Cornell Dupree lyrics
Artist · 2 860 listeners per month
Artist's albums
Guitar Riffs For DJ's, Vol. 2
1993 · EP
Guitar Riffs For DJ's, Vol. 1
1993 · EP
Child's Play
1993 · album
Cornell Dupree Jazz Legends
1981 · album
Saturday Night Fever
1977 · album
On & On (Instrumental)
2016 · album
Shadow Dancing
2011 · album
Groove With Dupree - [The Dave Cash Collection]
2011 · album
Saturday Night Fever (Digitally Remastered)
2010 · album
Shadow Dancing (Digitally Remastered)
2010 · album
Teasin'
1974 · album
Guitar Great
2009 · album
Saturday Night Fever / Shadow Dancing (2 on 1)
2007 · album
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Biography
A veteran of over 2,500 recording sessions, guitarist Cornell Dupree worked most prolifically in R&B and blues, but he was equally at home in jazz, particularly funky fusion and soul-jazz. Dupree was born in Fort Worth, TX, in 1942, and by the age of 20 was playing in King Curtis' R&B group. He became a session musician soon after, playing on Brook Benton's "Rainy Night in Georgia," as well as records by stars like Lou Rawls, Paul Simon, Barbra Streisand, Harry Belafonte, Lena Horne, Roberta Flack, Joe Cocker, Michael Bolton, Mariah Carey, and countless others. Dupree was also a member of Aretha Franklin's touring band from 1967-1976, and during that time also became a presence on many jazz-funk recordings, the sort that would find favor with rare groove and acid jazz fans in the years to come. Dupree's first jazz session as a leader was 1974's Teasin', which was followed by Saturday Night Fever in 1977, and Shadow Dancing in 1978. During the same period, Dupree was a member of the studio-musician fusion supergroup Stuff, which signed with Warner Bros. in 1975 and recorded four albums. They also reunited periodically in the '80s and spawned a mid-'80s spin-off group called the Gadd Gang, which Dupree also belonged to. Some of Dupree's most rewarding jazz albums came in the late '80s and early '90s; 1988's Coast to Coast was nominated for a Grammy, and funky sessions like 1991's Can't Get Through, 1992's live Uncle Funky, and 1993's Child's Play received positive reviews. 1994's Bop 'n' Blues was his most straight-ahead jazz album, also ranking as one of his best. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi