George Benson booking
So many times in contemporary popular music – in jazz, rock, blues, folk or beyond – the man with the
guitar is the fulcrum on which all other sounds and voices hinge. He’s the core, the engine, the captain
who leads and inspires the rest of the team.
George Benson has been that man for nearly a half century. In a career that spans five decades, more
than 30 recordings as a leader and ten Grammy Awards, NEA Jazz Master, George Benson, has used
his jazz roots as the foundation for an engaging mix of pop, R&B and other shades that add up to a
style that appeals to a broad mainstream audience. Along the way, he has also established himself as
a formidable jazz singer – one whose biggest career hits have showcased his vocals as well as his
guitar chops. In short, this guitar man is the complete package.
Benson brings his instrumental and vocal prowess to the fore once again in Guitar Man, his third
album on Concord Records (following on the successes of Givin’ It Up in 2006 and Songs and Stories
in 2009). Set for release on October 4, 2011, Guitar Man is a 12-song collection that includes a mix of
jazz and pop standards – some in a combo setting and some solo, but all of them tied together
seamlessly by Benson’s soulful and exploratory signature sound. Lending a hand on this recording is a
solid team made up of veterans and newcomers alike – pianist Joe Sample, keyboardist and musical
director David Garfield, bassist Ben Williams and drummer Harvey Mason (on loan from Fourplay, and
a studio collaborator with Benson all the way back to Benson’s 1976 blockbuster album, Breezin’).
The crew came together in the studio with a minimum of prior rehearsal time but an eagerness to jump
in and lay down tracks in something very close to the live experience – what Benson describes as an
“old school” approach. The impromptu sensibility comes across in the final product, much of which
came together with minimal takes in a single day of recording. “We figured that we would get the best
energy if we went into the studio with some live musicians who are savvy and flexible,” says Benson,
“and boy, did we accomplish that. David has been my musical director for a number of years, and we
were fortunate to get Joe and Harvey for this recording. I had never played with Ben before this
project, but he understood everything I wanted before I could even get the words out of my mouth. We
got six or seven songs recorded in a single day, and Ben was like the glue that held them all together.”
The setting was loose and informal, a vibe that Benson prefers in the studio. “I think our producer,
John Burk, realized that I work better when I’m in the center of the floor, just passing out ideas,” he
says. “I understand what my musicians can do, I know where they excel, and I try not to play past
them or take things to a place where they shouldn’t go. I’m very comfortable with records like this – off
the cuff, arranged as you go.” From the very beginning, Benson has embraced this improvisational
approach to recording and performing. At age eight, he was already singing and playing the ukulele in
local nightclubs in his native Pittsburgh. By his teenage years, he had switched from ukulele to guitar,
and he had stopped singing for the most part to focus more on his instrumental work. His musical
sensibilities shifted toward jazz, due in large part to his exposure to records by Wes Montgomery,
Charlie Christian and Charlie Parker.
By the early ’60s, Benson had joined organist Jack McDuff’s band – a gig that was educational but
short-lived. He left to form his own band and launch his solo career with the 1964 album, The New
Boss Guitar (a nod to Montgomery’s album, Boss Guitar, released just a year earlier). The album
caught the attention of Columbia talent scout John Hammond, who signed him to the label. Benson
recorded two solo albums for Columbia and played session dates for numerous other artists, including
Miles Davis’ 1968 opus, Miles in the Sky. He left Columbia in the late ’60s and recorded on a number
of labels for the next several years. All the while, he’d been looking for a way to redevelop his vocals
and make them part of his overall repertoire, but most of the producers and record execs at the time
dismissed the idea, which became a source of growing frustration. But producer Tommy LiPuma saw
the idea differently, and the result was Breezin’, the 1976 blockbuster album that marked the
beginning of a long association with Warner Brothers. The first jazz record to achieve platinum sales,
Breezin’ yielded a number of hits, including the instrumental title track, the soulful update of Leon
Russell’s “This Masquerade” and the lively “Give Me The Night.”
