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  • Home >> Gil Evans >> Out of the Cool


    The Gil Evans Orchestra

    Out of the Cool

    Gil Evans, Piano
    Johnny Coles, Trumpet
    Phil Sunkel, Trumpet
    Keg Johnson, Trombone
    Jimmy Knepper, Trombone
    Tony Studd, Bass, Trombone
    Bill Barber, Tuba
    Ray Beckenstein, Alto Sax, Flute, Piccolo
    Eddie Caine, Alto Sax, Flute, Piccolo
    Budd Johnson, Tenor & Soprano Sax
    Bob Tricarico, Bassoon, Flute, Piccolo
    Ron Carter, Bass
    Charlie Persip, Drums
    Elvin Jones, Drums, Percussion

    Arranged and Conducted by Gil Evans
    Produced by Creed Taylor

    Recorded at Van Gelder Studios
    Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey
    Rudy Van Gelder, Engineer
    Recorded November 18, 30 and December 10, 15, 1960

    Catalog Number: IMPD-186
    Format: CD
    Label: Impulse




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    Click on tracks to hear sound samples.

    1. La Nevada (15:33)
    2. Where Flamingoes Fly (5:11)
    3. Bilbao Song (4:10)
    4. Stratusphunk (8:00)
    5. Sunken Treasure (4:15)
    6. Sister Sadie (6:57)

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  • From Gil Evans: Out of the Cool: His Life and Music

    "La Nevada" was not only original but was totally spontaneous - we had gotten nothing until the fourth trip out to Rudy Van Gelder's. Gil started noodling at the piano for awhile, and he started this thing, and the rhythm section started doing something and then something sparked in Gil. He walked over to Tony Studd, the bass trombone player and said something to him. Then he wrote something down on a match book. Literally! I know it sounds like an exaggeration, but that's what he did. Then, he showed it to Tony, who started playing that figure, and then Gil passed it around to the other horn players. So it was arranged on the spot without anything except Gil Evans suggesting these notes, and then he went back to the piano. Then it proceeeded for quite awhile - La Nevada was not edited.
    – Stephanie Stein Crease

    The other pieces were a little more arranged. But we didn't get any of them down [as useable takes] until he got whatever it was on "La Nevada" out of his system. That session let the dam loose; he was struggling with the musicality until then. There was nothing to do as far as I was concerned except patiently sit and wait. I knew it was going to happen at some point.

    – Creed Taylor


    He Fell From a Star: Gil Evans
    He was a mysterious man, as elusive and evanescent as his art. He could be maddeningly absent-minded. Yet he could be closely attentive and solicitous, and you never knew quite how much Gil Evans was noticing about you. His childhood is an enigma, and there is even a question about his real name. Tall, lank, professorial of mien, he was kind, self-critical and self-doubting.

    …Gil’s musical interests were inclusive, hugely inclusive, not exclusive.

    “I go along with the rhythm of the time,” Gil told the Toronto jazz critic Mark Miller in 1984. “Jazz has always used the rhythm of the time, until it becomes formalized… Current jazz, now jazz, uses the rhythm of the time.” But for Gil Evans, a man whose music was never “popular” in the strict sense of the word, the assertion that he wrote popular music borders on the inscrutable. Creed Taylor, who produced a number of Gil’s albums, thinks he meant the popular idiom, not the extent of the sale. “And that was his concept,” Creed said.


    …One of Gil’s staunchest admirers was a young and boyish-faced ex-trumpet player and former Marine Corps officer with a degree in psychology from Duke University. Creed Taylor was proving to be one of the most astute record producers in the business, with a knack for getting from musicians performances that were simultaneously of the highest artistic merit and yet had considerable commercial appeal. His “product” usually sold well. And Creed had been following the work of Gil Evans since the Thornhill days. Indeed, Creed saw that band when it played Duke. “I remember standing there with goosebumps,” Creed said. “That was the ’49 band.”


    Creed had founded the Impulse label and established the pattern for his career... And one of the artists he now wanted to record was Gil.


    The first album that came out of that was Out of the Cool. Gil turned to old associates for two of the pieces. He did a new version of "Where Flamingos Fly" by John Benson Brooks and "Stratusphunk" by George Russell, who had shared arranger credits with Gil on a Lucy Reed album for Fantasy. Gil orchestrated Kurt Weill’s "Bilbao Song" for a third track, and used two of his own pieces, one called "Sunken Treasure" and a new version of "La Nevada." It is interesting to see how the orchestral colors in "La Nevada" differ from those in the same tune in the Great Jazz Standards two years earlier for Pacific Jazz. The same figures from Prokofiev that Gil used in the Helen Merrill album open "Where Flamingos Fly."

