the native word for vespers, Old English æfensang; see even (n.) + song.
Entries linking to evensong
even n.
"end of the day," Old English æfen, Mercian efen, Northumbrian efern (see eve (n.)).
song n.
"musical or rhythmic vocal utterance," Old English sang "voice, vocal music, song, art of singing; metrical composition adapted for singing, psalm, poem," from Proto-Germanic *songwho- (source also of Old Norse söngr, Norwegian song, Swedish sång, Old Saxon, Danish, Old Frisian, Old High German, German sang, Middle Dutch sanc, Dutch zang, Gothic saggws), from PIE *songwh-o- "singing, song," from *sengwh- "to sing, make an incantation" (see sing (v.)).
Of the musical call of some birds from late Old English. Middle English had songly "worthy of song" (mid-14c.). The colloquial phrase for a song "for a trifle, for little or nothing" is from "All's Well" III.ii.9 (the identical image, por du son, is in Old French). With a song in (one's) heart "feeling joy" is attested by 1930 in Lorenz Hart's lyric. Song and dance as a form of stage act is attested from 1872; the figurative sense of "rigmarole" is by 1895.