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Freddie Roach (organist)

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Name
  
Freddie Roach


Role
  
Organist

Freddie Roach (organist) Freddie Roach Artists Blue Note Records

Albums
  
Good Move!, Down to Earth, Mocha Motion!, All That's Good, Brown Sugar

Similar People
  
Al Harewood, Milt Hinton, Alfred Lion

Freddie roach party time


Freddie Roach (May 11, 1931 - October 3, 1980) was a soul jazz Hammond B3 organist born in the Bronx, New York. He was one of a handful of legendary jazz organists that made history in the 1960s, the golden era of the Hammond organ. Roach made his record debut in 1960 with saxophonist Ike Quebec on the albums Heavy Soul and It Might as Well Be Spring and played with Willis Jackson. From 1962-64 he recorded 5 albums as a leader for the Blue Note Records label and also recorded with Donald Byrd on the album I'm Tryin' to Get Home. His Blue Note album Mo' Greens Please is perhaps one of the greatest 10 jazz organ sides ever recorded. Roach's original writing, steady basslines, and highly musical fleet-fingered right hand set him apart. From 1966-67 he recorded three more albums as a leader for Prestige Records, which are in a more commercial vein than his Blue Note dates. He left the music business in 1970 and became involved in theater, playwriting and film. Reportedly, he moved to California to the film industry, where he suffered a heart attack and died in 1980.

Contents

Freddie Roach (organist) Good Move Wikipedia

Roach was a soulful organist, certainly influenced by Jimmy Smith, but with a distinct sound and a quite original concept, which was perhaps best heard on "Good Move" for Blue Note. His Blue Note albums are critically acclaimed.

Freddie Roach (organist) Mo Greens Please Wikipedia

Discography

Freddie Roach (organist) Freddie Roach Biography Albums Streaming Links AllMusic

  • Down to Earth (Blue Note, 1962)
  • Mo' Greens Please (Blue Note, 1963)
  • Good Move! (Blue Note, 1963)
  • Brown Sugar (Blue Note, 1964)
  • All That's Good (Blue Note, 1964)
  • The Freddie Roach Soul Book (Prestige, 1966)
  • Mocha Motion! (Prestige, 1967)
  • My People (Soul People) (Prestige, 1967)
  • As Sideman

    Freddie Roach (organist) Freddie Roach Good Move 1963 Blue Note poll Heroes of the

    With Ike Quebec

    Freddie Roach (organist) My People Soul People Wikipedia

  • Heavy Soul (Blue Note, 1961)
  • It Might as Well Be Spring (Blue Note, 1961)
  • With Willis Jackson

  • Thunderbird (Prestige, 1962)
  • With Donald Byrd

  • I'm Tryin' to Get Home (Blue Note, 1965)
  • References

    Freddie Roach (organist) Wikipedia