    Creed Taylor left Impulse to run the Verve label, which had been purchased from Norman Granz by MGM records. Creed was the sole A&R director of Verve. One of the albums he made there was The Individualism of Gil Evans. The original LP contained five tunes. Gil turned again to Kurt Weill for "The Barbara Song," which has a strange and haunting reflective quiescence about it. Gil had an eerie ability to write the sound of quiet. The other tunes included his own "Las Vegas Tango," "Flute Song," and "El Toreador," and "Hotel Me," a co-composition with Miles Davis. The running time of that album is thirty-two minutes and twenty-nine seconds. But for the CD edition, the vaults were searched and a great deal of material that Creed and Gil had abandoned was included, those “special bonus” tracks that flesh out CD reissues. At first I thought Gil and Creed were right about the rejected material, but the more I hear it the more I value it, particularly "Time of the Barracuda," interesting for, among other things, the excellent Wayne Shorter tenor solo. And "Spoonful" has some predictably fiery playing by Phil Woods.

    I no longer remember whether it was Creed or Gil who asked me to write the liner notes of that album, but I do remember that Creed set aside an audition room for us and Gil and I listened to the tape together. I wrote at the time:


    “Without doubt the most individualistic and personal jazz composer since Duke Ellington, Evans is held in near-reverence by a wide range of composers, arrangers, instrumentalists, and critics. This feeling is only intensified by the fact that he is a rather inaccessible man—not unfriendly, or anti-social; just politely, quietly inaccessible—whose output has been small, and all of it remarkable.”

    As we listened to "Las Vegas Tango," Gil said, “It’s a plain traditional minor blues.” There was nothing plain about it. Gil said, “I used this title because it had a kind of open sound like the plains, to me. I grew up in the west.” A gorgeous, big-toned, melancholy trombone solo by Jimmy Cleveland emerges from the orchestration. The melody, in its opening phrase, is so perfectly suited to the composition that I asked Gil if it was written. “No,” Gil said. “That’s his.” One of the most striking things about the track is the way Elvin Jones dances across the cymbals, drawing from them all the varied sounds of which they are capable.

    I asked Gil why he so often used Spanish titles for his tunes. He answered: “I don’t know. Perhaps because I can’t find English titles for them. I’ve always inclined to Spanish music, but I didn’t really absorb it from the Spanish. I got it from the French impressionists—and, of course, the Spanish impressionists, like de Falla.”…

    George Wein recounted an incident that gives an insight into Gil’s character.

    “I’d known Gil for years, but we were never that close. We weren’t buddies.

    “I got a serious attack of gout. And I was in pain. It was in my knee. And one night at my apartment, 9:30, there was a knock on my door. Not even a ring from down below. I opened the door and it was Gil.

    “I said, ‘Gil! What are you doing here?’

    “He said, ‘I heard you’ve got the gout. Cherries are very good for the gout. I brought you this bottle of cherries. Maybe they might help you.’

    “Isn’t that a beautiful little story? I never forgot.”
    – Gene Lees

    Creed Taylor: “La Nevada” was not only original but was totally spontaneous—we had gotten nothing until the fourth trip out to Rudy Van Gelder’s. Gil started noodling at the piano for awhile, and he started this thing, and the rhythm section started doing something and then something sparked in Gil. And he walked over to Tony Studd, the bass trombone player, and said something to him. Then, he wrote something down on a match book. Literally! I know it sounds like an exaggeration, but that’s what he did. Then, he showed it to Tony, who started playing that figure, and then Gil passed it around to the other horn players. So it was arranged on the spot without anything except Gil Evans suggesting these notes, and then he went back to the piano. Then it proceeded for quite awhile—it [that tune] was not edited.

    The other pieces were a little more arranged. But we didn’t get any of them down [as useable takes] until he got whatever it was on “La Nevada” out of his system. That session let the dam loose; he was struggling with the musicality until then. There was nothing to do as far as I was concerned except patiently sit and wait. I knew it was going to happen at some point, but I sure hoped it would happen soon.
    – Stephanie Stein Crease

    Gil Evans


    Johnny Coles


    Tony Studd


    Gil Evans


    Gil Evans

    Photos by Chuck Stewart

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