Performance

Monthly Listeners

Current

Followers

Current

Streams

Current

Tracks

Current

Popularity

Current

Top Releases

View All

New Jazz Standards Vol 3

10.2M streams

10,239,706

Roger Kellaway Cello Quartet

366.5K streams

366,465

The Art of Interconnectedness (Live at...

38.6K streams

38,648

Soaring

35.5K streams

35,494

I Was There: Roger Kellaway Plays from...

33.7K streams

33,664

Remembering Red

30.3K streams

30,319

Solo Piano (Digitally Remastered)

17.5K streams

17,542

Just Friends: Live at the Village Vang...

11.3K streams

11,288

Remebering Bobby Darin

10.3K streams

10,264

The Many Open Minds of Roger Kellaway

8.4K streams

8,447

Biography

A virtuosic pianist whose phenomenal technique rivals Dick Hyman's, Roger Kellaway's work in commercial settings prior to the 1980s led to him being initially overlooked in the jazz world. He played piano and bass at the New England Conservatory (1957-1959) and actually left school to play bass with Jimmy McPartland. Switching permanently to piano, Kellaway picked up experience working with Kai Winding, Al Cohn/Zoot Sims, and Clark Terry/Bob Brookmeyer (1963-1965). He recorded with many players, including Ben Webster, Maynard Ferguson, Wes Montgomery, and Sonny Rollins, and in 1966 moved to Los Angeles where he played with Don Ellis' innovative orchestra. Kellaway became Bobby Darin's musical director, worked in the studios (his piano is heard playing the theme of All in the Family), wrote film scores, experimented with electric keyboards, played with Tom Scott, and recorded with his popular (but mostly non-jazz) Cello Quartet. Although he gigged locally with Zoot Sims and Harry "Sweets" Edison, it was not until the mid-'80s that Kellaway started playing jazz nearly full-time. His many records since then (for Concord, All Art, Stash, and Chiaroscuro) attest to his impressive talents. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi