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Bill Evans: Ten Essential Sideman Albums

Courtesy Don Hunstein
Evans was choosy about who we worked with, even with a monkey the size of King Kong on his back. He always needed money. But he would not debase himself or his music for a quick buck.
Evans' hardcore fans include practically every musician who played with him.

Eddie Gomez
bassb.1944
So good luck with selecting Evans' top sideman albums.
The exercise is made harder by the fact that from the outset Evans was choosy about who he worked with. His first studio date was in 1955 on clarinetist

Artie Shaw
clarinet1910 - 2004
Jerry Wald
b.1919
Paul Motian
drums1931 - 2011
Evans was just as choosy a decade later when he had a monkey the size of King Kong on his back. He always needed money. But he would not debase himself or his music for a quick buck. After receiving trumpeter

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
Not included in this top ten but receiving honorary mentions are clarinetist

Tony Scott
clarinet1921 - 2007

Michel Legrand
piano1932 - 2019

Lee Konitz
saxophone, alto1927 - 2020

Chet Baker
trumpet and vocals1929 - 1988

Dave Pike
vibraphoneb.1938
Also excluded, Evans' two albums with singer

Tony Bennett
vocals1926 - 2023
In 1977, Evans told The New York Times: "I am a rather simple person with a limited talent and perhaps a limited perspective." All the evidence suggests he genuinely believed this. The depth of his talent and the breadth of his perspective is, however, conclusively proved by the variety of situations in which he excelled himself, not just when recording as a leader, but as a sideman, too.
Bill Evans: Ten Essential Sideman Albums
The albums are listed in chronological order of recording, not of release.
The Jazz Workshop
RCA Victor
1957 (recorded 1956)
When

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Red Garland
piano1923 - 1984

George Russell
composer / conductor1923 - 2009
"Is he white?" asked Miles.
"Yeah," I replied.
"Does he wear glasses?"
"Yeah."
"I know that motherfucker. I heard him at Birdlandhe can play his ass off. Bring him over to the Colony Club in Brooklyn on Thursday night." (Russell duly drove Evans over; Evans did a hot-seat auditon; Davis offered him the job.)
Evans plays his ass off, and then some, on "Concerto For Billy The Kid" on Russell's calling card, The Jazz Workshop, recorded with a sextet which also included trumpeter

Art Farmer
flugelhorn1928 - 1999

Modern Jazz Concert
Columbia
1958 (recorded 1957)
Wherein Evans plays his ass off again. Modern Jazz Concert is a studio recreation of a performance at the 1957 Brandeis Jazz Festival by a 12-piece band conducted by composer/arranger

Gunther Schuller
composer / conductor1925 - 2015

Charles Mingus
bass, acoustic1922 - 1979

Jimmy Giuffre
clarinet1921 - 2008
The album as a whole is a bit of a curate's egg, but Russell's suite "All About Rosie" is among the keepers. The third movement is a platform for a rolling, tumbling Evans solo along similarly giddy lines as the one on "Concerto For Billy The Kid." Another notable Evans performance is his rousing gospel-infused work on Mingus' "Revelations" (which led to Evans appearing on the next album in this list).
Along with Russell's The Jazz Workshop and Evans' own-name debut, New Jazz Conceptions (Riverside, 1957), Modern Jazz Concert, though patchy, is one of a handful of albums which show off Evans' early, exhilarating, bop-based pianism to maximum advantage.

East Coasting
Bethlehem
1957
The combination of Evans and composer/bassist Mingus may not necessarily suggest a marriage made in heaven, but
Clarence Shaw
b.1926
Jimmy Knepper
trombone1927 - 2003
Shafi Hadi
b.1929
Dannie Richmond
drums1935 - 1988
Evans was, almost literally, a last-minute inclusion. Around 4am on August 6, 1957, he received a wire asking if he could make a Mingus session at 10am (pianist

Wade Legge
piano1934 - 1963

Eubie Blake
piano1887 - 1983
Mingus, impressed by Evans on the Brandeis project, was impressed once more and Evans became a member of Mingus' Jazz Workshop, staying for several months. A few months later Evans played on Knepper's A Swinging Introduction To Jimmy Knepper (Bethlehem, 1957), but, sadly, he did not record with Mingus again.

Modern Art
United Artists
1958
Strictly speaking, the amiable Modern Art might not qualify as a sideman album. It had been planned by producer Jack Lewis as a showcase for three New Star winners of Downbeat magazine's 1958 International Critics' PollEvans, Farmer and tenor saxophonist

Benny Golson
saxophone, tenor1929 - 2024

Dave Bailey
drums1926 - 2023

Gigi Gryce
saxophone1927 - 1983

Junior Mance
piano1928 - 2021
Earlier in 1958, in an interview with Nat Hentoff from which was pulled Miles Davis' "I've sure learned a lot from Bill Evans" soundbite for the cover of Everybody Digs Bills Evans (Riverside, 1959), Davis also said: "Like Red Garland, when [Evans] plays a chord, he plays a sound more than a chord only." Everybody Digs and Modern Art are glistening examples of Evans' emerging macro sound.

