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Will Lee (bassist)

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Genres
  
Role
  
Musician · willlee.com

Name
  
Will Lee


Years active
  
1973–present

Occupation(s)
  
Bassist, composer

Education
  
University of Miami

Will Lee (bassist) wwwvintageguitarcomwpcontentuploadsLEE01jpg

Birth name
  
William Franklin Lee IV

Born
  
September 8, 1952 (age 71) San Antonio, Texas, United States (
1952-09-08
)

Instruments
  
Bass guitar, voice, acoustic guitar, drums

Music groups
  
The Fab Faux, Aztec Camera (1987)

Albums
  
Love, Gratitude and Other Distractions, Love, Bird House, Oh!

Similar People
  
Randy Brecker, John Tropea, Steve Gadd, Anton Fig, Michael Brecker

And will lee on bass


William Franklin "Will" Lee IV (born September 8, 1952) is an American bassist known for his work on the Late Show with David Letterman as part of the CBS Orchestra.

Contents

Will Lee (bassist) Will Lee picks 10 essential bass albums MusicRadar

Born in San Antonio, Texas, Lee has recorded and toured with many artists. He appeared on the Mark & Clark Band's hit record Worn Down Piano. He performs with his Beatles tribute band, The Fab Faux, which he co-founded in 1998.

Will Lee (bassist) MusicPlayerscom Features gt Bass gt Will Lee

Will lee speaks about jaco


Beginnings in music

Will Lee (bassist) Best of 2013 The Top Bassist Interviews Old School

Lee was greatly influenced to pursue music because of his parents. His father, William Franklin Lee III played piano, trumpet and the upright bass professionally. Lee's mother sang with big bands. Lee took up drums after seeing the Beatles on The Ed Sullivan Show, and by the time he was 12 had formed his first band in Miami. The band members each earned $9 a night playing the popular surfing tunes characteristic of the 60s. With the great numbers of drummers in Miami, Lee shifted to bass, an instrument that offered more opportunities. Lee was part of a succession of bands including top 40 bands with names like "Chances R" "The Loving Kind", and "Green Cloud."

Will Lee (bassist) MusicPlayerscom Features gt Bass gt Will Lee

Lee had a formal musical education at the University of Miami. He studied French horn for a year and then switched to a bass major. After classes, he worked on bass fundamentals listening to not only the Beatles, but also Stevie Wonder, Jimi Hendrix, Steve Miller, The Rascals, Motown, Sly & the Family Stone, among others. He would put it all into practice six sets a night playing with various local bands, including a horn band called "Goldrush."

Professional music career

Will Lee (bassist) Will Lee Talks About the Hipshot Bass Xtender YouTube

Lee then went to New York City. Trumpeter Randy Brecker called Lee out of class one day and invited him to audition for Dreams. In New York, Lee's career as a session musician flourished, and he toured with many artists. Lee played in the New York "24th Street Band" which had great success in Japan, giving him a solo artist career that yielded him a top 5 single. Most recently, his solo CD entitled OH! reached the #1 position on the "Jazz Beyond" chart there. On January 20, 2016 Lee played bass with Christopher Cross at the Moody Theater in Austin, TX at a taping for Austin City Limits.

The CBS Orchestra

Will Lee (bassist) Lehman College School of Arts and Humanities

In 1982, Lee became one of the original members of The World's Most Dangerous Band, the house band on NBC's Late Night with David Letterman. He holds the distinction of playing with Paul Shaffer, on both Late Night and the Late Show, longer than any other member of the CBS Orchestra. Before the Late Show begins taping, he often tosses out guitar picks to the audience as souvenirs. On the May 13, 2015 episode of the Late Show with David Letterman, as Letterman was interviewing Paul Shaffer, Shaffer gave recognition to the members of his band, and lastly mentioned Lee as the "man has been with us on bass since the first night we were on Late Night, Will Lee."

Awards and honors

  • NARAS MVP Award for bass guitar, 1979, 1982, 1985–1987
  • NARAS MVP Award for male session singer, 1987
  • NARAS MVP Virtuoso Award for bass guitar, 1989
  • Grammy Award for Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album, Some Skunk Funk, with Michael Brecker, Randy Brecker, Peter Erskine, Jim Beard, Vince Mendoza, Marcio Doctor, and the WDR Big Band, 2006
  • Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum, 2014
  • Basses

    Lee uses the Sadowsky Will Lee model, a 4-string jazz bass with a narrower nut width of 1.45" [37mm] instead of the usual 1.5" [38mm], 22 frets and a Hipshot D-tuner. The bass was built for him by Roger Sadowsky and has now become a production model within the line of Sadowsky basses.

    Discography

  • OH! (1993)
  • Birdhouse (2006)
  • Love, Gratitude and Other Distractions (2013)
  • As sideman

    With Ace Frehley

  • Ace Frehley (Casablanca ,1978)
  • With Patti Austin

  • End of a Rainbow (CTI, 1976)
  • Havana Candy (CTI, 1977)
  • Live at the Bottom Line (CTI, 1978)
  • With George Benson

  • In Concert-Carnegie Hall (CTI, 1975)
  • Benson & Farrell with Joe Farrell (CTI, 1976)
  • With Dan Brenner

  • Little Dark Angel (2011)
  • With The Brecker Brothers

  • The Brecker Bros. (Arista, 1975)
  • Back to Back (Arista, 1976)
  • Don’t Stop the Music (Arista, 1977)
  • Return of the Brecker Brothers (GRP, 1992)
  • With James Brown

  • Dead on the Heavy Funk (1975–1983)
  • With Hiram Bullock

  • From All Sides (Atlantic, 1986)
  • Give It What U Got (Atlantic, 1987)
  • Way Kool (Atlantic, 1992)
  • World of Collision (Big World, 1994)
  • Manny's Car Wash (Big World, 1996)
  • First Class Vagabond (JVC Victor, 2000)
  • Color Me (Via, 2001)
  • Best of Hiram Bullock (WEA, 2002)
  • Try Livin' It (EFA, 2003)
  • Guitarman (JVC Victor, JVC Victor)
  • Too Funky 2 Ignore (BHM, 2006)
  • With Gary Burton

  • Reunion (GRP, 1990)
  • Cool Nights (GRP, 1991)
  • With Mariah Carey

  • Emotions (Columbia, 1991)
  • With D'Angelo

  • Brown Sugar
  • With Chaka Khan

  • Chaka (Atlantic, 1978)
  • Chaka Khan (Warner Bros., 1982)
  • With Art Farmer

  • Crawl Space (CTI, 1977)
  • Yama with Joe Henderson (CTI, 1979)
  • With Yusef Lateef

  • In a Temple Garden (CTI, 1979)
  • With Herbie Mann

  • Waterbed (Atlantic, 1975)
  • With Lalo Schifrin

  • Towering Toccata (CTI, 1976)
  • With Don Sebesky

  • The Rape of El Morro (CTI, 1975)
  • With Spyro Gyra

  • Morning Dance (1979)
  • Catching the Sun (1980)
  • Carnaval (1980)
  • Free Time (1981)
  • Incognito (1982)
  • With Mike Stern

  • is what it is (Atlantic, 1994)
  • These Times (ESC, 2004)
  • All Over the Place (Heads Up, 2012)
  • References

    Will Lee (bassist) Wikipedia