Jazz Blues News mourns the loss of Philly native jazz icon Benny Golson, after it was reported today that he has passed away at the age of 95.
An incomparable musician, composer, and arranger, it is hard to imagine what the jazz world would be like today without his contributions over a near 70-year career.
Golson was born in Philadelphia in 1929, and grew up surrounded by a vibrant musical community, going to sessions and practicing from the time he was a teen with musicians like John Coltrane and the Heath Brothers.
Throughout the ‘50s, he joined different bands led by the likes of Tadd Dameron, Lionel Hampton, and Dizzy Gillespie, but one of the biggest early career moments for him occurred in 1955 when his friend John Coltrane brought Golson’s tune “Stablemates” to a session led by Miles Davis.
This led to Miles recording the tune, which was released on the 1956 album: “Miles: The New Miles Davis Quintet”. Over his career, Benny Golson wrote many other compositions that have become an essential part of the jazz standard repertoire.
His work with Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers and the Jazztet (which he founded with Art Farmer) remain today some of the most influential recordings made in jazz, and are a testament to his inimitable and special voice as an improviser, composer, arranger, and creative director.
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