Bios
of the Funk Brothers
KEYBOARDISTS
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Earl
Van Dyke - A veteran of the late '50s and early
'60s Chitlin' Circuit, Earl migrated to Motown in late 1962
after having toured with Aretha Franklin and Lloyd
("Mr. Personality") Price. Within no time, the
musical sophistication and aggressive keyboard style he
brought with him made Earl an integral part of "The
Motown Sound." Hitsville's Steinway often had to be
reconditioned after Earl played on a session because of the
passion and force with which he attacked the keys.
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Arrangers and
producers looked upon him as a hub through which they could
convey their ideas to Hitsville's studio musicians. Motown's
management viewed him as the unofficial bandleader because -
apart from his talent as a keyboardist - he always knew
where to find the Funk Brothers and get them into the
studio. This was no small feat when trying to control James
Jamerson, Benny Benjamin and some of the Funk Brothers'
other more "colorful" personalities. When Motown's
"Golden Era" ended in Detroit, Earl hooked up with
Freda ("Band Of Gold") Payne and toured the world
with her throughout the remaining years of the 1970s before
returning home to teach music in the Detroit public school
system.
Born: Detroit,
MI in the early 1930s (died 1992)
Nicknames:
Chunk Of Funk, Ookie, Big Funk
Musical
Influences: Tommy Flanagan, Hank Jones, Barry Harris
Instruments
Played: : Steinway grand piano, Hammond B-3 organ, Wurlitzer
electric piano, Fender Rhodes, toy piano
Greatest
Performances: "Ain't Too Proud To Beg," "My
Guy," "For Once In My Life"
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Joe
Hunter - Motown's first bandleader, Joe left Hank
Ballard and the Midnighters to join Berry Gordy's fledgling
recording operation in 1958. A self-described
"boogie-woogie" piano player, Joe's keyboard style
set the "down home," rootsy feel on most of the
company's early twist, doo-wop, and blues influenced
recordings. During this period of musical simplicity and
small orchestrations, Joe's arranging talents often came
into play during the recording sessions.
One of his favorite
and most painful memories was playing on the ill-fated
"Way Over There" session for the Miracles in which
an engineer accidentally erased the tape after Berry Gordy
had made the studio musicians take the song thirty-two
times. Gone from the company by the end of 1963, Joe's
influence nevertheless continued to resound throughout
Motown's Detroit era in the musical tone he set, and in the
cornerstone musicians he helped Berry Gordy recruit during
the label's early days. Currently in his mid-'70s, Joe still
performs on a full-time basis throughout the Detroit
metropolitan area.
Born: Jackson,
Tennessee in 1927
Nicknames: None
Musical
Influences: Art Tatum, Sergei Rachmaninov, Nat King Cole
Instruments
Played: Steinway grand piano, Hammond B-3 organ
Greatest
Performances: "Heat Wave," Pride And Joy,"
"Come And Get These Memories"
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Johnny
Griffith - One of the few classically trained
musicians in the Funk Brothers ranks, Johnny was Hitsville's
"hired gun," having never signed the exclusive
recording contract under which most of Motown's rhythm
section musicians worked. Originally lured into the company
in 1961 hoping to record jazz, Johnny often moonlighted on
hits for other R&B record labels around Detroit and in
Chicago.
While he did get
the opportunity to record two albums on Motown's
"Workshop Jazz" label, his true value down in
"Studio "A" was in the delicate touch with
which he played that so perfectly complimented Earl Van
Dyke's "gorilla piano" style. This two keyboard
approach had Earl and Johnny spending the next decade
trading off on acoustic piano, Hammond organ, and Wurlitzer
electric piano. To this day, in spite of all the R&B
hits Johnny played on, he still considers himself, first and
foremost, a jazz musician.
Born: Detroit,
MI (died 2002 in Detroit)
Nicknames: None
Musical
Influences: Bud Powell, Glenn Gould, Oscar Peterson
Instruments
Played: : Steinway grand piano, Hammond B-3 organ, Wurlitzer
electric piano, celeste, harpsichord, Fender Rhodes
Greatest
Performances: "Wonderful One," "Stop In The
Name Of Love," "I Heard It Through The
Grapevine" (Marvin Gaye Version)
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GUITARISTS
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Eddie
Willis - Detroit may have been a northern city
but the Motown Sound had a lot of the South in it. One of
the principal reasons was the Mississippi funk that Eddie
Willis brought to Studio "A." After playing guitar
in Marv Johnson's band (Motown's first star and the singer
of "Come To Me"), Eddie became an integral part of
the label's recording operation in 1959. Unlike most of the
Funk Brothers who were jazz musicians, Eddie came from more
of a country and blues background.