Throughout the remainder of the ’70s and into the ’80s, Benson and LiPuma crafted a string of great
records that collectively cemented the guitarist’s global reputation. In the mid-’90s, Benson followed
LiPuma to the GRP label, where the two basically picked up where they’d left off at Warners. High
points from the period include That’s Right (1996) and Standing Together (1998). Since the start of the
millennium, Benson has shown no signs of slowing down. Some of his more notable offerings of the
past decade include the sexy and soulful Irreplaceable (2004), and Givin’ It Up (2006), a duet
recording with Al Jarreau that scored two Grammy Awards and marked his Concord debut. Songs and
Stories followed in 2009, with the help of some high-profile guest musicians: guitarists Lee Ritenour,
Steve Lukather and Norman Brown; vocalists Lalah Hathaway and Patti Austin; keyboardist David
Paich; bassist and co-producer Marcus Miller and several others.
Guitar Man may be a scaled back recording in comparison with its predecessor, but the smaller roster
of players has no trouble generating a healthy dose of creative energy. The opening track, however –
an intriguing rendition of Lennon and McCartney’s “I Want To Hold Your Hand” – actually features a
fuller lineup than that found in the 11 tracks that follow. Along with Benson and Garfield on this tune
are guitarists Paul Jackson Jr. and Ray Fuller; bassist Freddie Washington; drummer Oscar Seaton,
Jr. (who regularly tours with Benson); violinist Charlie Bisharat; and flutist/clarinetist Dan Higgins. All
come together to create a fully orchestrated sound that casts one of the most simplistic of the Beatles’
early love ballads into something full-bodied and engaging. The remainder of the set consists of the
aforementioned five-man team, which lays down an easygoing rendition of Stevie Wonder’s “My
Cherie Amour.” Benson delivers the lyrics in his own engaging vocal style, yet clearly tips his hat along
the way to Wonder’s original version along the way.
Solo guitar tracks like “Danny Boy” and “Tenderly” provide quiet interludes between the full-combo
tracks, and serve as a reminder that Benson is one guitar man with sufficient technical and interpretive
skills to be a band unto himself. (Check out his fretwork on the introduction to “Danny Boy,” wherein he
makes his guitar strings actually sound like bagpipes.) “My One and Only Love,” a Guy Wood/Robert
Mellin tune made famous by vocalist Johnny Hartman, opens with a 16-bar guitar interlude that
segues into a sweet vocal ballad. “I’m not Johnny Hartman,” says Benson, “but I think there are a lot of
Hartman fans who might appreciate an arrangement like that.”
Other highlights include a playful reading of “Paper Moon,” a rollicking version of the Champs’ 1958
instrumental pop classic “Tequila,” and a lush guitar-and-piano arrangement of the smoky standard,
“Since I Fell For You,” with Benson once again stepping up to the mic for an emotional delivery of the
song’s impassioned lyrics. The set closes with the driving and syncopated “Fingerlero,” written by
Ronnie Foster, whom Benson calls “the greatest keyboard player in the world.” Foster sent the track to
Benson on a whim, and the guitarist instantly recognized its rhythmic intrigue. “I knew before he sent it
that it was going to be unusual, but I didn’t know how unusual,” says Benson. “It was so interesting
that we had to try it. David wrote out the changes for the guys. We did it a couple times and it worked.
It had a really unique vibe to it.”
Indeed, Benson has never been one to shy away from innovation or experimentation. For this guitar
man, putting a jazz spin on pop standards – not just on this recording but throughout his career – is
less of a taboo when you’re willing to dispense with labels and the limitations that come with them.
“People categorize things because they need to find someplace to put them on their shelf,” he says.
“It’s all music to me. I think a lot of pop tunes that were very big in the United States many years ago
were recorded by jazz musicians playing in the background. Most of the Motown records were
recorded that way. Those guys were jazz musicians who were living in Detroit and were called to do a
job, and they did it very well…I try to do the same thing. I try to make it sound like it’s natural, because to me it is. There are only two kinds of music, good and bad. There are a lot of things in between, but they’re eventually going to fall on one side or the other of that equation.”
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