You Must Believe in Spring cover

You Must Believe in Spring

Recorded
Released

You don’t need to know the circumstances that surround this album — recorded in 1977 but not released until 1981, a year after Bill Evans’s death — to feel its sadness. Evans never accepted any advances in jazz in the second half of the 60s and into the 70s, but where for others this usually implied a stuffy staidness, in his minimal ensembles with bassist Eddie Gómez it led to an absolute purity of expression. Evans’s piano here is as expressive as at any time in his life, and the exquisite geometries between him, Gómez and drummer Eliot Zigmund are as perfect and ineffable as a starry sky. The songs express endless loss and heartbreak: Evans had lost friends and lovers to suicide and huge parts of his own life to addiction — the cover of “Theme From M*A*S*H (Suicide is Painless)” is as mordant as it is lovely. But he was also a philosopher with an eye to the eternal at all times — it was, after all, Evans who had introduced John Coltrane to the teachings of Krishnamurti — and there is always more, much more, beyond the mere melancholy here. It may have been the opposite of innovative in many ways, but as a deep dive into oceans of human feeling, this album is peerless.

Joe Muggs

Suggestions
Expansions cover

Expansions

McCoy Tyner
Days of Wine and Roses cover

Days of Wine and Roses

Tony Coe, Alan Barnes
Inside Chicago, Vol. 3 cover

Inside Chicago, Vol. 3

Von Freeman, Brad Goode
In My Life cover

In My Life

Marian McPartland
Soul Station cover

Soul Station

Hank Mobley
What Now? cover

What Now?

John Taylor, Kenny Wheeler, Dave Holland, Chris Potter
Plays the Benny Carter Songbook cover

Plays the Benny Carter Songbook

Marian McPartland, Benny Carter
Gateway cover

Gateway

Jack DeJohnette, John Abercrombie, Dave Holland
Five Brothers cover

Five Brothers

Herbie Harper Quintet
Identity cover

Identity

Jeremy Pelt