A near-total unknown when he landed in New York in 1955 to study with George Russell, Bill Evans quickly became famous as the most cerebral modern jazz pianist since Thelonious Monk. After a stint with Miles Davis that included the epochal Kind of Blue, Evans led his own trio with bassist Scott LaFaro and drummer Paul Motian that ended with LaFaro's death in a 1961 car accident. After a period of seclusion, Evans returned with 1962's haunting, minimal Undercurrent. He maintained a steady presence in modern jazz until his death in 1980. Read more on Last.fm
A lot's changed since we got started a few years ago, but our mission never has: make ways to discover and discuss music. We've evolved to better accomplish that mission. Read more on our new direction if you're interested.
We're now curating killer music content at TuneDig.com and sending out what we call the TuneDig Weekly: 5 of the best music + tech nuggets delivered directly to your inbox each week, carefully curated by our team of real human beings and guaranteed to be killer. We'd love for you to sign up and give it a shot: