Bill Evans Peace - Piece Midi ((new))

There are piano solos, and then there is Bill Evans’ Peace Piece .

Recorded in December 1958 for the album Everybody Digs Bill Evans , "Peace Piece" is arguably the most beautiful accident in jazz history. It was a spontaneous, pastoral improvisation recorded at the very end of a studio session. Evans was reportedly playing around with the opening chords of Leonard Bernstein's "Some Other Time" when he settled into a hypnotic, repeating pattern (ostinato) in his left hand, allowing his right hand to float freely above it.

Evans superimposes localized bitonal structures (such as playing in E major or G-flat major simultaneously against the left hand's C major).

Recorded during the sessions for the album Everybody Digs Bill Evans , "Peace Piece" was not a pre-planned composition. Evans initially intended to record the introduction to Leonard Bernstein's "," but he found himself captivated by the two-chord ostinato ( Cmaj7cap C m a j 7 G9sus4cap G 9 s u s 4 bill evans peace piece midi

Sheet music gives you the dots. A MIDI file gives you the data .

Transform the jazz standard into a modern ambient lo-fi track. Where to Find Quality MIDI Files

If you have acquired a MIDI file of the piece, here is how to get the most out of it: There are piano solos, and then there is

If you are a guitarist, a producer, or a student, you have legitimate reasons for seeking this file beyond mere plagiarism.

Here is the honest truth about searching for a Peace Piece MIDI.

Bill Evans once noted that "Peace Piece" was supposed to just be an introduction to a standard, but it became so fulfilling that he just kept playing. Decades later, MIDI technology allows us to peer under the hood of that spontaneous moment of inspiration. Whether you are using it to master his touch, reverse-engineer his chord voicings, or reinvent the track in a lo-fi hip-hop beat, the MIDI data of "Peace Piece" proves that Evans' music is as mathematically beautiful as it is emotionally profound. If you want to dive deeper into this track, let me know: Evans was reportedly playing around with the opening

of the best VSTs (Virtual Instruments) to get that "Bill Evans" piano sound? Let me know your target reader and I can refine the tone!

: A long-standing resource for jazz students that provides a MIDI file and computer-generated transcription of the piece. Sheet Music Plus

Unlike traditional jazz songs that follow a complex chord progression, "Peace Piece" is built upon a simple, rolling two-chord ostinato: Cmaj7 to G7/C (effectively just swapping the C bass note with a G, creating a meditative, unresolved feeling).

If you own a digital piano with MIDI-over-USB (any Casio, Yamaha, Roland from the last decade):

In your MIDI editor:

If you have any comments or feedback, please send me an e-mail. (stig at stigok dotcom).

Did you find any typos, incorrect information, or have something to add? Then please propose a change to this post.

Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.