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		Though he never received any exaggerated title like the king of soul 
          jazz, Jimmy Smith certainly ruled the Hammond organ in the '50s and 
          '60s. He revolutionized the instrument, showing it could be creatively 
          used in a jazz context and popularized in the process. His Blue Note 
          sessions from 1956 to 1963 were extremely influential and are highly 
          recommended. Jimmy Smith turned the organ into almost an ensemble itself. 
          He provided walking bass lines with his feet, left hand chordal accompaniment, 
          solo lines in the right and a booming, funky presence that punctuated 
          every song, particulary the uptempo cuts. Jimmy Smith turned the fusion of 
          R&B, blues and gospel influences with bebop references and devices into 
          a jubilant, attractive sound that many others immediately absorbed before 
          following in his footsteps. Jimmy Smith initially learned piano, both from 
          his parents and on his own. He attended the Hamilton School of Music 
          in 1948, and Ornstein School of Music in 1949 and 1950 in Philadelphia. 
          Jimmy Smith began playing the Hammond in 1951, and soon earned a great reputation 
          that followed him to New York, where he debuted at the Cafe Bohemia. 
          A Birdland date and 1957 Newport Jazz Festival appearance launched Jimmy Smith's 
          career. He toured extensively through the '60s and '70s. His Blue Note 
          recordings included superb collaborations with Kenny Burrell, Lee Morgan, 
          Lou Donaldson, Tina Brooks, Jackie McLean, Ike Quebec and Stanley Turrentine 
          among others. He also did several trio recordings, some which were a 
          little bogged down by the excess length of some selections. Jimmy Smith scored 
          more hit albums on 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. 
          But Verve went to the well once too often seeking crossover dollars, 
          loading down Jimmy Smith's late '60s album with hack rock covers. His '70s 
          output was quite spotty, though Jimmy Smith didn't stop touring, visiting 
          Israel and Europe in 1974 and 1975. He and his wife opened a club in 
          Los Angeles in the mid-'70s. Jimmy Smith resumed touring in the early '80s, 
          returning to New York in 1982 and 1983. He resigned with Blue Note in 
          1985, and has done more representative dates for them and Milestone 
          in the '90s. -- Ron Wynn and Bob Porter
         
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