His principal duty
in the guitar triumvirate of Messina, White, and Willis was
to add the spontaneous funky fills and rhythms that played
off of the more foundation oriented parts the other two
guitarists were usually laying down. Eddie was also a more
active road musician than most of the Funk Brothers, touring
with the Marvelettes during Motown's early days and later
spending almost two decades playing throughout the world
with the Four Tops following the label's 1972 departure from
Detroit. While Eddie actively recorded at Hitsville until
the operation closed down, a lot of his most prolific work
was on the early Mary Wells and Marvelettes sessions.
Born: Grenada,
Mississippi in 1936
Nicknames:
Chank, Soupbone
Musical
Influences: Chet Atkins, Wes Montgomery, Albert King
Instruments
Played: Early '60s Gibson Firebird, mid-'60s Gibson ES 335,
Coral Sitar
Greatest
Performances: "I Was Made To Love Her," "The
Way You Do The Things You Do," "Friendship
Train"
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Joe
Messina - One of the
signature musical elements that set Motown apart from all
the other recordings that rode the radio waves in the 1960's
was the razor-sharp guitar backbeats heard on almost every
recording they released. That role was played flawlessly by
Joe Messina, a local Detroit jazz guitarist with a sense of
time that could be used to set the world clock in Greenwich,
England. Earl Van Dyke insisted that "Joe never blew a
backbeat on one session during the entire fourteen years he
was at Motown." He also had the challenging role of
doubling James Jamerson's bass lines on numerous recordings.
Joe arrived at
Motown in 1959 and came back to it four decades later by
very circuitous routes. Playing mostly Italian music in his
teens, the lure of jazz was overpowering and by his mid
twenties, he had landed a gig on the nationally televised
Soupy Sales Show. That afforded him the opportunity of
playing with John Coltrane, Charlie Parker, Miles Davis and
all of his other jazz heroes who were guest artists on the
show. Because of his growing reputation around town, Berry
Gordy recruited him. When Motown moved to the West Coast in
1972, Joe put down his guitar for almost thirty years, but
he quickly got his chops back in late 2000 to play on
Standing In The Shadows Of Motown.
Born: Detroit,
MI in 1928
Nicknames: None
Musical
Influences: Charlie Parker, Les Paul, George Barnes
Instruments
Played: Gibson L-5 (in the early days only), an early '60s
Fender Telecaster with a Jazzmaster neck strung with heavy
flatwound strings.
Greatest
Performances: "Your Precious Love.," "Dancing
In The Street," "I Can't Help Myself"
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Robert
White - One of the more serious-minded and deep
thinkers amongst the members of the Funk Brothers, Robert is
often referred to by his fellow Hitsville musicians as
"the glue that held everything together." What
they're referring to is the fat, relaxed guitar strums he
played that were the meeting point for all the inter-twined
parts everyone else was laying down. Robert was also called
upon any time the producers and arrangers needed a very
distinct melody to be played on guitar, because he picked
his instrument with a long thumbnail that gave all his lines
a very unique and instantly recognizable tone.
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Arriving in Detroit
in 1960 when the doo-wop group the Moonglows (for whom he
was playing bass) ended a tour, Robert began working for
Motown and quickly became a favorite of the producers and
arrangers. Like Uriel Jones, he teamed up with Earl Van Dyke
and became a fixture on Detroit's nightly club scene. Always
in search of some higher meaning for his life, Robert moved
to Los Angeles in the mid-'70s hoping to continue his
musical career and continue his spiritual quest. While he
never again reached the musical heights he had enjoyed back
in Detroit, he found what he was looking for in his personal
life through Eckankar (The Religion of The Light And Sound
Of God).
Born: Billmyre,
Pennsylvania in 1936 (died 1994 in Los Angeles)
Nicknames:
Robert had one but he hated it
Musical
Influences: Oscar Moore (Nat King Cole's guitarist), Wes
Montgomery
Instruments
Played: Gibson ES 335, Gibson L-5
Greatest
Performances: "My Girl," "My Cherie
Amour," "You Keep Me Hanging On"
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DRUMMERS |
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William
"Benny" Benjamin - The creator of the
Motown drumbeat and the most beloved musician at Hitsville,
Benny was Motown's first drummer, working with Berry Gordy
in 1958. Known for his deft brushwork, latin-influenced
grooves, and his explosive drum fills and pickups, Benny's
signature drum style defined the Motown groove. Coming out
of a big band-jazz background, Benny's beats swung much
harder than any of the other R&B and Blues drummers
residing in Detroit at the time, and his time was
impeccable.
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But the same
couldn't be said for his promptness. Benny's excuses for
often being late to Hitsville's recording sessions are
legendary - including one where he claimed to have been
sitting on his mother's step with his ex-old lady's
boyfriend when someone pulled up in a car and shot him. He
further endeared himself to his fellow Motown musicians when
- right in front some European distributors Berry Gordy was
trying to impress with his new operation - he asked the boss
if he could "bum a fin." "The Fuehrer,"
as Benny referred to him, was not pleased. A lifelong heroin
user and alcoholic, Benny's demons eventually caught up with
him in 1968 when the ravages of his addictions stilled his
drumsticks.
