Hank Crawford  

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 +'''Bennie Ross "Hank" Crawford, Jr.''' (21 December 1934 – 29 January 2009) was an [[United States|American]] [[rhythm and blues|R&B]], [[hard bop]], [[jazz-funk]], [[soul jazz]] alto saxophonist, arranger and [[songwriter]]. Crawford was musical director for [[Ray Charles]] before embarking on a solo career, during which he released many well-regarded albums for jazz record labels [[CTI Records]] and then [[Milestone Records]].
-'''James Harrell McGriff''' (April 3, 1936—May 24, 2008) was an [[United States|American]] [[hard bop]] and [[soul-jazz]] [[organist]] and [[organ trio]] [[bandleader]] who developed a distinctive style of playing the Hammond B-3 organ. 
-==Biography==+==Discography==
-===Early years and influences===+===As leader===
-Born in [[Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|Germantown]], [[Pennsylvania]], McGriff started playing [[piano]] at the age of five and by his teens had also learned to play [[Vibraphone|vibes]], [[alto sax]], [[drum]]s and [[upright bass]]. His first group was as bassist in a piano trio. When he joined the [[United States Army]], McGriff served as an [[Military police|MP]] during the [[Korean War]] and he later became a [[police officer]] in Philadelphia for two years.+{| cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" border="0"
 +|- style="background:#ffdead;"
 +! align="left" style="border-bottom:1px solid grey; border-top:1px solid grey;" | Year
 +! align="left" style="border-bottom:1px solid grey; border-top:1px solid grey;" | Title
 +! align="left" style="border-bottom:1px solid grey; border-top:1px solid grey;" | Label
 +|-
 +|1960
 +|''[[More Soul]]''
 +|Atlantic
 +|-
 +|1961
 +|''The Soul Clinic''
 +|Atlantic
 +|-
 +|1962
 +|''From the Heart''
 +|Atlantic
 +|-
 +|1963
 +|''Soul of the Ballad''
 +|Atlantic
 +|-
 +|1964
 +|''True Blue''
 +|Atlantic
 +|-
 +|1965
 +|''Dig These Blues''
 +|Atlantic
 +|-
 +|1966
 +|''After Hours''
 +|Atlantic
 +|-
 +|1967
 +|''Mr. Blues''
 +|Atlantic
 +|-
 +|1968
 +|''Double Cross''
 +|Atlantic
 +|-
 +|1969
 +|''Mr. Blues Plays Lady Soul''
 +|Atlantic
 +|-
 +|1971
 +|''Help Me Make it Through the Night''
 +|Kudu/CTI Records
 +|-
 +|1972
 +|''We Got a Good Thing''
 +|Kudu
 +|-
 +|1973
 +|''Wildflower''
 +|Kudu
 +|-
 +|1974
 +|''Don't You Worry 'Bout A Thing''
 +|Kudu
 +|-
 +|1975
 +|''I Hear A Symphony''
 +|[[Kudu Records]]
 +|-
 +|1976
 +|''Hank Crawford's Back''
 +|[[Kudu Records]]
 +|-
 +|1977
 +|''Tico Rico''
 +|[[Kudu Records]]
 +|-
 +|1978
 +|''Cajun Sunrise''
 +|Kudu
 +|-
 +|1982
 +|''[[Midnight Ramble (album)|Midnight Ramble]]''
 +|[[Milestone Records]]
 +|-
 +|1983
 +|''Indigo Blue''
 +|Milestone
 +|-
 +|1986
 +|''Mr. Chips''
 +|Milestone
 +|-
 +|1987
 +|''Steppin' Up''
 +|Milestone
 +|-
 +|1989
 +|''Night Beat''
 +|Milestone
 +|-
 +|1989
 +|''On the Blue Side''
 +|Milestone
 +|-
 +|1990
 +|''Groove Master''
 +|Milestone
 +|-
 +|1990
 +|''Bossa International''
 +|Milestone
 +|-
 +|1993
 +|''South Central''
 +|Milestone
 +|-
 +|1996
 +|''Tight''
 +|Milestone
 +|-
 +|1997
 +|''Road Tested''
 +|Milestone
 +|-
 +|1998
 +|''After Dark''
 +|Milestone
 +|-
 +|2000
 +|''The World of Hank Crawford''
 +|Milestone
 +|-
 +|2001
 +|''The Best of Hank Crawford and Jimmy McGriff''
 +|Milestone
 +|-
 +|2004
 +|''It's a Funky Thing to Do''
 +|Atlantic
 +|-
 +|2007
 +|''Back''
 +|King
 +|}
-Music kept drawing McGriff's attention away from the police force. His childhood friend, organist [[Jimmy Smith (musician)|Jimmy Smith]], had begun earning a substantial reputation in jazz for his [[Blue Note records]] (the two played together once in 1967) and McGriff became entranced by the organ sound while [[Richard "Groove" Holmes]] played at his sister's wedding. Holmes went on to become McGriff's teacher and friend and they recorded together on two occasions in 1973 for two [[Groove Merchant]] records.+===As sideman===
- +'''With [[Ray Charles]]'''
-McGriff bought his first [[Hammond B-3]] organ in 1956, spent six months learning the instrument, then studied at New York's [[Juilliard School]]. He also studied privately with [[Milt Buckner]], [[Jimmy Smith (musician)|Jimmy Smith]], and [[Sonny Gatewood]]. He was influenced by the energy and dynamics of organist [[Milt Buckner]] and the diplomatic aplomb of [[Count Basie]], and by local pianists such as Howard Whaley and pianist Austin Mitchell.+*''[[Ray Charles at Newport]]'' (1958)
- +*''[[What'd I Say (album)|What'd I Say]]'' (1959)
-===1960s: First combos===+*''[[Ray Charles in Person]]'' (1959)
-McGriff formed a combo that played around Philadelphia and often featured [[tenor saxophonist]] [[Charles Earland]] (who soon switched permanently to organ, and became one of the instrument's renowned performers). During this time, McGriff also accompanied such artists as [[Don Gardner]], [[Arthur Prysock]], [[Candido]] and [[Carmen McRae]], who came through town for local club dates.+*''[[Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music]]'' (1962)
