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George Duke 1946–2013


7/4

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Very sad. At the Zappa shows, it was always very cool to hear the crowd erupt when he was introduced; he was the "star" of the band (outside Zappa, of course). At the end of the '70's, he did those jazz/disco albums, but he had that goofy sense of humor:

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RIP for all the good times.

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Oh no ... I spent hours and hours listening repeatedly to some of albums in the 1970's immediately after they were released, dug his electric piano and synth stylings immensely, much more than Zawinul. Plus, he had much more and funkier groove than Joe ... God bless his soul .... Duke, Hancock, and Hammer are my Rhodes heroes (I know Duke played Wurlitzer back then).

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I always liked how a song like "Someday" could take the (obvious) Stevie Wonder inspiration and go off on its own tangent.

Such a talented guy, and such an open mind, and such a (seemingly) happy spirit. For some people "influenced by the marketplace" is a horrible, horrible way to die, but for George Duke, it often seemed to be liberating, like hey, I wasn't really gonna do anything specific with these massive skill sets anyway, so thanks for the suggestions!

RIP, and much thanks for the grins, including, especially, the Cannonball music. Couldn't just any old body take Zawinul's place and actually step the momentum up a notch.

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This was posted about a month ago

thank you so very much for posting this. George was always "up" no matter what! one would never know by listening to him how sick he was and that he had lost his beloved wife last year. I will always love Corine and George and their family. bless them all, strongly.

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He really was a great musician, and so flexibel. Could play anything. He was also very good on some live recordings he did with Dexter Gordon, where he plays some really exiting piano.

I also love his contributions on those marathon sessions "Montreux Summit" 1977, where he shared keyboards (electric and acoustic) with Bob James and does everything from bop to electric.

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He was not looking well, ever since his wife died a year ago (in that video posted above, for example), you could tell everything wasn't alright with his health.

I was absolutely a "fan", and consider him one of the electric keyboard greats along with Hancock / Corea / Zawinul / Hammer. I have a quite a few of his solo albums from the 1970's (even the 80's) and they always have some great stuff. Just don't consider them as "jazz" and you'll do fine.

The MPS discs (Feel, The Aura Will Prevail, I Love The Blues..., ), the CBS discs (Brazilian Love Affair, Reach For It, etc.) and so on. It's all good up until the mid-80's when he joined forces with Stanley Clarke (ok - apart from "Sweet Baby" which is awesomely cheesy) and then later went heavily into smooth jazz territory.

He was beginning to return to his jazzfunk roots with a few of his more recent albums (like "Deja Vu"), even though most of his recent output was firmly in the smooth jazz domain.

R.I.P.

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