Born:
Birmingham, Alabama in the early 1930s (died 1968)
Nicknames: Papa
Zita
Musical
Influences: Buddy Rich, Tito Puentes
Instruments
Played: A studio set comprised of Ludwig, Slingerland,
Rogers, and Gretsch components
Greatest
Performances: "Shop Around," "Get
Ready," "Going To A Go-Go"
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Richard
"Pistol" Allen - Noted Detroit bassist
Ralphe Armstrong once related how he was playing a gig at a
local jazz club when Pistol Allen (wearing only pajamas, a
robe, and slippers) busted through the doors of the
establishment, threw the drummer off his set, and counted
off "Cherokee" at a breakneck tempo: "Man, we
were all huffin' and puffin' trying to keep up with him for
about ten choruses of the tune and then he just cuts the
band, jumps off the stage and runs home," recalled
Ralphe. "This fool was probably just sittin' in front
of his TV and said to himself, 'I feel like playing,.' So he
drives halfway across town, gets it out of his system, and
then runs back to the TV. You see, this cat just burns with
music."
Recruited into
Motown in 1962 by his mentor, Benny Benjamin, Pistol quickly
learned he had to adapt his jazz drum style to the music
being created down in the Snakepit. Pistol recalls,
"Benny advised me, 'Jazz don't work down there. They
want it straight with 8th notes and a big backbeat. Just
play mm-mm-da, mm-mm-da and keep your mouth shut.'"
Pistol listened well. The result was a new Motown drum style
that featured a sledgehammer backbeat with a heavy hi-hat
that gave the producers a nice variation to what Uriel Jones
and Benny were doing. The master of the Beale Street shuffle
and the Motown "four on the floor" groove (a snare
drum hit on every beat), Pistol was the drummer on most of
Holland-Dozier-Holland's hit productions of the '60s.
Born: Memphis,
Tennessee in 1932 (died 2002 in Detroit)
Nickname:
Pistol
Musical
Influences: Benny Benjamin, Max Roach, Buddy Rich
Instruments
Played: A studio set comprised of Ludwig, Slingerland,
Rogers, and Gretsch components
Greatest
Performances: "Heat Wave," "Baby Love,"
"How Sweet It Is"
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Uriel
Jones - After touring with Marvin Gaye and
various Motown road shows in the early '60s, Uriel became a
Hitsville session player in 1964. Originally expected to be
a Benny Benjamin clone (which he mastered as much as any
human possibly could), Uriel quickly showed Motown's
producers and arrangers that he had something else to offer:
he rocked harder than any of the other drummers in the
building. Motown arranger Paul Riser explains, "Uriel's
drum sound was the most open and laid back and he was the
funkiest of the three guys we had. He had a mixed feel and
did a lot of different things well."
Uriel was an
indispensable component of producer Norman Whitfield's
"psychedelic soul" recordings with the
Temptations, and Ashford and Simpson's Marvin Gaye-Tammi
Terrell duets were all fueled by his slammin' drum grooves.
Joined at the hip with Earl Van Dyke for the next three
decades, Uriel was the main drummer when the Funk Brothers
performed at the Chit Chat club, the Twenty Grand, and the
other venues they frequented during Detroit's booming
nightlife scene of the '60s.
Born: Detroit,
MI in 1934
Nicknames:
Possum
Musical
Influences: Benny Benjamin, Art Blakey
Instruments
Played: A studio set comprised of Ludwig, Slingerland,
Rogers, and Gretsch components
Greatest
Performances: "Ain't Too Proud To Beg,"
"Cloud Nine," "Ain't No
Mountain High Enough"
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BASSISTS |
James
Jamerson - Motown's tormented genius, James
Jamerson is unanimously acclaimed as the first virtuoso of
the electric bass. Plagued by alcoholism and emotional
problems throughout his career, James has influenced
(whether they know it or not) every electric bassist to ever
pick up the instrument. Arriving at Motown in 1959, James'
bass playing evolved over the next decade from a traditional
root-fifth cocktail style of bass playing into an
astonishing new style built upon a flurry of sixteenth-note
runs and syncopations, "pushing the envelope"
dissonances, and fearless and constant exploration.
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A converted upright
bass player with bear claw hands, James plucked the strings
with only the index finger of his right hand (which he
dubbed "The Hook), and effortlessly and routinely
pulled off head-turning, technical feats on the '62 P-Bass
he nicknamed "The Funk Machine." His explosive,
earthquake-heavy bass lines have had the entire world
dancing and grooving to Motown records for over four
decades. But he labored in total obscurity - a condition
that ate at him throughout the last years of his life.
Recognition finally came on March 6, 2000 when James
Jamerson was inducted posthumously into the Rock & Roll
Hall Of Fame.
Born: Edisto
Island, South Carolina in 1936 (died in Los Angeles 1983)
Nicknames:
Igor, Funk, Diego Diegerson
Musical
Influences: Ray Brown, Paul Chambers
Instruments
Played: 1957 Fender Precision, 1962 Fender Precision (The
Funk Machine), German Upright bass, Fender 5 string,
Hagstrom 8 string
Greatest
Performances: "Bernadette," "I Was Made To
Love Her," "Home Cookin'"
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Bob
Babbitt - Stepping into the shoes of a legend is
an impossible burden to handle but Bob Babbitt was tough
enough to be able to work in James Jamerson's shadow and
still assert his own identity on some of Motown's biggest
hits. After freelancing around Detroit in the mid-'60s, Bob
joined Stevie Wonder's band in 1966 and eventually was
brought into the studio in 1967. The overwhelming workload
in the wake of Motown's phenomenal success combined with
James Jamerson's increasing health problems necessitated
bringing in a second bassist.
Instantly accepted
into the Funk Brothers' family atmosphere, Bob had a very
busy six year run at Hitsville particularly with Motown
producer Norman Whitfield. The shining moment in Bob's
career came in 1970 when he worked with Marvin Gaye on some
of the tracks from his epic "What's Going On"
album. After Motown's exodus from Detroit in 1972, Bob's
busy studio career continued in New York, Philadelphia, and
in Nashville where he currently resides.
Born:
Pittsburgh, PA
Nickname:
Babbitt (birth name - Robert Kreinar)
Instrument
Played: Post-CBS, mid-'60s Fender Precision Bass
Musical
Influences: Charles Mingus, Ray Brown, James Jamerson
Greatest
Performances: "Mercy Mercy Me," "Signed,
Sealed, Delivered," "War"
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PERCUSSIONISTS |
Jack
Ashford - Upon hearing the early Motown records
that invaded England in the '60s, EMI Records' president Sir
Joseph Blackwood remarked they would never make it because
the tambourine was mixed too hot.. But Sir Berry Gordy of
Motown Records knew something that Sir Joseph didn't: Jack
Ashford was not just any old tambourine player - he was a
tambourine virtuoso. Just talk to any percussionist about
"the cat that played tambourine at Motown" and
watch them become enraptured.
But his first love
was vibes, and his playing caught the eye of Marvin Gaye
when he saw Jack playing with an organ trio in Boston.
Coming to Motown at Marvin's request in 1963, Jack went on
to become their most prolific percussionist, playing more
than a dozen traditional percussion instrument as well as a
few "off the beaten track" instruments like knee
slaps, foot stomps, and his own invention, the "hotel
sheet." A particular favorite of Marvin Gaye and Norman
Whitfield, Jack's imaginative and colorful percussion
grooves were one of the principal reasons why these two
great artists always seemed to be breaking new ground with
every recording they produced.
Born:
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1934
Nicknames: None
Musical
Influences: Milt Jackson, Lionel Hampton
Instruments
Played: : Deagan model 510 and Deagan Imperial Nocturne
vibes, marimbas, tambourine, wood block, foot stomps, hand
claps, maracas, cabassa, bells, chimes, bell tree, hotel
sheet, triangle, finger cymbals, kazoo
Greatest
Performances: "What's Going On," "Ooh Baby
Baby," "Where Did Our Love Go"
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Eddie
"Bongo" Brown - As great a role as
Eddie Bongo played musically, he was an irreplaceable
element in the Funk Brother's family for one simple reason:
In the pressure cooker atmosphere of the Snakepit, they
desperately needed a comedian to keep things from boiling
over and Eddie was a virtuoso. A master at playing "the
dozens," many a session ground to a halt as players
doubled over in laughter while Bongo wailed on James
Jamerson's mother (his favorite target) or some other
unsuspecting victim.
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Coming into Motown
through the back door as Marvin Gaye's valet, Eddie
eventually became Hitsville's most prolific conga player
gracing many of the label's greatest recordings with his
latin and jazz grooves. Like some of the other Funk
Brothers, Bongo moved to the West Coast in the mid-'70s
hoping to still record for Motown while picking up recording
gigs for other labels. But his fate was the same. Bongo
found it impossible to regain the magic that he had been a
part of in Detroit.
Born: Memphis,
Tennessee in 1932 (died in Los Angeles 1983)
Nickname: Bongo
Musical
Influences: Chano Pozo
Instruments
Played: : LP congas, bongos, gourd, claves
Greatest
Performances: "Cloud Nine," "What's Going
On," "Beauty Is Only Skin Deep"
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