Diskussion:Grady Tate

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Wie schön, dass der großartige Drummer Grady Tate hier gewürdigt wird! Ich kann gerne noch einige Infos beisteuern.--hwb 14:25, 16. Aug 2006 (CEST)

sind sehr willkommen! -- Toolittle 22:25, 16. Aug 2006 (CEST)

Auszüge aus dem folgenden Text werde ich noch übersetzen und in den Artikel einfügen:

Biography by Richard S. Ginell
Grady Tate is renowned as a session drummer extraordinaire, an expert in the use of the rim shot for syncopating purposes; prized for his driving, pushing, or subtle coaxing of the beat. Yet he has also displayed a warm, flexible, rhythmically agile baritone voice, which, in a reversal of the usual commercial situation, is less well-known than his drumming. He began singing at age four, impressing local Durham, NC, church and school audiences, but quit temporarily when his voice broke at age 12. Self-taught as a drummer at first, he picked up the fundamentals of jazz drumming during his hitch in the Air Force (1951-1955), and arranger Bill Berry made some vocal charts for him there. Upon his discharge, he returned to Durham to study psychology, literature, and theater at North Carolina College, before moving to Washington, D.C., in 1959 to teach high school and take up a musical career with Wild Bill Davis. A move to New York City in 1963 led to a gig with the Quincy Jones big band, and soon he caught on as a recording session drummer. His most famous records as an accompanist were made under the aegis of producer Creed Taylor, for whom he became the house drummer of choice. Tate played on many of Wes Montgomery's and Jimmy Smith's most popular recordings, as well as some by Nat Adderley, Stan Getz, Tony Bennett, Kenny Burrell, Ella Fitzgerald, Benny Goodman, Roland Kirk, Count Basie, Oscar Peterson, Duke Ellington, J.J. Johnson, and Kai Winding, among countless other artists. Arranger Gary McFarland thought enough of Tate's singing voice to record a number of vocal albums for his short-lived Skye label; yet, despite further vocal sessions for Buddah, Janus, Impulse, and a host of Japanese labels, Tate's profile as a singer has not been as high as it could have been. He returned to the American recording scene with 1991's excellent, vocal-only album for Milestone, TNT, where drummer Dennis Mackrel uses many patterns that he learned from Tate. Body and Soul followed a year later, and, in 1999, he resurfaced with Feeling Free. --hwb 21:00, 17. Aug 2006 (CEST)

Auslagerung von Arbeiten als Studiomusiker[Quelltext bearbeiten]

Ich glaube nicht, dass es sehr hilfreich ist, wenn Tates Studiotätigkeit durch eine Aufzählung aller Arbeiten gewürdigt wird (zumal bisher im Artikel darüber seine Tätigkeit als Sänger vernachlässigt wurde). Ich lasse eine Auswahl im Artikel und stelle den Rest hier ein.

Alben als Sideman (Auswahl)
  • Dee Dee Bridgewater: Dear Ella 1997
  • Ray Brown: Much In Common 1964
  • Ray Brown: Ray Brown with Milt Jackson 1965
  • Ray Brown: Don't Forget the Blues 1985
  • Ray Bryant: Up Above the Rock 1968
  • Ray Bryant: Here's Ray Bryant 1976
  • Ray Bryant: All Blues 1978
  • Ray Bryant: Through the Years, Vol. 1 1995
  • Ray Bryant: Through the Years, Vol. 2 1995
  • Kenny Burrell: Guitar Forms 1964
  • Kenny Burrell: A Generation Ago Today 1966/1967
  • Kenny Burrell: Blues - The Common Ground 1967
  • Wild Bill Davis: One More Time 1962
  • Roberta Flack: Killing Me Softly 1973
  • Stan Getz: Sweet Rain 1967
  • Peter Herbolzheimer: Jazz Gala 1976
  • Milt Jackson: Ain't But A Few Of Us Left 1981
  • Hank Jones: Hanky Panky 1975
  • Quincy Jones: Walkin' In Space 1969
  • Quincy Jones: Gula Matari 1970
  • Rahsaan Roland Kirk: Now Please Don’t You Cry, Beautiful Edith 1967
  • Michel Legrand: Recorded Live At Jimmy's 1973
  • Wes Montgomery: Movin' Wes 1964
  • Wes Montgomery: Bumpin' 1965
  • Oliver Nelson: More Blues And The Abstract Truth 1964
  • Oliver Nelson: Sound Pieces 1966
  • New York Jazz Quartet: Blues For Sarka 1978
  • Duke Pearson: The Right Touch 1967
  • Oscar Peterson: The Silent Partner 1979
  • Jerome Richardson: Groove Merchant 1967
  • Lalo Schifrin: The Dissection and reconstruction of music from the past as performed by the inmates of Lalo Schifrin's demented ensemble as a tribute to the memory of the Marquis de Sade 1966
  • Lalo Schifrin: Jazz Meets The Symphony 1992
  • Lalo Schifrin: More Jazz Meets the Symphony 1993
  • Lalo Schifrin: Firebird: Jazz Meets the Symphony No. 3 1995
  • Lalo Schifrin: Return of the Marquis de Sade 2002
  • Lalo Schifrin: Ins and Outs/Lalo Live at the Blue Note 2003
  • Shirley Scott: Roll 'em 1966
  • Zoot Sims: Zoot Sims and the Gershwin Brothers 1975
  • Zoot Sims: Zoot Plays Soprano 1976
  • Jimmy Smith: The Cat 1964
  • Jimmy Smith: Christmas Cookin' 1964
  • Jimmy Smith: Organ Grinder Swing 1965
  • Jimmy Smith: Got My Mojo Workin'/Hoochie Coochie Man 1965/1966
  • Jimmy Smith: Peter and the Wolf 1966
  • Jimmy Smith: Respect 1967
  • Jimmy Smith: Stay Loose 1968
  • Jimmy Smith: The Cat Strikes Again 1980
  • Jimmy Smith: Off the Top 1982
  • Jimmy Smith: Go For Whatcha Know 1986
  • Jimmy Smith: Fourmost 1990
  • Jimmy Smith: Fourmost Return 1990
  • Jimmy Smith/Wes Montgomery: The Dynamic Duo 1966
  • Gábor Szabó: Gypsy '66 1965
  • Stanley Turrentine: Joyride 1965
  • The Manhattan Transfer: Vocalese 1985
  • Simon & Garfunkel: The Concert in Central Park 1982.--Engelbaet (Diskussion) 17:24, 4. Aug. 2012 (CEST)Beantworten