Artist's albums
At Their Best
1973 · compilation
The 2nd Crusade
1973 · album
The Crusaders: Finest Hour
2000 · compilation
Priceless Jazz 12: The Crusaders
1998 · compilation
Way Back Home
1996 · album
Live In Japan
1993 · album
Healing The Wounds
1991 · album
Life In The Modern World
1988 · album
The Vocal Album
1987 · album
The Good And Bad Times
1986 · album
Ghetto Blaster
1984 · album
Royal Jam
1982 · album
Standing Tall
1981 · album
Rhapsody And Blues
1980 · album
Street Life
1979 · album
Images
1978 · album
Free As The Wind
1977 · album
Those Southern Knights
1976 · album
Chain Reaction
1975 · album
Scratch
1974 · album
Southern Comfort
1974 · album
Gold
2007 · album
Serious Joy
2007 · album
Live in Japan 2003
2004 · album
Groove Crusade
2003 · compilation
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Biography
Back in 1954, Houston pianist Joe Sample teamed up with high school friends tenor saxophonist Wilton Felder and drummer Stix Hooper to form the Swingsters. Within a short time, they were joined by trombonist Wayne Henderson, flutist Hubert Laws, and bassist Henry Wilson and the group became the Modern Jazz Sextet. With the move of Sample, Felder, Hooper, and Henderson to Los Angeles in 1960, the band (a quintet with the bass spot constantly changing) took on the name of the Jazz Crusaders. The following year they made their first recordings for Pacific Jazz and throughout the 1960s the group was a popular attraction, mixing together R&B and Memphis soul elements with hard bop; its trombone/tenor frontline became a trademark. By 1971, when all of the musicians were also busy with their own projects, it was decided to call the group simply the Crusaders so it would not be restricted to only playing jazz. After a few excellent albums during the early part of the decade (with guitarist Larry Carlton a strong asset), the group began to decline in quality. In 1975, the band's sound radically changed when Henderson departed to become a full-time producer. 1979's "Street Life" was a hit, but also a last hurrah. With Hooper's decision to leave in 1983, the group no longer sounded like the Crusaders and gradually disbanded. In the mid-'90s, Henderson and Felder had a reunion as the Crusaders but in reality only Joe Sample has had a strong solo career. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi