Born in North London, George was the first musician on either
side of the family.
He first started by playing ukelele-banjo at the age
of 13, with a little band called The Yale Five. The leader was Norrie
Paramor, who was about 15 or 16 years old. A little gang of kids used
to stand in the street and listen to them rehearse in Norrie's front
room.
Meanwhile, George started to play saxophone at 14,
and was doing local gigs at age 15. So much so, that the school Headmaster
spoke to his parents, and said "This banding (as he called it)
is interfering with his studies. Either he stops, or he has to leave
school". So George left. That same Headmaster about five years
later at a prize-giving was heard to say "and we must not forget
our celebrated ex-pupil, George Evans, who may be heard each week on
the radio". George by that time was with Sydney Lipton at the Grosvenor
House.
His first professional job at 16, was at Talza's Ballroom,
Southend, with Sonny Winter's Band, and from there he went on to Sherry's,
Brighton, with Al Lever's Band.
Aged about 18, he was resident at the Spider's Web
roadhouse, Watford-by-pass, with Freddie Bretherton's Band, and already
doing arrangements as well as playing tenor. Freddie got the job on
piano with Syd Lipton, and soon encouraged Syd to send for George to
join the band, along with bass-player Will Hemmings. That was 1935,
and George wrote scores for the Lipton band, played tenor, and sang.
Harry Hayes joined Syd Lipton, the following year,
in 1936, and the two of' them had a great musical influence one upon
the other. Then in 1938, Geraldo formed a band that was totally unlike
his previous Gaucho Tango Orchestra . . . a bit bigger band than Syd
Lipton's . . . and he went in at the Savoy Hotel. George and Harry Hayes
left Syd Lipton to join Geraldo at that time. There is no doubt that
George virtually moulded the style of that band. He scored practically
every arrangement that Geraldo played, between 1938 and 1942. His own
tenor sounds, and that of Harry Hayes on alto, were always very distinctive.
Amongst Geraldo's usual battery of vocalists, George used to sing the
brighter numbers.
In February 1940, George joined the Welsh Guards Band,
followed the very next day by Harry Hayes. Plenty of service musicians
stationed in or near London, carried on playing with civilian bands.
Geraldo was broadcasting many times every week, and
his signature tune 'Hello Again', which George composed and arranged,
became famous at home and abroad.
Then, due to quite a lot of newspaper publicity, the
War Office, or Home Office, whoever clamped down, issued an edict and
Geraldo lost about seven or eight musicians more or less overnight:
George, Harry, Nat Temple, Ronnie Priest, Jack Bentley, Jimmy Coombs,
and others. George had also been running his own band at the Embassy
Club, called Saxes 'n Sevens: three altos, four tenors, four rhythm.
They also played at the Jazz Jamboree of 1941, and some of the saxes
connected with either the Club or the Jamboree were George, Harry Hayes,
Les Gilbert, Jimmy Durrant, Poggy Pogson, Tommy Bradbury, Andy McDevitt,
Norman Maloney, Aubrey Frank, with Bobby Midgeley, drums and George
Shearing, or Ronnie Selby on piano.
Later on, George also did a weekly broadcast with the
George Melachrino combined Forces Orchestra, played, sang, and did one
arrangement a week for them.
All this was going on whilst doing parades with the
Welsh Guards band, and arranging, playing and singing with the Guards
dance orchestra.
In 1944, still in the Army, he scored ten arrangements
to fulfil an ambition he had for a long time. This was for five trumpets,
ten saxes, and four rhythm, and recorded on Decca with the top session
men of the day.
Four sides were cut on the first sessions. Also, because
George was still in the Guards, they were released under the name of
the George Evans Orchestra, directed by his brother Leslie Evans. The
other six sides were cut at different times, and with a variety of players,
but were not released at the time.
In 1946, January, George came out of the Welsh Guards,
and formed a ten saxes, five trumpets band. Many of the musicians were
younger players, who could stay with him, and go out on the road. They
rehearsed for some months, did a few gigs, and then played at Hammersmith
Palais for three months, but the long and heavy work-toll over the many
years took effect, and George had to go into a Sanatorium with T.B.
that September, just at the end of the Palais period. George asked his
brother Les to front the band to go out on the road, so Les gave up
all his teaching, and they played all over the country, between September
1946 and February 1947, when the band folded.
