Artist's albums
Rough 'N Tumble
2000 · album
Do You Have Any Sugar?
1999 · album
Common Touch
1997 · album
T Time
1995 · album
Meets Mr. T.
1994 · album
Pieces Of Dreams
1994 · album
Up At Minton's
1994 · album
If I Could
1993 · album
Star Bright
2021 · album
Trouble
2021 · album
Milestones of New Jazz Masters: Yeah!, Vol. 9
2019 · album
Blue Note Stanley Turrentine/Sextet Sessions
2011 · album
A Chip Off The Old Block (Remastered)
2009 · album
Dearly Beloved (Remastered)
2008 · album
Return Of The Prodigal Son
2008 · album
A Bluish Bag
2007 · album
Look Out! (Remastered)
2007 · album
The Spoiler (Reissue)
2007 · album
Joyride (Remastered / Rudy Van Gelder Edition)
2005 · album
That's Where It's At
2005 · album
Music For Lovers
2004 · album
Never Let Me Go
2004 · album
Hustlin' (Remastered / Rudy Van Gelder Edition)
2002 · album
On A Misty Night
2002 · album
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Biography
A legend of the tenor saxophone, Stanley Turrentine was renowned for his distinctively thick, rippling tone, an earthy grounding in the blues, and his ability to work a groove with soul and imagination. Turrentine recorded in a wide variety of settings, but was best-known for his Blue Note soul-jazz jams of the '60s, and also underwent a popular fusion makeover in the early '70s. Born in Pittsburgh on April 5, 1934, Turrentine began his career playing with various blues and R&B bands, with a strong influence from Illinois Jacquet. He played in Lowell Fulson's band with Ray Charles from 1950-1951, and in 1953, he replaced John Coltrane in Earl Bostic's early R&B/jazz band. After a mid-'50s stint in the military, Turrentine joined Max Roach's band and subsequently met organist Shirley Scott, whom he married in 1960 and would record with frequently. Upon moving to Philadelphia, Turrentine struck up a chemistry with another organist, Jimmy Smith, appearing on Smith's 1960 classics Back at the Chicken Shack and Midnight Special, among others. Also in 1960, Turrentine began recording as a leader for Blue Note, concentrating chiefly on small-group soul-jazz on classics like That's Where It's At, but also working with the Three Sounds (on 1961's Blue Hour) and experimenting with larger ensemble settings in the mid-'60s. As the '70s dawned, Turrentine and Scott divorced and Turrentine became a popular linchpin of Creed Taylor's new, fusion-oriented CTI label; he recorded five albums, highlighted by Sugar, Salt Song, and Don't Mess With Mister T. While those commercially accessible efforts were artistically rewarding as well, critical opinion wasn't as kind to his late-'70s work for Fantasy; still, Turrentine continued to record prolifically, and returned to his trademark soul-jazz in the '80s and '90s. Turrentine passed away on September 12, 2000, following a massive stroke. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi