About

This Bio outlines a bit about my musical evolution and the path that has gotten me to where I am today. As things progress I’ll post more links to my music online, for now it is only live performances.

Evan Kepner was born and raised in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. He started on the piano at age 8, and at the age of 14 began playing the electric bass in a punk-rock band (spikes and bright colored hair included). Three years later after dabbling with a multitude of high-school bands and styles he began playing consistently in the Jim McRedmond Trio, a Lemoyne PA based jazz group. He continued to play with the trio after moving to Pittsburgh to study neuroscience at the University of Pittsburgh, and started playing in “Once by the Pacific,” a slow-groove indie band working the local Pittsburgh scene. After graduation he served for two years in South Africa as a member of the Peace Corps, which “… is where I put in the time and fell in love with the bass… I spent a full year playing an old fretless bass guitar with no amplifier in a village, dedicated to learning jazz theory, harmonic structure and function, as well as playing techniques.” When he came back, he rekindled playing jazz at a whole new level with guitarist Tony Grigonis playing restaurant gigs and open jams.

Currently Evan lives in Cleveland OH where he works as a  solution engineer and network engineering manager for a technology firm assisting  businesses with their infrastructure and technology needs. He contributes bass related written pieces to NoTreble.com, runs LearnTheLowEnd.com and studies classical upright bass under Dr. Kathleen Horvath of Case Western Reserve University. He has traded in the bright hair color for bright tattoos, is an all-around computer geek, seeker of eclectic and unusual music, and is working on original compositions using both the upright bass and bass guitar. While he pulls inspiration from almost any source, he considers himself to be heavily influenced by Victor Wooten, Les Claypool, Andrew Burashko, Stanley Clarke and Justin Chancellor. His car currently has “Fungi and Foe” “Eat me Drink me” “Moon Germs” “Bulls on Parade” “Extraction” and “A Healthy Distrust” in the CD-changer.

One response

1 01 2010
Marcia Sloane

Dear Evan,
Enjoyed your article on ear-training at the Discmakers website. If you are interested I would be happy to send you (gratis) my CD Cello Drones for Tuning and Improvisation. Whether singing or playing an instrument, you can palpably feel the frequency relationships of the different intervals with the cello drones. You can read about the CD at NavarroRiverMusic.com and If you would like a copy send me your mailing address.
Best wishes for the new year,
Marcia Sloane
NavarroRiverMusic.com

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