When George recovered from an operation, and from
lengthy treatment, he had to re-plan his career. He sang with Geraldo
again, did arrangements for various bands, and also formed a very advanced
Student Orchestra. This led him, in 1949 to form another band, this
time with four trumpets, four
trombones, six saxes and four rhythm. They played all over the country,
and then in 1951, George secured the residency at the Oxford Galleries,
Newcastle, from 1951 to 1957, during which time the format gradually
changed to eight saxes, four trumpets, and one trombone, rhythm and
vocalists.
The band made some very successful strict-tempo recordings.
In fact, after George retired in 1957, he was persuaded to come down
to London, where a big session-band was fixed for him, to record in
the huge organ-hall at the Alexandra Palace. That was 1958. The mono
versions were sold in Britain, and the mono and stereo LPs were sold
in America.
Then then was a very big gap, when he never played
or wrote a note of music, right up to 1980. He started to play a little,
just by doing multiple track recording at home,
writing four or five parts, and playing them himself by recording
over. This led George to practise really hard to regain his embouchure,
and his technique. His ear was always fantastic anyway. He started to
play with local Newcastle bands, some jazz at local pubs, and helped
to rehearse school Youth Orchestras.
Before his 70th birthday, in 1985, he formed a big
band, from local professionals and teachers, of eleven saxes, including
George, five trumpets, five trombones, four rhythm and vocalists. He
rehearsed the band for some weeks, then put on a Night of Nostalgia
on his birthday, at the Mayfair Ballroom, Newcastle. He re-scored many
of his best arrangements to bring in the five trombones.
1,400 people danced that night, the majority of them
middle-aged, with many who met, got engaged and married, from the days
at the Oxford Galleries, back in 195l-57.
Harking back to the ten saxes, five trumpets band,
George was always asked, "why no trombones, don't you like them?"
That wasn't the point. George wanted, and obtained an individual, and
a different sound. So the next question usually followed "But how
do you score and voice for ten saxes?"
Again it didn't really apply. George used five trumpets as one section,
five altos (two doubling soprano) as another section, and four tenors
and a baritone (one tenor doubling bass saxophone) as a third section.
This gave scope, anyway, for all sorts of permutations. Otherwise there
were counter-lines, interweaving, and big ensemble passages just like
any other band with three sections of trumpets, trombones and saxes.
There were not all that many occasions when the ten
saxes played as a block ensemble. At those times George would use five
or six part harmony spread across through the octaves. But it was very
impressive indeed when the ten stood up together, sopranos, altos, tenors,
baritone and bass sax.
A number of well-known musicians, who were young at
the time they played with George's earlier bands, have said how much
they were influenced in their careers, by George.
He taught without teaching. His presence, his aims,
his writing and his playing were enough to rub off on everyone around
him.
He made hundreds of friends . . . and fans . . . and
no enemies.
Adapted from an article by Les Evans
Jimmy
Staples remembers...
In the old George Evans band, Don Rendell and I sat
together for a time. Don used to keep time by stamping his feet on the
legs of my baritone stand. This was fine, as long as I played the machine
on a sling.
Playing on the stand was another matter. After a few
days of putting up with this I had to complain to Don who, to give him
his due, graciously apologised.
We had some interesting times in the band—musically,
if not financially.
George had the unusual combination of ten saxes, five
trumpets, four rhythm and vocalist. I was on tenth sax (presumably because
there wasn’t an eleventh sax). We mustered up five altos and five tenors,
or three sopranos, two altos, three tenors, baritone and bass saxes.
Our piece de resistance was a monster
clarinet section, comprising six clarinets, two alto clarinets, and
two bass clarinets. George’s arrangements were way ahead of his time,
and I always feel that his subsequent disbanding, due to illness, robbed
the world of a most interesting addition to the music scene—one that
would have made the grade.
One player in the band who really knocked us all out
was altoist Charlie Chapman, now a famous teacher and virtuoso. I’ll
always remember an arrangement of “Apple Honey”, that featured a written
break for Charlie. The band stopped for several bars, and Charles triple-tongued
at break-neck tempo-and never faltered or slowed down once. Jimmy
Staples
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