Mal Evans

MAL EVANS
 
 
Mal Evans  (27 May 1935 – 5 January 1976) was the road manager, assistant, and a friend of the Beatles.  In the early 1960s, Evans was employed as a telephone engineer, and also worked part-time as a bouncer at the Cavern Club.  The Beatles’ manager, Brian Epstein, later hired Evans as the group’s assistant road manager, in tandem with Neil Aspinall.  Peter Brown (one of Epstein’s staff) later wrote that Evans was “a kindly, but menacing-looking young man”.  From 1969, Evans also found work as a record producer (most notably with Badfinger’s top 10 hit “No Matter What”).  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 

The Beatles performed a sort of mini-Wall of Sound at the close of their masterful Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band album, not long after Phil Spector came along.  Following the second symphonic build-up within “A Day in the Life”, the orchestra swelled into a crescendo, and then there was a thunderous piano chord (an E-major chord to be exact).  Many people who have been around a piano marvel at how long the instrument can hold a note; and here, the Beatles were dealing that expectation up in spades with a long, slow fade for nearly one full minute before the sound faded into background hiss. 

 

Actually though, it wasn’t just one piano:  John LennonPaul McCartney, Ringo Starr, and one of the Beatles’ roadies, Mal Evans were manning different pianos; while George Martin was playing the same chord on a harmonium.  What’s more, the gain was gradually turned up as the chord faded in order to prolong the effect – at the end (they tell me), it is possible to hear background sounds in the recording studio:  rustling papers, a squeaking chair, and the air conditioners.      

 

(October 2013)

 

Last edited: March 22, 2021