Jimmy Smith
Biography
Jimmy Smith 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 many, like 1960's Back at the Chicken Shack and 1958 's The Sermon, are classics. 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, particularly the up-tempo cuts. 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. 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. Smith began playing the Hammond in 1951, and soon earned a great reputation that followed him to New York, where he debuted at the Café Bohemia. A Birdland date and 1957 Newport Jazz Festival appearance launched Smith's career.
Selected Discography

Midnight Special
2007

The Fantastic Jimmy Smith
2002

Dot Com Blues
2001

Jimmy Smith's Finest Hour
2000

Ultimate Jimmy Smith
1999

Damn!
1995

Angel Eyes
1995

Keep On Comin'
1983

Stay Loose
1968

Got My Mojo Workin' Hoochie Cooche Man
1965

Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf?
1964

Any Number Can Win
1963

Jazz 'Round Midnight
1963

Live At The Village Gate
1963

Fats Waller
1962




