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Everybody Still Digs Bill Evans

275.4M streams

275,383,925

On Riverside: Bill Evans

257.3M streams

257,334,028

The Complete Riverside Recordings (Rem...

233.7M streams

233,650,378

Coffee And Cigarettes

217.3M streams

217,268,179

The Definitive Bill Evans on Riverside...

212.7M streams

212,711,273

Plays For Lovers

152M streams

152,049,182

Essential Standards

127.8M streams

127,752,361

The Best Of Bill Evans

122.4M streams

122,447,580

Everybody Digs

107.3M streams

107,258,745

Jazz Showcase

103.8M streams

103,780,411

Biography

In 1955, Evans began working with Tony Scott and George Russell. His subtly swinging, lucidly constructed solos with these leaders quickly attracted attention, and provided Evans with an opportunity to begin recording under his own name. By 1958, he spent several months in Miles Davis’ band, where he played alongside John Coltrane and Cannonball Adderley, and became a central figure in Davis's shift to modal improvisation. The period with Davis allowed Evans to organize his own trio, which featured bassist Scott LaFaro and drummer Paul Motian by the end of 1959. The Bill Evans Trio developed a new and more interactive approach to trio playing, one in which all instruments carried melodic responsibilities and functioned as equal voices. LaFaro's tragic death in a July 1961 ended the existence of this seminal unit; but not before it had recorded four albums that influenced several generations of pianists, bassists, and drummers. While Evans excelled in even more intimate playing situations—he made memorable duet music with guitarist Jim Hall, singer Tony Bennett, and bassist Eddie Gomez, and on more than one occasion created fascinating studio recitals of multi-tracked piano—for the remaining two decades of his life, he continued to work in the trio format. His lyrical melodic inventions, intricate phrasing, complex voicings, and beautiful touch remain as unmistakable influences on pianists more than 40 years after his death. billevansofficial.com