ensemble's cool tones, utilized French horns and a tuba as frontline instruments, and, by 1946, incorporated the influence of bop. He met Miles Davis (who admired his work with Thornhill) during this time and contributed arrangements of "Moon Dreams" and "Boplicity" to Davis' "Birth of the Cool" nonet.

After a period in obscurity, Evans wrote for a Helen Merrill session and then collaborated with Davis on Miles Ahead. In addition to his work with Davis (which also included a 1961-recorded Carnegie Hall concert and the half-album Quiet Nights), Evans recorded several superb and highly original sets as a leader (including Gil Evans & Ten, New Bottle Old Wine, and Great Jazz Standards) during the era. Among the albums he worked on in the '60s for other artists were notable efforts with Kenny Burrell and Astrud Gilberto. After his own sessions for Verve during 1963-1964, Evans waited until 1969 until recording again as a leader. That year's Blues in Orbit was his first successful effort at combining acoustic and electric instruments; it would be followed by dates for Artists House, Atlantic (Svengali), and a notable tribute to Jimi Hendrix in 1974. After 1975's There Comes a Time (which features among its sidemen David Sanborn), most of Evans' recordings were taken from live performances. Starting in 1970 he began playing with his large ensemble on a weekly basis in New York clubs. Filled with such all-star players as George Adams, Lew Soloff, Marvin "Hannibal" Peterson, Chris Hunter, Howard Johnson, Pete Levin, Hiram Bullock, Hamiet Bluiett, and Arthur Blythe among others, Evans' later bands were top-heavy in talent but tended to ramble on too long. Gil Evans, other than sketching out a framework and contributing his keyboard, seemed to let the orchestra largely run itself, inspiring rather than closely directing the music. There were some worthwhile recordings from the '80s (when the band had a long string of Monday night gigs at Sweet Basil in New York) but in general they do not often live up to their potential. Prior to his death, Gil Evans recorded with his "arranger's piano" on duets with Lee Konitz and Steve Lacy and his body of work on a whole ranks with the top jazz arrangers. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi
Gil Evans

With Ryo Kawasaki at Sweet Basil in New York City,1982
Background information
Born May 13, 1912(1912-05-13)
Died April 20, 1988(1988-04-20) (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]

Contents

Early life

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]

Career

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.

Film music

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.

Personal life

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]

Awards & honors

Grammy awards

  • 1986: Bud and Bird (Grammy Award for Best Jazz Instrumental Performance, Big Band)

Discography

Studio albums

Live albums

  • 1974: Montreux Jazz Festival '74
  • 1976: Tokyo Concert
  • 1978: Live at Royal Festival Hall and The Rest of Gil Evans at the Royal Albert Hall
  • 1980: Live at the Public Theater Volume 1 & 2
  • 1986: Live at Sweet Basil Volume 1 & 2
  • 1986: Farewell: Gil Evans & the Monday Night Orchestra Live at Sweet Basil
  • 1986: Bud and Bird
  • 1987: Live at Umbria Jazz Volume 1 & 2
  • 1987: 75th Birthday Concert
  • 1987: Rhythm-A-Ning
  • 1987: Last Session (with Sting)
  • 1988: Tribute to Gil

Arranger

Filmography

  • 2005: RMS Live With Gil Evans at the Montreux Jazz Festival 1983
  • 2007: Gil Evans and His Orchestra[2]
  • 2007: Strange Fruit with Sting
  • 2009: Miles Davis The Cool Jazz Sound

References

External links


 
 

 

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