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Tag Archives: Les McCann

Herbie Lewis

Herbie Lewis towers among the top bassists from the hard bop period, adding to seminal periods headlined by McCoy Tyner, Les McCann, and Jackie McLean. Blessed Feb 17, 1941, in Pasadena, CA, Lewis was raised alongside potential jazz icon Bobby Hutcherson, and regarding to star he was in charge of …

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The Mastersounds

Vibraphonist Friend Montgomery and electric powered bassist Monk Montgomery (1921-1982) came collectively to create the Mastersounds (a melodic and easy hearing bop group) with pianist Richie Crabtree and drummer Benny Barth in 1957. The music group captured on for a couple of years, cutting ten information in four years for …

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Ron Jefferson

Drummer Ron Jefferson was fixture from the postwar NEW YORK bop panorama, collaborating with giants which range from Lester Adolescent to Coleman Hawkins. Created in ny on Feb 13, 1926, Jefferson start his career like a faucet dancer before embracing drums, touring and documenting having a who’s who of bebop …

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Joe Sample

Among the many jazzmen who all started out using hard bop but went electric powered through the fusion period, Joe Test was, in the later ’50s, a founding person in the Jazz Crusaders along with trombonist Wayne Henderson, tenor saxman Wilton Felder, and drummer Stix Hooper. The Crusaders’ debts to …

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Gene Harris

Perhaps one of the most accessible of most jazz pianists, Gene Harris’ soulful design (influenced by Oscar Peterson and containing the blues-iness of the Junior Mance) was immediately likable and predictably excellent. After playing within an Military music group (1951-1954), he produced a trio with bassist Andy Simpkins and drummer …

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The Lewis Sisters

Helen and Kay Lewis’, two sisters from Michigan, brands cropped through to Motown albums plus some one produces in the ’60s, such as for example Gladys Knight & the Pips’ “Just Walk in my own Shoes or boots.” But their professions didn’t start at Motown, rather, in the ’50s as …

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Paul Humphrey

A longtime session drummer who hardly ever emerged being a star in jazz circles, Paul Humphrey and his Great Aid Chemists had a brief stay static in the limelight when his one “Great Aid” managed to get in to the R&B Top 20 in 1971. Humphrey and his group actually …

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Zachary Breaux

Inspired by George Benson and Wes Montgomery, Zachary Breaux was a flexible guitarist who could deal with soul-jazz, post-bop, and hard bop in addition to more commercial pop-jazz and NAC music. Although jazzman only documented a small number of albums — including 1992’s Groovin’ and 1994’s Laidback, both on NYC, …

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Brian Jackson

Maker, composer, and musician Brian Jackson collaborated with Gil Scott-Heron on several influential and popular ’70s produces. The two fulfilled at Lincoln College or university, and later on teamed on such tracks as “The Container,” “H20 Gate Blues,” and “Johannesburg,” that was their most effective commercial solitary. Jackson later do …

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