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THE KING OF THE HAMMOND ORGAN 

              

I would like to thank all of my fans for visiting my site and sending me your good thoughts and blessings.  I will be celebrating my 70th birthday this year and I hope that I can. in some way, touch each and everyone's heart.  I hope you come and celebrate with me where ever I will be appearing.  I am happy to have made it this far and I am hoping that I will be able to continue to please you with my music.  God bless each and every one of you.

Jimmy

 

                                

                                    

                                     

                                 

                                                           

                                   

                                  

                                                          

All Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review: 5 out of 5 stars

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:

5 out of 5 stars It doen't get any better than this folks -, December 18, 1999
Reviewer:   W. Flannery (Berkeley, CA) - See all my reviews
This album features two of the best blues sax men to ever pick up horns, David 'Fathead' Newman, and Rusty Bryant. On this album, both are in top form. Of the two, Bryant is the more traditional player. He plays straight out of the blues idiom with a fat heavily nuanced sound that brings the blues right to you with the first note he blows. Fathead played with Ray Charles during Charles' phenomenal early years. He knows the traditional blues, and he plays a sophisticated harmonic angle that is totally his own and is as right as it gets.

I've spent a lot of time listening to the cut 'BGO'. It's a blues and features a tenor battle between Bryant and Fathead. Bryant leads off with a fine twisting solo, but Fathead comes in playing his off angle arpeggios with ferocious drive and precision, so, you expect that Bryant will have to fold. Instead Bryant comes back with some screeches that sound like a cat having its tail stepped on, and he ices Fathead. Chalk up one for the old school.

The tune 'Hittin the Jug' is a slow Bb blues. The sine qua non of the tenor sax. Both players play fine solos, but Fathead's is extraordinary. My favorite moment follows his third lick, when he runs down to the lowest note on the horn, and a sister in the studio is heard to say 'yeah'. Just like when he played for Ray.

The rhythm section is absolutely fine. Bernard Purdie on drums, with Jimmy McGriff handling the organ and bass.

 

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Jimmy McGriff's Web Page
Contact Info.
Margaret McGriff
Phone: 
609-332-5708- 5 PM-8 PM EST

Email: marmcgriff44@yahoo.com

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Here is the new CD.  Please call 609-332-5708 to order.  Thank you.