Learn to work the saxophone, I play just what I feel

About a year ago, I wrote a tribute to a brilliant musician who passed away named David Lindley, a multi-instrumentalist who appeared on dozens of popular albums in the ’70s and ’80s. He was widely respected among other musicians, and his performances made a substantial difference on many records known far and wide among the listening public, even if they didn’t recognize his name nor know much about him.

This week, once again I have the task of writing a tribute to another extraordinary musician — the superlative sax player David Sanborn — who passed away May 12 of prostate cancer at age 78. Like Lindley, Sanborn’s name may not be widely known to the public at large, but much of his work will be instantly familiar once you realize he was the guy responsible for so many brilliant alto sax solos on hit singles and deeper tracks alike.

So that you fully appreciate Sanborn’s oeuvre and the contributions he made during his 50 years in the business, I strongly urge you to immediately start the Spotify playlist I assembled that will demonstrate how often you’ve heard and admired his work without even knowing who it was.

Big hits by David Bowie, James Taylor, Linda Ronstadt, Carly Simon, Kenny Loggins, Pure Prairie League and Steely Dan were all made more memorable by Sanborn’s delicious sax solos. Same goes for album tracks by The Eagles, Stevie Wonder, Bryan Ferry, Michael Stanley, J.D. Souther, Elton John, Bonnie Raitt, Karla Bonoff and Phoebe Snow, on which his solos are prominently featured. His credits also include appearances on albums by Billy Joel, Bruce Springsteen, The Rolling Stones, Paul Simon, Toto, Roger Waters, Todd Rundgren, Little Feat, Roger Daltrey, Shawn Colvin and dozens more.

And that’s just among notable pop stars of the ’70s and ’80s. Sanborn also played sax with major blues artists like Paul Butterfield, Mose Allison, Robert Cray and Eric Clapton; R&B icons like James Brown; and leading jazz musicians such as George Benson, Michael and Randy Brecker, Bob James, Maynard Ferguson, Michael Franks, Al Jarreau and Gil Evans.

Somehow, concurrently with all these guest appearances on albums, Sanborn maintained a prolific solo career, releasing 25 albums of his own over a 40-year stretch between 1975 and 2018. Twice he won Grammy awards for Best Contemporary Jazz Album (“Voyeur” in 1981 and “Double Vision” in 1987) and four other Grammys as well.

There’s more: He spent a few years as a member of Paul Shaffer’s band on “Late Night With David Letterman” in the 1980s; co-hosted with Jools Holland a syndicated jazz-oriented TV show called “Night Music” in 1989-1990; and co-wrote orchestral, jazz and blues soundtrack music for the “Lethal Weapon” movies in the ’80s and ’90s. More recently, he hosted jazz radio programs and podcasts.

Sanborn with Bob James, 2003

“The loss of David Sanborn has deeply saddened me,” said Bob James, the jazz pianist who collaborated many times with Sanborn. “I was so privileged to share major highlights of my career in partnership with him. His legacy will live on through the recordings. Every note he played came straight from his heart, with a passionate intensity that could make an ordinary tune extraordinary.”

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Born in Tampa and raised outside St. Louis, Sanborn began his lifelong relationship with the alto sax by way of a medical recommendation. He had contracted polio at age 3, which had long-term effects on his growth. When his musically inclined parents started him on piano lessons at age 9, his doctor suggested the boy switch to a woodwind instrument as a way to strengthen his weakened chest muscles and improved his lung capacity.

He took to it quickly, learning the alto, tenor and soprano sax and flute, and became a passionate devotee of both jazz and blues. He was only 14 when, thanks to a referral from family friend Hank Crawford, who played alto sax in Ray Charles’s band, Sanborn performed with blues musicians Albert King and Little Milton. By the age of 22, he was invited to join The Paul Butterfield Blues Band, where he remained as an active member for four years, including their performance at Woodstock in 1969.

He broke into contemporary pop/rock/soul in 1972 on sessions for Stevie Wonder’s “Talking Book” album, and then Todd Rundgren’s “A Wizard, A True Star” in 1973. By 1975, his sax solos were all over the Top Ten on hits like David Bowie’s “Young Americans” and James Taylor’s “How Sweet It Is To Be Loved By You.” Both of these turned into TV performances and touring opportunities for Sanborn.

