Artist's albums
Just Moody
2022 · compilation
Moody & Soul
2021 · EP
Project Baby
2021 · single
James Moody
2020 · album
Flute 'N the Blues
2020 · album
Last Train from Overbrook
2020 · album
Two Tropicana Workshop
2020 · album
Two Tropicana Workshop
2020 · album
These Sunny Love Things
2020 · single
These Sunny Love Things
2020 · EP
These Sunny Love Things
2020 · EP
Tenor Contrasts (Remastered 2016)
2016 · album
In The Beginning
2016 · album
Crawl
2016 · single
James Moody, Jazz Stars
2015 · album
Moody 4B
2010 · album
Visiting Paris
2009 · album
Moody 4A
2009 · album
Body and Soul
2008 · album
Jazz Progressions
2008 · album
Over the Rainbow (The Best Of)
2008 · compilation
Kite Hill
2005 · album
The World Is A Ghetto
2005 · album
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Biography
James Moody was an institution in jazz from the late '40s into the 21st century, whether on tenor, flute, occasional alto, or yodeling his way through his "Moody's Mood for Love." After serving in the Air Force (1943-1946), he joined Dizzy Gillespie's bebop orchestra and began a lifelong friendship with the trumpeter. Moody toured Europe with Gillespie and then stayed overseas for several years, working with Miles Davis, Max Roach, and top European players. His 1949 recording of "I'm in the Mood for Love" became a hit in 1952 under the title of "Moody's Mood for Love" with classic vocalese lyrics written by Eddie Jefferson and a best-selling recording by King Pleasure. After returning to the U.S., Moody formed a septet that lasted for five years, recorded extensively for Prestige and Argo, took up the flute, and then from 1963-1968, was a member of Dizzy Gillespie's quintet. He worked in Las Vegas show bands during much of the 1970s before returning to jazz, playing occasionally with Gillespie, mostly working as a leader and recording with Lionel Hampton's Golden Men of Jazz. Moody, who alternated between tenor (which he preferred) and alto throughout his career, had an original sound on both horns. He was also one of the best flutists in jazz. Moody recorded as a leader for numerous labels, including Blue Note, Xanadu, Vogue, Prestige, EmArcy, Mercury, Argo, DJM, Milestone, Perception, MPS, Muse, Vanguard, and Novus. He died of complications from pancreatic cancer on December 9, 2010 in San Diego, CA. James Moody was 85 years old. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi