Having
basically started my music career as a starving avant-garde jazz drummer, 19
and almost penniless on the streets of New York’s Lower East Side in 1967. Jazz
drummer Norman Connors and I were best friends and roommates for a while, the
difference being he could run home to his momma in Philly to eat and my momma
was way in California. Rent was like 40 dollars a month, and I was lucky if I
had that. Kenny Dorham and Cecil McBee whenever I would see them on the streets
always bought me food. Playing the angry experimental jazz of that era mainly
with saxophonist Sonny Simmons, Pharaoh Sanders and Albert Ayler was definitely
economically dangerous.
I left
Oakland with bassist/percussionist Juma Sultan and first lived in the basement
of singer Richie Havens house and there were cockroaches as big as my kneecap
running around. Juma and I played with many of New York’s cutting edge Jazz
kats including saxophonist Jackie McClean who asked me to join his band but I
was beat down and ready to go home by then. I saw too many musicians doing bad
and too many drugs around. Soon after I left Juma became Jimi Hendrix’s musical
Guru helping Jimi to change the direction of his music. I was back home by then
licking my wounds at my momma’s house. At Juma’s insistence Jimi bought me a
plane ticket to come to Woodstock to play with his new band but I never caught
the plane because I was afraid of Jimi’s music, a right decision at the time
but a big mistake historically.
I soon
recognized that I needed to figure out a better way to make more money if I was
going to stay a musician, so I began writing music with lyrics, something I had
started when I was 15 and stopped when I got out of high school. After high
school I began playing drums in a hippy band called the “Second Coming”. Rock
legend Steve Miller was also in the band and it was soon after that I switched
to jazz. Thank goodness I learned a little piano when I was young. People still
can’t figure out how a jazz drummer writes pop and funk tunes. The jazz
community won’t own me and the funk community won’t own me. I’m caught in the
middle somewhere. My jazz chops are up, however.
A couple of
these songs represent some of my late ‘80s to middle ‘90s musical productions,
updated where I had a chance to work with the late pianist-vocalist Bonnie
Boyer and vocalist-pianist Rosie Gaines who both toured with Prince. I also
recorded Sheila E when she was 15 and you can find that record in Japan
somewhere.
Vocalist
Skyler Jett, who also showed up at my house ambitious at age 15 continues to
have an illustrious career and also took Lionel Richie’s place for a few gigs
with the Commodores. Skyler is featured with Bonnie on a duet called “The
Newsroom”, and that’s me doing the news broadcast on the tune. I had to get in
where I could fit in. KCSM disc jockey and TV personality Sonny Buxton was paid
to do the original news broadcast, my friend who never invited me to be in his
Bay Area jazz picture that hangs at San Francisco’s main library. Everybody I
ever played with was in it. I did enjoy playing at his Milestone’s Jazz club
many times in a band with John Handy and pianist Bill Bell. God knows how many
thousands of hours I spent playing in San Francisco jazz clubs many with Bobby
Hutcherson, Merl Saunders, Woody Shaw, Alice Coltrane, Harold Land and Eddie
Henderson, the list goes on. My voice over on “Newsroom” turned out pretty
good. Anyway, Skyler Jett currently has a new single out entitled “Eternally”
featuring him and soprano sax icon Kenny G that is real cool. —
Also,
third-year “American Idol” finalist LaToya London — who everyone from the Bay
thought should have won the damn thang — sings two cuts and is also featured on
the title track along with Donnie, Bonnie and Rosie, called “A Beautiful
Heart”. The song also features another Prince bandmate, Levi Seacer Jr., on
guitar, Nelson Braxton of the Braxton Brother’s who currently is in Michael
Bolton’s band is on bass, and Michael Jackson’s last guitarist, Tommy Oregon,
is the groove master on the track. The late Donald Tavie who was “lakesides”
pianist is playing the keys, plus Lori Taylor, who is now sadly in a permanent
coma suffered during childbirth, sings on the hook. Former Qwest recording
artist and Wynton Marsalis bandmate Robert Stewart takes a mean sax solo.
I am also
showcasing what I believe to be Rosie’s first professional recording from 1981,
a song titled “Summer Sky.” The song sounds like it could have been a hit back
when I cut it. I should have put it on the market way back then. (No wonder I’m
broke!) Rosie’s song is the bonus track at the end of the record and features
Ray Obiedo on guitar.
Of course,
the greatest unsung vocal hero of the Bay area, third-year “American Idol”
finalist Donnie Williams, is the main featured vocalist on seven of the 14
tracks. This is my fourth musical collaboration with him.
“Precious
Song” is the only Gospel song on my record. It is sung and arranged by church
pianist Robert Collier, with added vocals by Donnie Williams. Sax man Vincent
Lars, who plays unbelievably on the song, should have been famous a long time
ago. The song was inspired and is dedicated to Reverend Jay Matthews who is
currently the presiding Rector at the “Cathedral of Christ the Light” Oakland
Ca.
Lastly would
like to thank my Godson Derick Hughes a member of my seventies Bang CBS
recording group “Bridge” for his great vocal arrangement of “ Sweet and
Wonderful” a song he co-wrote with Bridge keyboardist Michael (Spiderman)
Robinson while both were members of the Bridge band. Derick is currently the
lead male vocalist with Roberta Flack and also spent time recording with Motown
& Prince in the 80’s. Spiderman is now one of the most sought after
keyboardist in the bay area.
I love these
songs. Some are freshly cut and others are old tracks that were updated and
newly arranged by two Bay Area musical geniuses Bassist Nelson Braxton and
Guitarist Levi Seacer Jr. I am so proud to be able to put my name on such a
lovely work o art. My daddy would be proud of me.