Sanborn (left) in a TV performance of “Young Americans” with Bowie

He became an active participant in the jazz fusion scene at that point, teaming up with the Brecker brothers on his solo debut “Taking Off,” which jump-started his recording career. Although he won accolades as a reliable practitioner of the genre known as smooth jazz, he never warmed to that description of his musical oeuvre. “Not everything I play is smooth,” he chuckled during a 1988 interview. “I think it’s more accurate to say I enjoy many different musical styles.”

Indeed. Some of his solo work was more experimental and freeform, some vibrant and exhilarating, and some mellow and soothing. It was that versatility that made him so influential and in demand among artists ranging from Ian Hunter and Dr. John to Aretha Franklin and John McLaughlin.

“The ‘Sanborn’ sound is more of an extreme sound tone-wise,” the saxophonist and educator Steve Neff wrote on his blog in 2012. “It’s very raw, bright, edgy and tough sounding. It’s right in your face. What Michael Brecker did for the tenor sound, Sanborn did for the alto sound. It’s not a middle-of-the-road thing at all.”

He and James were the toast of the town in 1987 when their collaborative work “Double Vision” won a Grammy, with the opening track “Maputo” gaining a modest amount of airplay.

Among his more notable LPS was 2008’s “Here & Gone,” a tribute to Ray Charles and his musical influences. “That music was everything to me,” Sanborn said. “It kind of combined jazz, gospel, and rhythm and blues. It wasn’t any one of those things, but it was all of them kind of mixed together, and that, to me, is the essence of American music.”

Sanborn in 2018

Ahmir Thompson, the drummer/producer/music journalist known professionally as Questlove, recalled performing with Sanborn in Aspen, Colorado, in the early 2000s. “Doing concerts at a 6,000-foot altitude is a nightmare for many musicians. You have to acclimate your system to having less oxygen, and some cats can only play at a level 5 or 6 under those conditions. Many need a break during their sets to hit the oxygen tank backstage. I know I did. But even though (Sanborn) had dealt with diminished lung capacity all his life, he laughed and playfully scoffed, ‘I always play at a level 10. Speak for yourselves!’ He told me that since being diagnosed with cancer, he got a renewed vigor, and played like his life depended on it.”

Although he found touring to be challenging due to his declining health, he continued going out on the road regularly over the past 20 years. He was still doing upwards of 150 gigs a year as recently as 2017, mostly in Asia, Africa and Europe, where jazz has a wider appeal. As he told The New York Times, “I still want to play, and if you want to play for an audience, you’ve got to go where the audience is.”

Sanborn is survived his wife, Alice Soyer Sanborn, a pianist, vocalist and composer; his son, Jonathan; two granddaughters; and his sisters, Sallie and Barb Sanborn.

An obituary in The Guardian this week opened by saying, “So distinctive was the soaring, heart-piercing sound of David Sanborn’s alto saxophone, and yet so comprehensive in its instant evocation of the spirit of a certain essence of US popular music, that it became familiar to many millions who knew nothing of the jazz world from which it had emerged.”

This week, I have been listening to classic ’70s tracks like Michael Stanley’s “Let’s Get the Show on the Road,” Carly Simon’s “You Belong to Me,” “Michael Frank’s “Jive” and James Taylor’s “You Make It Easy” just to marinate in Sanborn’s luscious sax work. I suggest you do the same.

Rest In Peace, good sir. Your musical reputation is intact.

I’ve got nothing to say, but it’s okay

What makes a hit song?  A catchy melody, of course, but also, typically, an indelible chorus with a repeated catchphrase and memorable lyrics you can sing along with.

Well, not always lyrics, as it turns out.  Back in the ’50s and ’60s especially, and well into the ’70s, you can find almost 50 entries on the Billboard singles charts of instrumental songs that made the Top Ten.  Nearly 20 of those reached the #1 position, sometimes for multiple weeks. And another 50-60 at least made the Top 40, bringing the total number of instrumental hits to well over 100.

How did that happen?  Doesn’t a hit single need lyrics to become the kind of “earworm” song that stays in your head all day long after hearing it?  Not necessarily; a compelling instrumental passage can be as addicting as a vocal hook.  Take Edgar Winter Group’s “Frankenstein,” for example.  That monstrous main riff is arguably every bit as mesmerizing as a repeated lyric like “I’d like to hear some funky Dixieland…”

These instrumental hits came in a number of sub-categories.  Theme songs from movies and TV shows make their way into the Top 40 from time to time; surf music and disco sometimes offer irresistible instrumental riffs that don’t need words; and jazz artists who play sax or trumpet have been known to have a Top Ten hit or two without lyrics to carry the songs.

I’ve selected a baker’s dozen of Top Ten instrumental songs that should be familiar to most of you — if not by the title, then by the first 15 seconds of the song itself.  A Spotify list at the end will allow you to sample the songs as you read.  Enjoy!

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“Grazing in the Grass,” Hugh Masekela, 1968

This #1 hit from the summer of ’68 was written as an instrumental by an African composer named Philemon Hou, and made famous by South African jazz trumpeter Hugh Masekela, who was among the surprises at the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival.  His version, which was #1 for two weeks, has a reggae flavor and features a prominent cowbell (!) throughout.  A year later, a group called The Friends of Distinction recorded another version with lyrics (“Grazing in the grass is a gas, baby can you dig it…”) written by member Harry Elston, with a faster, funkier arrangement, and it reached #3 in the summer of ’69.  Both versions are on the Spotify list.  You decide which is better.

“TSOP (The Sound of Philadelphia),” MFSB, 1974

As disco was just getting started, Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff of Philadelphia International Records wrote an instrumental piece to be used as the theme song for “Soul Train,” the Chicago-based TV show featuring R&B/soul/disco music that was about to go national.  Their label’s house band MFSB (Mother, Father Sister, Brother) laid down the groove, the recording was bathed in strings and horns, and then, tacked on the end, the vocal group called The Three Degrees added one line of lyric (“Let’s get it on, it’s time to get down”), repeated 6-7 times.  It was officially the first TV theme song (and, unofficially, the first disco song) to reach #1 on the US singles chart.

“Green Onions,” Booker T. and the M.G.’s, 1962

Here’s another track originally issued as a B-side (this one to a forgotten song called “Behave Yourself”) that went on to become one of the most popular instrumental tracks in rock/soul history.  Written by Booker T. Jones, the track prominently features Jones’s Hammond organ on a minor-chord 12-bar blues structure, interrupted periodically by Steve Cropper’s fine guitar work.  It reached #3 in the US and #7 in the UK.  Evidently named after the cat of one of the M.G.’s, whose way of walking inspired the main riff, the track has been used in several major films over the years, including “American Graffiti,” “The Flamingo Kid,” “Happy Gilmore,” “The Sandlot” and “Get Shorty.”

“Hocus Pocus,” Focus, 1973

Hailing from The Netherlands, this progressive rock band majored in instrumental pieces with plenty of Jethro Tull-like flute by Thijs van Leer and histrionic guitar solos from Jan Akkerman.  Very few tracks on their early ’70s albums had any vocals; could be they didn’t know any English, but I’m not sure about that.  In any event, in the spring of 1973, “Hocus Pocus,” a hard rock track from their 1971 album “Focus 2:  Moving Waves,” reached #9 on the US singles chart.  It was technically an instrumental if you don’t count the incessant yodeling and high-octave vocalizing heard throughout the song.

“The Horse,” Cliff Nobles & Co., 1968

Anybody recognize this title? Didn’t think so…but I’ll bet you recognize the main riff, because it reached #2 in June 1968 and sold a couple million copies.  This track was released as the B-side of a song called “Love is All Right,” which is the same song with vocals and lyrics.  Radio stations preferred the instrumental version (called “The Horse” for no discernible reason), and the hit was attributed to singer Cliff Nobles, even though his vocals were removed.  Listen to both versions on the Spotify list below.

“Joy,” Apollo 100, 1972

It takes guts to lift a 250-year-old classic hymn by Johann Sebastian Bach (“Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring”) and turn it into an instrumental piece of pop confection, but a British band called Apollo 100 did exactly that, and sure enough, it went to #6 on the US charts (but made no appearance on UK charts).  Played to a straight 4/4 beat, dominated by organ, harpischord and lead guitar, “Joy” probably exposed huge sections of the US radio audience in 1972 to the music of Bach, even if it certainly was not how he intended…

“Scorpio,” Dennis Coffey, 1971

Coffey was a guitar prodigy out of Michigan who quickly became known for innovative techniques, which caught the ear of Berry Gordy and Norman Whitfield at Motown Records. Coffey became a regular in the Funk Brothers, the Motown house band, and was responsible for most of the guitar work on the latter day Temptations hits (“Cloud Nine,” “Ball of Confusion,” “Psychedelic Shack”), Edwin Starr’s “War” and Freda Payne’s “Band of Gold.” In 1971, he recorded his own guitar-laden instrumental track, “Scorpio,” which became a US hit at #6.