- +'''With [[Eric Clapton]]'''
-In 1961, McGriff's trio was offered the chance to record an instrumental version of [[Ray Charles]]' hit "[[I've Got a Woman]]" by Joe Lederman's Jell Records, a small independent label. When the record received substantial local airplay, [[Juggy Murray]]'s [[Sue Records|Sue]] label picked it up and recorded a full album of McGriff's trio, released in 1962. The album also turned out another huge hit in McGriff's "All About My Girl", establishing McGriff's credentials as a fiery blues-based organist, well-versed in [[Gospel music|gospel]], [[Soul music|soul]] and "fatback groove".+*''[[Journeyman (album)|Journeyman]]'' (1989)
- +'''With [[Grant Green]]'''
-McGriff recorded a series of popular albums for the Sue label between 1962 and 1965, ending with what still stands as one of his finest examples of blues-based jazz, ''Blues for Mister Jimmy''. When producer [[Sonny Lester]] started his [[Solid State Records (jazz label)|Solid State]] record label in 1966, he recruited McGriff to be his star attraction. Lester framed McGriff in many different groups, performing a wide variety of styles and giving the organist nearly unlimited opportunities to record. McGriff was heard everywhere from an all-star tribute to [[Count Basie]]; ''The Big Band'', a series of organ and blues band records such as ''A Thing to Come By'' (1969), pop hits ("Cherry", "The Way You Look Tonight") and funk classics (''Electric Funk'' and singles such as "The Worm" and "Step 1").+*''[[Easy (Grant Green album)|Easy]]'' (1978)
- +'''With [[B.B. King]]'''
-During this time, McGriff performed at clubs and concert halls worldwide. He settled in [[Newark, New Jersey|Newark]], [[New Jersey]], and eventually opened his own supper club, the Golden Slipper - where he recorded ''Black Pearl'' and a live album, ''Love Ain’t Nothin’ But A Business Goin’ On'' with [[Junior Parker]] in 1971. Beginning in 1969, he also performed regularly with [[Buddy Rich]]'s band, though the two were only recorded once together in 1974 on ''The Last Blues Album Volume 1''.+*''[[There Must Be a Better World Somewhere]]'' (1981)
- +*''[[Let the Good Times Roll (album)|Let the Good Times Roll]]'' (1999)
-===1970s-1980s===+'''With [[Janis Siegel (singer)|Janis Siegel]]'''
-McGriff "retired" from the music industry in 1972 to start a horse farm in Connecticut. But Sonny Lester's new record company, [[Groove Merchant]], kept issuing McGriff records at a rate of three or four a year. By 1973, McGriff was touring relentlessly and actively recording again. Around this time, [[disco]] was gaining a hold in jazz music and McGriff's flexibility proved infallible.<ref name="go" /> He produced some of his best music during this period: ''Stump Juice'' (1975), ''Red Beans'' (1976) and ''Outside Looking In'' (1978). These albums still stand out today as excellent documents of McGriff's organ playing.<ref name="ALLMUSIC" />+*''The Tender Trap'' (Monarch, 1999)
- +
-By 1980, McGriff broke away from Sonny Lester and began working actively with producer [[Bob Porter]] (and recording engineer [[Rudy Van Gelder]]). McGriff began a long relationship with [[Fantasy Records]]' Milestone label, collaborating with [[Rusty Bryant]], [[Al Grey]], [[Red Holloway]], [[David "Fathead" Newman]], [[Frank Wess]] and [[Eric Alexander (jazz saxophonist)|Eric Alexander]].+
- +
-In 1986, McGriff started a popular partnership with alto saxophone player [[Hank Crawford]]. Their partnership yielded 1987's ''Soul Survivors'' and 1997's ''Road Tested''. But it was only during their brief period at [[Telarc International Corporation|Telarc]] in the mid 1990s that McGriff's name headlined the popular club and cruise ship attraction.+
- +
-===1990s-2000s===+
-Between 1994 and 1998, McGriff also experimented with the [[Hammond XB-3]], an organ [[synthesizer]] that increased the organ's capabilities with [[MIDI]] enhancements.<ref name="go" /> This gave McGriff an unnatural synthesized sound, which probably explains his retreat from the instrument on late recordings such as 2000's ''McGriff's House Party'' (featuring fellow organist [[Dr. Lonnie Smith (musician)|Lonnie Smith]]). ''House Party'' did include the use of the XB-3; however, he did not use the [[Musical Instrument Digital Interface|MIDI functions]].+
- +
-McGriff was one of the first B3 players to add MIDI to the upper keyboard his personal B3 to add and extend "his sound" beyond just the drawbar sound of the B3. He incorporated synthesizers in his live performances as he liked vibes, piano, string, brass and other sounds that could only be created by a synthesizer and which the classic B3 cannot provide. Jimmy purchased the XB-3 as he had more control over the MIDI functions, and the XB-3 weighs about half of the classic B3, which made it easier to move.+
