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Gil Evans, Essential Jazz Arranger, At 100

Gil Evans in the studio with Miles Davis, circa 1970.
Michael Ochs Archives
Gil Evans in the studio with Miles Davis, circa 1970.

Gil Evans, one of the most important jazz arrangers of the 20th century, was born 100 years ago today.

Evans is best known for music he wrote between 1957 and 1963 for his 19-piece orchestra, which backed trumpeter Miles Davis. The albums Sketches of Spain and Porgy and Bess were hailed for their rich harmonies and use of instruments not usually associated with jazz big bands. But in a 1980 interview, Evans said he wanted to use orchestral instruments in a new way: "Many great compositions have been written with the traditional sound of the orchestra. You know what I mean? Nothing much has been added to it as far as sound is concerned."

Evans gave the orchestra a different sound by creating unusual harmonies, using colors he borrowed from Debussy, Ravel and Stravinsky. "I got the harmonic language from the French, Spanish and Russian Impressionists," he said in the same interview. "That's where the harmony comes from."

Evans made it sound easy, but Emile Charlap — a music copyist who worked with Evans in the '50s, filling out and finishing his scores — says the arranger labored to create that new sound.

"He sat there all night composing," Charlap recalls. "I had a secretary who worked for me who lived upstairs. And she told me that she can't sleep, because Gil is there all night, and he plays F, F, F, all night long. ... That was like the beginnings of Sketches of Spain.

Evans arranged Sketches of Spain in Charlap's New York offices.

"Gil was beyond belief," Charlap says. "He would work on one thing forever. I don't know about the word 'slow.' Slow might be the right thing, because he wanted it to be the note. He would write a whole arrangement and leave out one note, and come back two weeks later to put that right note in."

Birth Of The Cool

Born in 1912 in Toronto and raised in Stockton, Calif., Evans spent a lifetime creating a new sound for a jazz orchestra and did it without any musical education. (He said he learned how to handle a popular song from copying the arrangements on early Louis Armstrong records.) He always played popular music; in the 1930s, he led his own dance band in Stockton. But his music became more complex when he joined bandleader Claude Thornhill's orchestra in 1941.

Then, in the late 1940s, Evans met Miles Davis. Their initial collaboration grew out of informal jam sessions at the arranger's apartment on 52nd Street, where some of the best young beboppers in town showed up. The result was a series of recordings that came to be known as Birth of the Cool, credited today with launching the "cool sound" in jazz.

Among the musicians was a young French horn player, Gunther Schuller. Now a world-reknowned composer, Schuller says the arrangements were amazing — in particular, a piece called "Moondreams," written by Glen Miller's pianist, Chuck McGregor.

"Gil Evans just re-composed this piece in his own much more advanced style," Schuller says. "He composed this coda, which starts with a dramatically dissonant chord, very loud. And over a period of about, let's say, a minute and a half, the music subsides. It gets softer and softer. And it calms down, also rhythmically. It's very agitated at first. And it finally comes to a very beautiful, soft, restful ending in B minor.

"It's just an incredible piece of composition. How he came up with that at that time ... it's just beyond even my comprehension, and I knew him very well."

The Space Between The Notes

Evans wrote dozens of scores that were never recorded. Composer Ryan Truesdell spent the last three years unearthing 50 of them, most written for the Thornhill Orchestra in the late 1940s. He assembled a modern orchestra to record 10 songs for a record released today, for Evans's birthday, called Centennial: Newly Discovered Works of Gil Evans.

Truesdell says what makes Evans' sound distinctive is an air of mystery that comes from the space between the notes in his chords.

"It's almost like a cloud that the music is able to float on," he says. "With the brass section, for instance, [Evans] would write four-, maybe five-note voicings. But instead of putting them really spaced out, so they took up all that range from bottom to top, he would put them all together. And then all of a sudden, there's all this air between the bass — you know, the walking bass line — and these instruments. And it gives it a floaty, very light effect."

In the 1960s, Evans updated his orchestra with electric guitars and synthesizers, but he continued to harmonize with his "close" note chords. In 1983, a week before his 71st birthday, Evans sat at the piano in his cramped New York apartment, took a toke on the marijuana in his pipe and showed me how he harmonized the Jimi Hendrix song "Up From the Skies."

"It's got a certain spice to it, right? Because the notes are close," he said.

Evans said he never made a cent off any of his records — but he was cool with that. "I started out as an arranger," he said. "If I'd known at the time it was such a loser's game, I wouldn't have done it, because the arranger doesn't get any royalties. But I had so much fun doing it, I never even thought of that at the time."

Evans said there was no use complaining about the past; he was only interested in what was happening now. He died at the age of 75 in 1988.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Tom Vitale

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