“Classical Gas,” Mason Williams, 1968

Williams was both a musician and a comedy writer, and was head writer for the CBS variety show “The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour” in the late ’60s.  He was given several opportunities to showcase his instrumental acoustic guitar number “Classical Gas” on the program, which gave it valuable exposure and helped it reach #2 on the charts in the fall of 1968.  The song, originally titled “Classical Gasoline,” won multiple Grammys.  Mason went on to write comedy for “Saturday Night Live” as well.

“Frankenstein,” The Edgar Winter Group, 1973

Once again, we have a happy accident:  This instrumental track was added as an afterthought to the group’s LP “They Only Come Out at Night” (and B-side of the since-forgotten single “Hangin’ Around”).  It was a series of spliced-tape sections pieced together in the studio, which drummer Chuck Ruff described as “it’s like a Frankenstein monster taking shape,” and the track’s name was born.  It went to #1 in the spring of ’73.  Edgar Winter, with guitarists Ronnie Montrose and Rick Derringer aboard, had a short but successful run as a live act, and Winter was the first performer to ever strap a keyboard around his neck, which allowed him to walk around the stage playing synthesizer parts as the song’s lead instrument.

“Soulful Strut,” Young-Holt Unlimited, 1969

Never heard of the song or the band, right?  Well, you’ll surely know the song when you hear it — it reached #3 in December 1968-January 1969 and was on the charts for three months.  With a strong horn riff and jazz piano solo, it did indeed have a soulful strut to it.  In fact, R&B singer Barbara Acklin recorded it as a single, with lyrics, called “Am I the Same Girl,” and “Soulful Strut” is actually the backing track to that recording embellished slightly.  Acklin’s version stalled at #79; in 1992, Swing Out Sister reached #45 with a strong cover rendition.  But the instrumental was by far the most successful version.

“A Taste of Honey,” Herb Alpert & Tijuana Brass, 1964; “Rise,” Herb Alpert, 1979

Alpert is a giant in the LA recording industry.  He played trumpet in the military and the USC marching band; he formed The Tijuana Brass to play songs inspired by Mexican marachi music; had five #1 albums and 28 LPs overall, sold 70 million records and won nine Grammys; wrote numerous pop hits, including Sam Cooke’s “Wonderful World” and Dionne Warwick’s “Do You Know the Way to San Jose”; founded A&M Records; and is the only musician in chart history to have a #1 vocal hit (“This Guy’s in Love With You,” 1969) and a #1 instrumental hit (“Rise,” 1979).  With the Tijuana Brass, he made many memorable instrumental tracks (“Tijuana Taxi,” “Spanish Flea,” “Mae”) and had two top ten hits, 1962’s “The Lonely Bull” and 1964’s “A Taste of Honey.”

“Rock and Roll Part 2,” Gary Glitter, 1972

Born in Oxfordshire as Paul Gadd, the man whose stage name was Gary Glitter was a very popular glam rock star in England in the 1972-1975 period, scoring a dozen Top Ten singles and rivaling Marc Bolan and David Bowie in that genre.  In the US, however, he was merely a one-hit wonder…but what a hit it was.  The lyric-less “Rock and Roll Part 2” reached #7 on the charts here in 1972, but more important, it became (and still is) the noisy, obnoxious chant heard everywhere in arenas and stadiums when the home team is doing well.  By the way, there is a “Part 1,” with lyrics and everything — in fact it was the original A-side, and “Part 2” was the B-side…  Both are on the Spotify list if you’re interested.  Sad to say, Gadd was convicted in 2015 of multiple lurid sex offenses and is currently serving prison time.

“Theme From ‘A Summer Place’,” Percy Faith and His Orchestra, 1960

Academy Award winner Max Steiner, an Austrian-born composer who is regarded as “the father of film music,” wrote the music for this theme song for the mildy risque 1959 romantic drama “A Summer Place,” starring Sandra Dee and Troy Donahue.  The movie was a modest success, but the theme song, in its instrumental version as recorded by the Percy Faith and His Orchestra, was the #1 song in the country for an unprecedented nine weeks in 1960, a record that wouldn’t be broken for 17 years.  The Percy Faith recording was also the first instrumental and first movie theme song to win a Record of the Year Grammy.  Steiner wrote dozens of popular film scores, most notably for “Gone With the Wind” and “Casablanca.”  The song does have some lame lyrics, written by Mack Descant, and there are a few vocal versions by the likes of The Lettermen and Andy Williams.

