Yusef Lateef
Biography
Yusef Lateef has long had an inquisitive spirit and he was never just a bop or hard bop soloist. Lateef, who does not care much for the term "jazz," has consistently created music that has stretched (and even broken through) boundaries. A superior tenor saxophonist with a soulful sound and impressive technique, by the 1950s, Lateef was one of the top flutists around. He also developed into the best jazz soloist to date on oboe, was an occasional bassoonist, and introduced such instruments as the argol (a double clarinet that resembles a bassoon), shanai (a type of oboe), and different types of flutes. Lateef played "world music" before it had a name and his output was much more creative than much of the pop and folk music that passed under that label in the '90s.
Yusef Lateef grew up in Detroit and began on tenor when he was 17. He played with Lucky Millinder (1946), Hot Lips Page, Roy Eldridge, and Dizzy Gillespie's big band (1949-1950). He was a fixture on the Detroit jazz scene of the '50s where he studied flute at Wayne State University. Lateef began recording as a leader in 1955 for Savoy (and later Riverside and Prestige) although he did not move to New York until 1959.
Selected Discography

Suite 16
2004

The Last Savoy Sessions
2000

The Doctor Is In...And Out
1976

10 Years Hence
1975

The Gentle Giant
1972

The Blue Yusef Lateef
1968

The Golden Flute
1966

Psychicemotus
1964

Live At Pep's
1964

Into Something
1961

Eastern Sounds
1961

Cry! -Tender
1959

Prayer To The East
1957

Jazz Moods
1957

The Three Faces Of Yusef Lateef
