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The following is a listing of the jazz pianist Bill Evans's original albums. He recorded over 50 albums as a leader between 1956 and 1980 and also played as a sideman on nearly as many more.
Somebody always had a record date. I mean, that is what we did. It was very exciting in those sessions. We weren't thinking about "jazz history." Later in 1962, Evans and Hall would record together with larger ensembles on the albums Interplay, Loose Blues (which was released only after Evans's death), and The Gary McFarland Orchestra.
Bill Evans entry — Jazz Discography Project "Remembering Bill Evans" by Ted Gioia, Jazz.com, January 2008. Bill Evans Musical Style Archived January 10, 2017, at the Wayback Machine at Jazz-Piano.org "Bill Evans: Twelve Essential Recordings by Ted Gioia" The Bill Evans Memorial Library; Jazz wax-Interview with Laurie Verchomin
The Bill Evans Album is a recording by the jazz pianist Bill Evans, released in 1971 on the Columbia label. It was his first album to feature all compositions written (or co-written), arranged, and performed by him. On the record, Evans plays both an acoustic and a Fender Rhodes electric piano.
The Complete Tony Bennett/Bill Evans Recordings is a two-CD box set released in 2009 compiling the two recording sessions by singer Tony Bennett and pianist Bill Evans which produced The Tony Bennett/Bill Evans Album in 1975 and Together Again in 1976, including twenty alternate takes and two bonus tracks not released on the original albums.
The Tony Bennett Bill Evans Album is a 1975 studio album by singer Tony Bennett and pianist Bill Evans. Their second album together, Together Again , was released in 1977. Both albums plus alternate takes and additional tracks were released on The Complete Tony Bennett/Bill Evans Recordings by Fantasy Records in 2009.
Interplay is a 1963 album by jazz musician Bill Evans.It was recorded in July 1962 in New York City for Riverside Records. The Interplay Sessions is a 1982 Milestone album that includes the entirety of this album, and tracks recorded for Riverside on August 21 and 22 of the same year with a different lineup (with Zoot Sims and Ron Carter, and without Freddie Hubbard and Percy Heath).
From Left to Right is an album by American jazz pianist Bill Evans, released in 1971. It was recorded with his regular bassist Eddie Gómez and drummer Marty Morell and with an orchestra arranged and conducted by Michael Leonard. This was the first album on which Evans played a Fender Rhodes electric piano. [4]