Jimmy McGriff
One of the all-time giants of the Hammond B-3, Jimmy McGriff (April 3, 1936 -- May 24, 2008) sometimes gets lost amid all the great soul-jazz organists from his hometown of Philadelphia. He was almost certainly the bluesiest of the major soul-jazz pioneers, and indeed, he often insisted that he was more of a blues musician than a jazz artist; nonetheless, he remained eclectic enough to blur the lines of classification. His sound -- deep, down-to-earth grooves drenched in blues and gospel feeling -- made him quite popular with R&B audiences, even more so than some of his peers; what was more, he was able to condense those charms into concise, funky, jukebox-ready singles that often did surprisingly well on the R&B charts. His rearrangement of Ray Charles' "I Got a Woman" was a Top Five R&B hit in 1962, and further hits like "All About My Girl," "Kiko," and "The Worm" followed over the course of the '60s. ...show more
One of the all-time giants of the Hammond B-3, Jimmy McGriff (April 3, 1936 -- May 24, 2008) sometimes gets lost amid all the great soul-jazz organists from his hometown of Philadelphia. He was almost certainly the bluesiest of the major soul-jazz pioneers, and indeed, he often insisted that he was more of a blues musician than a jazz artist; nonetheless, he remained eclectic enough to blur the lines of classification. His sound -- deep, down-to-earth grooves drenched in blues and gospel feeling -- made him quite popular with R&B audiences, even more so than some of his peers; what was more, he was able to condense those charms into concise, funky, jukebox-ready singles that often did surprisingly well on the R&B charts. His rearrangement of Ray Charles' "I Got a Woman" was a Top Five R&B hit in 1962, and further hits like "All About My Girl," "Kiko," and "The Worm" followed over the course of the '60s.
McGriff spent much of the '70s trying to keep pace with the fusion movement, switching to various electric keyboards and adopting an increasingly smooth, polished style. As the '80s dawned, McGriff gave up trying to sound contemporary and returned to his classic organ-trio sound; as luck would have it, vintage soul-jazz soon came back into vogue with a devoted cult of fans and critics, and McGriff was able to recover his creative vitality and take his place as one of the genre's elder statesmen. James Harrell McGriff, Jr. was born April 3, 1936, in Philadelphia.
His mother and father both played the piano, and he counted saxophonist Benny Golson and soul singer Harold Melvin among his cousins. First getting involved in music through his family's church, he received his first instrument, a drum set, at age eight; by his teen years, he had taken up acoustic bass and alto sax, and also learned vibes, piano, and drums by the time he finished high school. Bass remained his primary instrument for a while, although he was inspired to try his hand at the Hammond organ after seeing Richard "Groove" Holmes at a club in Camden, NJ. However, McGriff was drafted into the military after high school, and served in the Korean War as a military policeman. ...show less
Albums & Singles by Jimmy McGriff

Christmas With McGriff

In A Blue Mood

Jimmy McGriff, Lucky Thompson, George Freeman, O'Donel Levy -- Live Concert - Cook County Jail

Let's Stay Together

Tribute To Basie / Funkiest Little Band In the Land

I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus

Jimmy McGriff - Pisces

Nice

Jimmy McGriff - Unreleased

Merry Christmas Baby

McGriff's Blues

Soul Sugar

Fly Dude

Groove Grease

The Best Of The Sue Years 1962-1965

Main Squeeze
Playlists Containing Tracks by Jimmy McGriff

NPR's Marketplace

Gentlemen of Distinction: 60's Chill Swing

Jazz Brasillia

Mad Men Season 6: The Best Songs of 1968

Hipster Jazz, Hip Hop & Soul

Jazz

Songs I Heard Right 'Round The US of A

Funk a Go-Go: Rare Soul Hipshakers

Fat Daddy's Groove Bag

Soul & Jazz

Essential Hip Hop Samples

The Funkiest Song Ever?

Fab Jazz & Sweet Soul

Lounge 2000-2013

The Ultimate Acid Jazz,Jazz,NuJazz Playlist

Future Tarantino Tracks?

3. Soul Lunch

The Ultimate Mod Playlist

60's Funky Hip Shaker

Jazz For Those That Don't Like Jazz

Groovy Funky

The Whole Funk

Cover #3

Cover Songs

Christmas Cocktails

Best of the Blues

Funky Soul

Jazzy Blue

Oldiz Jazz Funk

Doctor Who - Wibbly-Wobbly, Timey-Wimey Stuff

Foxy Funky Boogaloo Baby

Blue Note Trip Collected
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