Artist's albums
Inimitable
1999 · album
Meet Betty Carter And Ray Bryant
1996 · album
Alone With The Blues
1996 · album
Plays Blues and Ballads (Piano Solo)
1993 · album
Stompin' With Bill
1990 · album
Alone At Montreux (Live)
1972 · album
With His Trio
2022 · compilation
Dynamic Piano Collection
2022 · album
Cold Turkey
2012 · album
In the Back Room (Live)
2008 · album
Key One Up
2006 · album
Somewhere in France
2003 · album
MCMLXX
1970 · album
Presenting Ray Bryant
1960 · album
Lonesome Traveler
1966 · album
Similar artists
Bobby Timmons
Artist
Junior Mance
Artist
Sonny Clark
Artist
Phineas Newborn Jr.
Artist
Kenny Drew Trio
Artist
Duke Jordan
Artist
Billy Taylor
Artist
Red Garland
Artist
Red Garland Trio
Artist
Horace Parlan
Artist
Bobby Timmons Trio
Artist
Benny Green
Artist
Sonny Criss
Artist
Barry Harris
Artist
Wynton Kelly
Artist
Kenny Drew
Artist
Hampton Hawes
Artist
Tommy Flanagan
Artist
Cedar Walton
Artist
Nat Adderley
Artist
Biography
Although he could always play bop, Ray Bryant's playing combined together older elements (including blues, boogie-woogie, gospel, and even stride) into a distinctive, soulful, and swinging style; no one played "After Hours" quite like him. The younger brother of bassist Tommy Bryant and the uncle of Kevin and Robin Eubanks (his sister is their mother), Bryant started his career playing with Tiny Grimes in the late '40s. He became the house pianist at The Blue Note in Philadelphia in 1953, where he backed classic jazz greats (including Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, and Lester Young) and made important contacts. He accompanied Carmen McRae (1956-1957), recorded with Coleman Hawkins and Roy Eldridge at the 1957 Newport Jazz Festival (taking a brilliant solo on an exciting version of "I Can't Believe That You're in Love with Me"), and played with Jo Jones' trio (1958). Bryant settled in New York in 1959; played with Sonny Rollins, Charlie Shavers, and Curtis Fuller; and soon had his own trio. He had a few funky commercial hits (including "Little Susie" and "Cubano Chant") that kept him working for decades. Bryant recorded often throughout his career (most notably for Epic, Prestige, Columbia, Sue, Cadet, Atlantic, Pablo, and Emarcy), and even his dates on electric piano in the '70s are generally rewarding. However, Bryant was heard at his best when playing the blues on unaccompanied acoustic piano. After a lengthy illness, Ray Bryant died in Queens, New York on June 2, 2011; he was 79 years old. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi