pplpod

The Seven Secret Names of Sticks Evans


Listen Later

Imagine walking into a recording studio on a Tuesday morning to play metronomically perfect pop music for national television, then driving across town on Wednesday to set your own rhythmic blueprint on fire with Ornette Coleman’s avant-garde free jazz. This level of mental and physical whiplash defined the career of Samuel "Sticks" Evans, the "Kevin Bacon" of 20th-century music. In this episode of pplpod, we conduct a structural archaeology of a drummer who operated under at least seven different names to navigate the cutthroat mechanics of mid-century recording contracts. We unpack the "Contractual Ghosting" strategy, analyzing his transition from the unglamorous hustle of session work to becoming the secret weapon of Prestige Records. We explore the mechanical "Rhythmic Spectrum," where Evans functioned as both an architectural drafter for Neil Sedaka and an abstract expressionist for Charles Mingus. By examining his role as the "Character Actor" of the rhythm section—tethering the erratic timing of Lightnin’ Hopkins like a hot air balloon—we reveal the friction between analog mastery and the digital revolution. Join us as we navigate the 23-year gap after 1971 and his legacy as a teacher to icons like Bernard Purdy, proving that the invisible architecture of a song relies on the man who refuses to be boxed in.

Key Topics Covered:

  • The Alias Archeology: Analyzing the eight variations of Evans's name used to bypass territorial record label contracts and avoid being blacklisted while moonlighting across rival studios.
  • Rhythmic Language Synthesis: Exploring the porous borders between pristine pop and experimental jazz, where Evans seamlessly switched between metronomic pulse and spontaneous sonic texture.
  • The Telepathic Tether: A look at the "hot air balloon" physics of backing solo bluesmen like Lightnin’ Hopkins, where the rhythm section must anticipate dropped measures in real-time.
  • The "Hey, It's That Guy" Factor: Analyzing the duo of Evans and Gaskin as the ultimate character actors of the 1960s blues world, providing structural integrity without stealing the spotlight.
  • Exponential Tutelage: Exploring Evans’s transition from player to teacher, passing a massive instrumental vocabulary to pupils like Bernard Purdy and shaping the future of drumming.

Source credit: Research for this episode included Wikipedia articles accessed 3/16/2026. Wikipedia text is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0; content here is summarized/adapted in original wording for commentary and educational use.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

pplpodBy pplpod