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NEW
YORK (Concord Records) - Jimmy Smith, the Hammond B-3 icon who
creatively revolutionized the instrument in Jazz, died of apparent
natural causes on Tuesday, February 8, at his home in Scottsdale,
Arizona. Funeral arrangements are pending.
"Jimmy was one of the
greatest and most innovative musicians of our time. I love the man and
I love the music. He was my idol, my mentor and my friend," fellow
Hammond B-3 artist and friend, Joey Defrancesco said yesterday.
Born
in Norristown, Pennsylvania on December 8, 1925, Jimmy Smith ruled the
Hammond B-3 organ in the 1950s & 1960s. He turned the instrument
into almost an ensemble itself, fusing R&B, blues, and gospel
influences with bebop references into a jubilant, attractive sound that
many others immediately absorbed before following in his footsteps.
Smith initially learned piano both from his parents and on his own.
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After service in the Navy, in 1948 he studied bass at the Hamilton
School of
Music and piano at Ornstein's School of
Music in
Philadelphia. He began playing the Hammond organ in 1951, and soon
earned a great reputation that followed him to New York, where he
debuted at the Caf� Bohemia. A date at Birdland and then a 1957 Newport
Jazz Festival appearance launched Smith's career. He toured extensively
throughout the 1960s & '70s.
Smith's Blue Note sessions from
1956 to 1963 were extremely influential and are highly recommended.
They included collaborations with Kenny Burrell, Lee Morgan, Lou
Donaldson, Tina Brooks, Jackie McLean, Ike Quebec, and Stanley
Turrentine, among others. Smith also recorded for
Verve from 1963 to
1972, many of them featuring big bands and using fine arrangements from
Oliver Nelson. These included the excellent Walk on the Wild Side.
Jimmy
Smith persevered in times when the Hammond organ seemed like it was
down and out, and reigned as the master of the craft. The authentic
sound of the Hammond still lives on in his prot�g� and good buddy Joey
DeFrancesco. The pair recently recorded a studio album together,
Legacy, to be released on Concord Records February 15. A national tour
was in place for the B-3 soul mates to commence at Yoshi's February
16-20, along with a special Iridium engagement in New York, March
23-27.