Performance

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Anthology

513.2M streams

513,201,713

In the Name of Love: The Elektra Recor...

308.6M streams

308,646,930

Just the Two of Us

179.4M streams

179,359,260

The Best Of Grover Washington Junior: ...

23.8M streams

23,826,362

The Essential Grover Washington, Jr.: ...

13.6M streams

13,609,577

Winelight

13M streams

13,046,481

Feels So Good

5.3M streams

5,253,234

Reed Seed

4.8M streams

4,839,281

Grover Live

2.5M streams

2,524,096

Togethering

2.5M streams

2,506,638

Biography

One of the most popular saxophonists of the 20th century, Grover Washington, Jr. was long the pacesetter in his field. His roots were in R&B and soul-jazz organ combos, but he also fared very well on the infrequent occasions when he played straight-ahead jazz. A highly influential player, Washington was known for his spontaneity and risk-taking. Grover Washington, Jr.'s, father also played saxophone and was his first influence. The younger son started playing music when he was ten, and within two years he was working in clubs. He picked up experience touring with the Four Clefs from 1959 to 1963 and freelancing during the next two years, before spending a couple years in the Army. He moved to Philadelphia in 1967, becoming closely identified with the city from then on. There, he worked with several organists, including Charles Earland and Johnny Hammond Smith, recording as a sideman for the Prestige label. His biggest break occurred in 1971, when Hank Crawford could not make it to a recording date for Creed Tasylor's Kudu label; Washington was picked as his replacement, and the result was Inner City Blues, a big seller. From then on he became a major name, particularly after recording 1975's Mister Magic and Feels So Good, and later 1980's Winelight. The latter album included the Bill Withers hit "Just the Two of Us." Along the way, he developed his own personal voices on soprano, tenor, alto, and even his infrequently-used baritone. Grover Washington Jr. recorded as a leader for Kudu, Motown, Elektra, and Columbia and made notable guest appearances on dozens of records ranging from pop to straightforward jazz. He died of a sudden heart attack on December 17, 1999 while taping an appearance on CBS television's The Saturday Early Show; Washington was 56. The posthumous Aria was issued early the following year. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi