Artist's albums
Legends Of Acid Jazz: Brother Jack
1999 · album
Bringin' It Home
1999 · album
Down Home Blues
1997 · album
Down Home Style
1997 · album
Screamin'
1996 · album
It's About Time
1996 · album
The Honeydripper
1995 · album
Crash!
1994 · album
Another Real Good'Un
1990 · album
Kirk's Work
1990 · album
The Re-Entry
1988 · album
Live It Up
1984 · album
George Benson & Jack McDuff [2-fer]
1977 · compilation
Live at Parnell's
2022 · album
Blues in the Night / Another Real Goodun'
2022 · single
Walkin' The Dog / Untitled D Minor
2022 · single
Sanctified Samba (Live in New Jersey)
2021 · album
Time to Go
2021 · album
Live!!!
2020 · album
Screamin' Soul
2013 · album
Jack-Pot
2010 · album
The Prestige Years
2004 · album
Moon Rappin'
2002 · album
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Biography
A marvelous bandleader and organist as well as capable arranger, "Brother" Jack McDuff has one of the funkiest, most soulful styles of all time on the Hammond B-3. His rock-solid basslines and blues-drenched solos are balanced by clever, almost pianistic melodies and interesting progressions and phrases. McDuff began as a bassist playing with Denny Zeitlin and Joe Farrell. He studied privately in Cincinnati and worked with Johnny Griffin in Chicago. He taught himself organ and piano in the mid-'50s, and began gaining attention working with Willis Jackson in the late '50s and early '60s, cutting high caliber soul-jazz dates for Prestige. McDuff made his recording debut as a leader for Prestige in 1960, playing in a studio pickup band with Jimmy Forrest. They made a pair of outstanding albums: Tough Duff and The Honeydripper. McDuff organized his own band the next year, featuring Harold Vick and drummer Joe Dukes. Things took off when McDuff hired a young guitarist named George Benson. They were among the most popular combos of the mid-'60s and made several excellent albums. McDuff's later groups at Atlantic and Cadet didn't equal the level of the Benson band, while later dates for Verve and Cadet were uneven, though generally good. McDuff experimented with electronic keyboards and fusion during the '70s, then in the '80s got back in the groove with the Muse session Cap'n Jack. While his health fluctuated throughout the '90s, McDuff released several discs on the Concord Jazz label before succumbing to heart failure on January 23, 2001, at the age of 74. ~ Ron Wynn and Bob Porter, Rovi