The Fender-Rhodes piano

An non-acoustic instrumental approach was the development in 1965 of the Fender Rhodes Piano. Bill Evans released in 1970 his first 'electric' album "From Left To Right", well before Chick Corea, Herbie Hancock and Joe Zawinul worked on it. Bill Evans playing the electric piano is rather controversial. Some purists disapprove Bill Evans playing the Fender Rhodes piano, whereas he should deny his recognisable touch on the acoustic grand piano with his characteristic cord voicings. On the album he swaps effortlessly back and forth from the acoustic piano to the Fender Rhodes electric piano. The second release was "The Bill Evans Album" in 1971, where he plays all his own compositions on acoustic and electric piano with Eddie Gomez on bass and Marty Morrell on drums. He released the albums "Living Time" (1972) with George Russell and "Symbiosis" (1974) with Claus Ogerman where he plays long passages on electric piano. "New Conversations" (1978) is the third and final recording of his overdubbed solo albums with monologues, dialogues and trialogues alternating between the acoustic and electric piano. Finally on some titles of the duo album "Intuition"(1978) with Eddie Gomez he plays the Fender Rhodes.

Bill Evans: "I don't think too much about the electronic thing, except that it's kind of fun to have it as an alternate voice. Like, I've used the Fender- Rhodes piano on a couple of records. I don't really look on it as a piano— merely an alternate keyboard instrument, that offers a certain kind of sound that’s appropriate sometimes. I find that it’s kind of a refreshing auxiliary to the piano— but I don't need it, you know. I guess it’s for other people to judge how effective it’s been on my records; I enjoyed it, anyway. I don't enjoy spending a lot of time with the electric piano. I mean, if I play it for a period of time, then I quickly tire of it, and I want to get back to the acoustic piano." (From an interview with Bill Evans in 1972 by Les Tomkins (1930). He is an English journalist, singer and jazz aficionado. He was a freelance contributor of magazines like "Melody Maker", "Jazz News" and "Crescendo", interviewing jazz musicians, especially famous Americans visiting England).

"I am interested in other keyboard sounds, but basically I'm an acoustic pianist. I’ve been happy to use the Fender-Rhodes to add a little colour to certain performances but only as an adjunct, he later explained. It's hard for people to recognize individuals on an electric piano. Because it is an electric instrument, it's hard for a personality to come through".

Bill Evans preference for a particular brand acoustical piano

Jazz pianist don't have many choices when it comes to the piano that's at a particular gig. There's a stereotype that says Yamaha is the jazz piano, but there are plenty of Steinway and Baldwin jazz pianists, with some Bösendorfer mixed-in. Bill Evans to François Postif (Jazz Hot): "The trumpet player plays on his trumpet, the bassist on his bass, they reach such a knowledge of their own instrument as they are married with them. The pianist however, he discovers every night a new fiancée with whom he must come to an agreement"

"Many clubs pay more attention to their trash cans than the house piano, but I’ve been lucky in this respect and most of the instruments I use are acceptable, though not always in tune."

Most pianists favor certain grand pianos. Glenn Gould preferred the Steinway and Sviatoslav Richter the Yahama. Oscar Peterson changed from Baldwin to Bösendorfer. Keith Jarrett played the Steinway, Erroll Garner and Dave Brubeck a Baldwin and Bill Evans would became from 1978 a Baldwin artist. The Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz broadcastings for the NPR were recorded in the Baldwin Piano Showroom in New York, where Bill Evans played also a Baldwin grand.

After he was discharged from the army he moved in 1955 to New York City where he rented an appartment and purchased a Knabe grandpiano. The Knabe piano is known in some circles as "a singer's piano" because of its somewhat more mellow tone than many of its contemporaries. After he left Nenette in 1978 he moved to a Fort Lee apartment where he installed his Chickering and Sons baby grand piano in the living room, which his first wife Ellaine gave it to him. A Baldwin on loan from the company stayed at Nenette's home. Regarding the Bill Evans comments, his own piano at home was indeed this Chickering grand. He played a bunch of pianos, he recorded "Conversations with Myself" on a Steinway, another "overdubbing" CD "New Conversations" was recorded on a Baldwin grand and "You Must Believe In Spring" on a Yamaha grand.

It was at a time when Yamaha appeared with a slightly longer key length, which facilitated leverage and improved action when playing higher, deeper in towards the fallboard, on the keyboard. Bill Evans experienced moderate swelling in his hands and fingers due to his chronic hepatitis, and the Yamaha with the slightly longer key was less painful to play for him (Look at the cover of the album "Symbiosis"). Bill Evans was a left-handed pianist, who had large hands, able to cover easily four-note chords. When playing the piano, his fingers seem hardly move: an impressive economy of performing to serve a perfect legato. At one point in the late 1960s, he was forced to perform at the Village Vanguard playing piano with his left hand alone because he had numbed his right arm by shooting heroin and hit a nerve and temporarily lost the use of his right hand. People has seen performances at which he played all his solo with his left hand. Without a glance at the keyboard you could not hear that he was playing only left-handed.

He reflects also on how his finger position had changed over the years: "When I was younger, I played with flat fingers. when we possess a lot of vitality and we have a lot of energy, this method of playing permits you to use your energy effectively. As I matured technically I noticed that my fingers curled when I played. Is is a more natural position which was used by Mozart, Haydn and especially Bach." (Interview with François Postif, "Les Grandes Interviews de Jazz Hot", 1989)


Do you prefer any particular brand of piano?

"I love the old Steinway action. The Steinway action for the last ten or twelve years however has been a great problem. In fact, I tend to avoid those pianos - the newer Steinways. I prefer a Yamaha to a new Steinway. I don't like an extremely heavy action and I don't like a slow action. However, you find that if you play any kind of action for a while, unless it's really really sluggish or something, you just begin to compensate and get used to it and learn how to handle it. But ideally, I like the old Steinways."

Do you request particular pianos when you play, or do you have to deal with whatever you find?

"We always try to set things up in front. The instructions are that unless it is a proven Steinway, preferably an older proven Steinway, then I would rather have a Yamaha. Of course, in some places, like in Europe, you get German Steinways, which are marvelous. And once I had a wonderful Bösendorfer in London for a few weeks - one of those really large ones with the nine extra keys at the bottom. The action is really different on the Bösendorfer, but you get used to it soon. It's a more direct kind of feeling - an even feeling; whereas in the old Steinway there is a little break in the action. If you push the keys half way down on the Steinway, there's just a little catch in it, and then it goes the rest of the way down. Anyway, that's where I stand on preferences now. Of course you sometimes hit other make pianos that are good, but they are few and far between. You can get a good Mason & Hamlin; or possibly a good Baldwin, but I don't think they work as well - especially the big ones." (Interview by Michael Spector, Contemporary Keyboard, March 1977).


The Steinway CD 318 of Glenn Gould

Bill Evans was Gould's favourite jazz pianist. His record collection contained seven Evans albums as "Conversations with Myself", "Symbiosis" and "Further Conversations with Myself". Glenn Gould's obsessive quest for the perfect piano was a particular instrument, a Steinway concert grand, known as unit number CD 318 (C to signify its special status as having been put aside for the use of Steinway concert artists, and D, denoting it as the largest that Steinway built). Glenn Gould's beloved Steinway piano that he used exclusively after 1960 is the instrument that Bill Evans used when he recorded the album "Conversations with Myself" in 1963 in Webster Hall. Soon after Bill's recording Gould finished his recording of Bach's "D major Partita" on this beloved piano nearby in the the old CBS East 30th Street Studio in Manhattan, a deconsecrated Greek Orthodox church with peerless acoustics. This studio was the venue for many classic sessions including Glenn Gould's two recordings of the "Goldberg Variations". One of the first recordings happened in 1947 when Robert Casadesus recorded a Mozart piano concerto. Miles Davis with Bill Evans on piano recorded here in 1959 the famous "Kind of Blue" album. The grand piano CD 318 came to Ottawa's Library and Archives Canada auditorium in 1983 and was used for the concerts of the Ottawa International Jazz Festival. In the years as the Jazz Festival has staged concerts here, several jazz pianists have played on this CD 318, like Fred Hersch and Brad Mehldau. At a jazz festival concert in 2004, pianist Bill Mays, joked: "I sat down to play a bebop piece on the CD 318 and Bach's F-major Invention came out." Nowadays it resides in the Canadian Museum of Civilization and no pianist is playing this famous grand piano. After hearing a concert of Bill Evans on a Yamaha piano Glenn Gould, the most loyal of Steinway advocates, switched to a Yamaha piano, because the clarity and touch of Evans' piano style resembled his own. Bill Evans was also impressed by a number of late Yamaha's and chose on request of Max Gordon a new Yamaha house piano for the Village Vanguard. (The pictures represent the outside and inside of the CBS studio, below Bill Evans and Miles Davis in the studio during the "Kind of Blue" recording session.


Space-age piano

Bill Evans unveils his "Space-Age Piano" at the "Cafe Au Go Go", 152 Bleeckerstreet in Greenwich Village. Bill Evans came by his new piano, one of only three in existence, during a tour of Sweden. While playing at the Golden Circle Club in Stockholm, he gave the first public performance on a specially designed "space-age" piano made by George Bolin. Bolin is a Swedish cabinetmaker turned acoustician who has also built guitars for Andres Segovia. The Bolin piano, a gift from its maker, is strong on innovations. It is made of welded steel, rather than the usual cast iron. The metal frame is mounted so that it can be tilted to provide the best acoustic environment. The sound-board, built after eight years of research, enhances dynamics and offering the player firmer control and a greater balance between keyboard registers. The new piano represents Mr. Bolin's ultimate desire, to produce an instrument that gives the pianist the sensation of playing "directly on the the strings" as a guitarist would. Bill Evans says: "It is one of the most unbelievable instruments I've ever played. I fell in love with it the first time I touched it." Robert Shelton in The New York Times, October 12, 1964.

MIDI

Musical Instrument Digital Interface (MIDI) is an standard protocol that enables electronic musical instruments and computers to communicate, control, and synchronize with each other. MIDI does not transmit an audio signal — it simply transmits digital data "event messages" such as the pitch and intensity of musical notes to play, control signals for parameters such as volume, vibrato and panning, cues, and clock signals to set the tempo. As an electronic protocol, it is notable for its success since its introduction in 1983. Since Bill Evans died in 1980, three years before, he was not familiar with MIDI. Because the music is simply data and not actually recorded wave forms, it is therefore maintained in a small file format. Several computer programs allow manipulation of the data so that composing is possible and can be reproduced by any electronic instrument that adheres to the GM standards. There are websites that allow downloads of popular songs as well as jazz and classical music and sites where MIDI composers can share their works. Some composers tried, with varying degrees of success, to transpose the music of Bill Evans to the MIDI standard.




' When you play music
you discover a part of yourself
that you never knew existed'
               

MIDI files

Alice in Wonderland
Blue in Green
Emily
I Love You Porgy
Israel
My Romance
Nardis
Peace Piece
Since We Met
Someday My Prince
Spartacus Love Theme
Time Remembered
Turn Out the Stars
Very Early
Waltz for Debby
We Will Meet Again
Who Can I Turn To
Young and Foolish
Your Story


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