- +
-Jimmy, as well as [[Richard Holmes (organist)|Groove Holmes]], spent a great deal of time experimenting and modifying their B3's and [[Leslie speaker]]s over the years. Some of these modifications made their way into products manufactured by both Hammond and Leslie, for which they did not always receive credit.+
- +
-Along with the [[soul-jazz]] sound, McGriff experienced renewed popularity in the mid-1990s, forming The Dream Team group, which featured [[David "Fathead" Newman]] (a longtime saxophonist with [[Ray Charles]]) and drummer [[Bernard Purdie]], and recording the ''Straight Up'' (1998), ''McGriff's House Party'' (2000), ''Feelin' It'' (2001), and ''McGriff Avenue'' (2002) albums.+
- +
-On March 29, 2008, McGriff was given a last private concert by "Mr. B3" Bill Dilks and Grant Macavoy in his honor in Voorhees, New Jersey. Dilks brought his B3 and played for McGriff his wife Margaret, their guests, and the folks at Genesis HealthCare. As Dilks said, "The Hammond reaches its players far beyond where the conscious mind lives".+
- +
-A resident of [[Voorhees Township, New Jersey|Voorhees Township]], [[New Jersey]], McGriff died there at age 72 on May 24, 2008, due to complications of [[multiple sclerosis]].<ref>Ratliff, Ben. [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C0DE0DE103AF93BA15756C0A96E9C8B63 "Jimmy McGriff, 72, Jazz and Blues Organist"], ''[[The New York Times]]'', May 28, 2008. Accessed March 17, 2011. "Jimmy McGriff, who since the early 1960s was one of the most popular jazz and blues organists, died on Saturday in Voorhees, N.J. He was 72 and lived in Voorhees."</ref>+
- +
-==Discography==+
-*''I've Got a Woman'', Sue, 1963+
-*''One of Mine'', Sue, 1963+
-*''Jimmy McGriff at the Apollo'', Sue, 1963+
-*''Christmas With McGriff'', Sue, 1964+
-*''Jimmy McGriff at the Organ'', Sue, 1964+
-*''Topkapi'', Sue, 1964+
-*''Blues for Mister Jimmy'', Sue, 1965+
-*''The Big Band of Jimmy McGriff'', Solid State, 1966+
-*''Cherry'', Solid State, 1966+
-*''A Bag Full of Soul'', Solid State, 1966+
-*''A Bag Full of Blues'', Solid State, 1967+
-*''I've Got a New Woman'', Solid State, 1967+
-*''The Worm'', Solid State, 1968+
-*''Honey'', Solid State, 1968+
-*''Step 1'', Solid State, 1969+
-*''A Thing to Come By'', Solid State, 1969+
-*''[[Electric Funk]]'', Blue Note, 1969+
-*''[[Something to Listen To (Jimmy McGriff album)|Something to Listen To]]'', Blue Note, 1970+
-*''[[Black Pearl (Jimmy McGriff album)|Black Pearl]]'', Blue Note, 1971+
-*''Good Things Don't Happen Everyday'', Groove Merchant, 1971+
-*''Groove Grease'', Groove Merchant, 1971+
-*''Black and Blues'', Groove Merchant, 1971+
-*''Soul Sugar'', Capitol, 1971+
-*''Let's Stay Together'', Groove Merchant, 1972+
-*''Fly Dude'', Groove Merchant, 1972+
-*''Giants of the Organ Come Together'', Groove Merchant, 1973+
-*''The Main Squeeze'', Groove Merchant, 1974+
-*''Stump Juice'', Groove Merchant'', Groove Merchant, 1975+
-*''The Mean Machine'', Groove Merchant, 1976 Feat. Joe Thomas+
-*''Red Beans'', Groove Merchant, 1976+
-*''Tailgunner'', Lester Radio Corp. 1977+
-*''Outside Looking In'', Lester Radio Corp. 1978+
-*''City Lights'', Jazz America, 1980+
-*''Movin' Upside the Blues'', JAM, 1980+
-*''The Groover'', JAM, 1982+
-*''Countdown'', Milestone, 1983+
-*''Skywalk'', Milestone, 1984+
-*''State of the Art'', Milestone, 1985+
-*''Soul Survivors'', Milestone, 1986 with Hank Crawford+
-*''The Starting Five'', Milestone, 1986+
-*''Steppin' Up'', Milestone, 1987 with Hank Crawford+
-*''Blue to the Bone'', Milestone, 1988+
-*''On the Blue Side'', Milestone, 1989 with Hank Crawford+
-*''You Ought To Think About Me'', Headfirst, 1990+
-*''In A Blue Mood'', Headfirst, 1991+
-*''Right Turn on Blues'', Telarc, 1994 with Hank Crawford+
-*''Blues Groove'', Telarc, 1995 with Hank Crawford+
-*''The Dream Team'', Milestone, 1996 Feat. David 'Fathead' Newman+
-*''Charles Earland's Jazz Organ Summit'', Cannonball, 1997+
-*''Road Tested'', Milestone, 1997 with Hank Crawford+
-*''Straight Up'', Milestone, 1998 Feat. David 'Fathead' Newman+
-*''Crunch Time'', Milestone, 1999 with Hank Crawford+
-*''McGriff's House Party'', Milestone, 1999 Feat. Dr. Lonnie Smith+
-*''Feelin' It'', Milestone, 2000+
-*''McGriff Avenue'', Milestone, 2001+
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Bennie Ross "Hank" Crawford, Jr. (21 December 1934 – 29 January 2009) was an American R&B, hard bop, jazz-funk, soul jazz alto saxophonist, arranger and songwriter. Crawford was musical director for Ray Charles before embarking on a solo career, during which he released many well-regarded albums for jazz record labels CTI Records and then Milestone Records.


Discography

As leader

Year Title Label
1960 More Soul Atlantic
1961 The Soul Clinic Atlantic
1962 From the Heart Atlantic
1963 Soul of the Ballad Atlantic
1964 True Blue Atlantic
1965 Dig These Blues Atlantic
1966 After Hours Atlantic
1967 Mr. Blues Atlantic
1968 Double Cross Atlantic
1969 Mr. Blues Plays Lady Soul Atlantic
1971 Help Me Make it Through the Night Kudu/CTI Records
1972 We Got a Good Thing Kudu
1973 Wildflower Kudu
1974 Don't You Worry 'Bout A Thing Kudu
1975 I Hear A Symphony Kudu Records
1976 Hank Crawford's Back Kudu Records
1977 Tico Rico Kudu Records
1978 Cajun Sunrise Kudu
1982 Midnight Ramble Milestone Records
1983 Indigo Blue Milestone
1986 Mr. Chips Milestone
1987 Steppin' Up Milestone
1989 Night Beat Milestone
1989 On the Blue Side Milestone
1990 Groove Master Milestone
1990 Bossa International Milestone
1993 South Central Milestone
1996 Tight Milestone
1997 Road Tested Milestone
1998 After Dark Milestone
2000 The World of Hank Crawford Milestone
2001 The Best of Hank Crawford and Jimmy McGriff Milestone
2004 It's a Funky Thing to Do Atlantic
2007 Back King

As sideman

With Ray Charles

With Eric Clapton

With Grant Green

With B.B. King

With Janis Siegel

  • The Tender Trap (Monarch, 1999)




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