Kind Of Blue
Columbia
1959
What more needs to be said about Kind Of Blue? What more usefully can be said about it?
Perhaps just this. Kind Of Blue is a bona fide Miles Davis masterpiece, no argument. But such was the degree of Evans' involvement that it could with some justification be attributed to "Miles Davis with Bill Evans." Evans wrote "Blue In Green," co-wrote "Flamenco Sketches" with Davis, and in Ashley Kahn's Kind Of Blue: The Making Of A Masterpiece (Da Capo, 2000), drummer and eyewitness

Jimmy Cobb
drums1929 - 2020

Sung Heroes
Sunnyside
1986 (recorded 1959)
Evans began recording with Tony Scott in 1956 and the pair were good friends. Sung Heroes, recorded in October 1959, shortly before Scott took off on a two-year immersive tour of India and the Far East, is Evans and Scott's last recording together. More significantly, perhaps, it is the first known recording of Evans' fledgling trio with bassist

Scott LaFaro
bass1936 - 1961
Other recommended Scott/Evans albums include Golden Moments and I'll Remember, both recorded live at The Showplace in New York in August 1959 with bassist

Jimmy Garrison
bass, acoustic1934 - 1976

Pete La Roca
drums1938 - 2012
Also recommended, the double album A Day In New York (Fresh Sounds, 1991). Recorded in 1957, it is a collection of head arrangements of (mainly) standards featuring Scott, Evans and Motian and a rolling cast of horn players including trumpeter

Clark Terry
trumpet1920 - 2015

Sahib Shihab
woodwinds1925 - 1989

Know What I Mean?
Riverside
1962 (recorded 1961)
In which alto saxophonist

Cannonball Adderley
saxophone1928 - 1975

Modern Jazz Quartet
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1952

Percy Heath
bass, acoustic1923 - 2005

Connie Kay
drums1927 - 1994

Earl Zindars
composer / conductor1927 - 2005

John Lewis
piano1920 - 2001
Evans played on two other Adderley albums, Portrait Of Cannonball (Riverside, 1958) and Jump For Joy (EmArcy, 1958) . Both are solid, but Know What I Mean? is more than that.

The Blues And The Abstract Truth
Impulse!
1961
It has been suggested that Evans was miscast on composer/arranger/saxophonist

Oliver Nelson
saxophone1932 - 1975

Wynton Kelly
piano1931 - 1971

Eric Dolphy
woodwinds1928 - 1964

Freddie Hubbard
trumpet1938 - 2008
Producer Creed Taylor, who would figure large in Evans' subsequent work on Verve before he handed the producer baton to Helen Keane, was influential in involving Evans on another of Impulse!'s 1961 launch albums, trombonists

J.J. Johnson
trombone1924 - 2001

Kai Winding
trombone1922 - 1983

Nirvana
Atlantic
1964 (recorded 1961-62)
The importance of this album is considerable but it has little to do with the presence of flautist

Herbie Mann
flute1930 - 2003

Chuck Israels
bass, acousticb.1936
Most of the tracks were recorded in December 1961, when Evans was still traumatised by LaFaro's death, and the new lineup is yet fully to mesh. But it is getting there. The weak link is Mann. His playing here is pretty but inconsequential and his writing ditto. The wafty title track (one of two Mann originals) is proto-New Age. So too the arrangement of Erik Satie's "Gymnopedies." The album finds its groove on three standards: an up-tempo reading of Cole Porter's "I Love You," a soulful version of Ann Ronell's "Willow Weep For Me" and, the highlight on the album on the strength of Evans' thoughtfully constructed solo, Jimmy Davis, Ram Ramirez and James Sherman's "Lover Man."
The closer is a second Mann original, "Cashmere." Given the cover art, the title is presumably intended as a nod to India's Kashmir region, the source of what is arguably the world's finest hashish. There is, unfortunately, not a whiff of it in the music.

Waltz For Debby
Philips
1964
Among the most charming items in Evans' discography, Waltz For Debby is nominally a back-up gig with Swedish singer

Monica Zetterlund
vocals1937 - 2005

Larry Bunker
drums1928 - 2005
The YouTube clip below tells us volumes about how comfortably Evans and Zetterlund worked together, albeit that it shows a rehearsal for a TV performance recorded two years later in Copenhagen, on which Israels is replaced by Eddie Gomez and Bunker by

Alex Riel
drumsb.1940
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