“Dueling Banjos,” Eric Weissberg and Steve Mandell, 1972

In 1954, bluegrass artist Arthur Smith wrote and recorded this banjo instrumental piece he called “Feudin’ Banjos,” collaborating with fellow banjo player Don Reno. The piece was first featured on an episode of “The Andy Griffith Show” in 1963 when a traveling musical family performed it on Sheriff Taylor’s front porch as a surprise for Aunt Bee. Most people know it from its use in an early scene in the 1972 film “Deliverance,” and Weissberg and Mandell’s recording of “Dueling Banjos” made it all the way to #2 on US pop charts in January 1973.

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Other instrumental songs that were #1 hits:

Tequila,” The Champs, 1958; “Ah Via Musicom,” Eric Johnson, 1990; “Love is Blue,” Paul Mauriat and His Orchestra, 1968; “Pick Up the Pieces,” Average White Band, 1974; “Miami Vice Theme,” Jan Hammer, 1985; “Theme From S.W.A.T.,” Rhythm Heritage, 1976; “Love’s Theme,” Love Unlimited Orchestra, 1974; “Chariots of Fire – Titles,” Vangelis, 1982; “A Fifth of Beethoven,” Walter Murphy, 1976; “The Hustle,” Van McCoy, 1975; “The Stripper,” David Rose and His Orchestra, 1962; “Telstar,” The Tornadoes, 1962; “Gonna Fly Now,” Bill Conti, 1977; “Love Theme From Romeo and Juliet,” Henry Mancini and His Orchestra, 1969; “Star Wars Theme/Cantina Band,” Meco, 1977;

Other Top Ten instrumentals:

Wipeout,” The Surfaris, #3, 1963; “Feels So Good,” Chuck Mangione, #4, 1978; “The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly,” Hugh Montenegro, #2, 1968; “Tubular Bells,” Mike Oldfield, #7, 1974; “Last Night,” The Mar-Keys, #3, 1961; “Popcorn,” Hot Butter, #9, 1972; “Outa-Space,” Billy Preston, #2, 1972; “Hawaii Five-O,” The Ventures, #4, 1969; “Also Sprach Zarathustra,” Deodato, #2, 1973; “Jungle Fever,” The Chakachas, #8, 1972; “Tonight,” Ferrante and Teicher, #8, 1961; “No Matter What Shape,” The T-Bones, 1965; “The Entertainer,” Marvin Hamlisch, #3, 1974; “Pipeline,” The Chantays, #4, 1963; “Nadia’s Theme,” Barry DeVorzon, #8, 1976; “Songbird,” Kenny G, #4, 1987; “Born Free,” Roger Williams, 1966; “Walk Don’t Run,” The Ventures, #2, 1960; “Deulin’ Banjos,” Weissberg & Mandel, #2, 1973; “Axel F,” Harold Faltermeyer, # 3, 1985.

Beyond the Top 40 charts, the rock music landscape has hundreds and hundreds of instrumental tracks, especially in the progressive rock and jazz fusion genres.  For example, just about everything guitar great Jeff Beck ever recorded is an instrumental.  The Allman Brothers were famous for long instrumental pieces, on both studio and live albums (“In Memory of Elizabeth Reed,” “Jessica“).  The Alan Parsons Project had at least one instrumental track per LP throughout their 10-album run.  Santana (the band and guitarist Carlos) loved to stretch out on instrumental numbers like “Soul Sacrifice,” “Europa,” “Tales of Kilimanjaro” and “Samba Pa Ti.”  Yes and Genesis each offered the occasional instrumental track (“Clap” and “Los Endos” respectively).

A few hot tips:  A personal favorite instrumental deep track is “Fire on High,” the opening song on Electric Light Orchestra’s 1975 album “Face the Music.”  There’s some ferocious acoustic guitar work within an intricate ELO quasi-classical arrangement that’ll blow your socks off.  Another favorite is Jethro Tull’s instrumental flute piece “Bouree,” a jazzy take on an old Bach lute composition (“Boureé in E Minor”) that features Ian Anderson doing some of his best work.

And lastly, don’t miss the aptly titled instrumental track “Song With No Words” from David Crosby’s 1971 album, “If I Could Only Remember My Name”…

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