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While highly regarded in soul jazz circles,
Stanley Turrentine is one of the finest tenor saxophonists in any style
in modern times. He excels at uptempo compositions, in jam sessions, interpretating
standards, playing the blues or on ballads. His rich, booming and huge
tone, with its strong swing influence, is one of the most striking of
any tenor stylist, and during the '70s and '80s made otherwise horrendous
mood music worth enduring.
To give you an idea where Turrentine is coming from: Early on, he toured
with the R&B band of Lowell Fulson (1950-1951) whose featured pianist
at the time was a young Ray Charles. From 1953-1954 he worked with Earl
Bostic (perhaps the greatest R&B sax player of all time), where he
replaced John Coltrane. He also worked and cut his first albums with Max
Roach (1959-1960). Turrentine started recording as a leader on Blue Note
in 1959 and 1960, while also participating in some landmark Jimmy Smith
sessions such as Midnight Special, Back at the Chicken Shack and Prayer
Meeting.
His decade plus association with Shirley Scott was both professional
and personal, as they were married most of the time they were also playing
together. They frequently recorded, with the featured leader's name often
depending on the session's label affiliation. When they divorced and split
musically in the early '70s, Turrentine became a crossover star on CTI.
Several of his CTI, Fantasy, Elektra and Blue Note albums in the '70s
and '80s made the charts. Though their jazz content became proportionally
lower, Turrentine's playing remained consistently superb. He returned
to straight ahead and soul jazz in the '80s, cutting more albums for Fantasy
and Elektra, then returning to Blue Note. He's currently on the Musicmasters
label. Almost anything Turrentine's recorded, even albums with Stevie
Wonder cover songs, are worth hearing for his solos. Many of his classic
dates, as well as recent material, is available on CD.
Turrentine is an original, a one-of-a-kind. He does not fit neatly into
ordinary jazz categories. What makes Turrentine great is his deep love
of the roots of jazz ˜ blues and groove music. He never abandoned
these roots to join the more cerebral set of jazz soloists. His recording
partnership with Jimmy Smith has given us some of the finest funk groove
music of all time, a high-water mark for both artists. This man likes
to groove and play funky music! He won't be tamed!
Dudley Williams, a reviewer for Bluenote proclaimed, "The Turrentine
tenor displays none of the weak-kneed and frazzle-buttocked bleatings
of many tenor sax deviates, but relies on the truly large tone of the
big tenor sounds of the old masters. " Stanley Turrentine continued
playing to enthusiastic audiences right up until the end. Turrentine suffered
a massive stroke in early September of 2000, and died less than a week
later on September 12.
This Biography was written by Richard C. Walls
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