![]() ![]() ![]() Nevertheless, Vick recorded another session with Patton the next year, but this was rejected by Blue Note and he moved on. The opening track 'Our Miss Brooks' referred to Ellen Brooks, who had been Vick's girlfriend but was now going out with John Patton, who she married the next year.Īhh, musical tension in the studio! Listen to the above clip and imagine her sitting with a glass of wine, Yoko-like, at the back of the studio while the organ and sax face off. 'Our Miss Brooks' excerptHis debut 1963 album (Blue Note) sits firmly in the blues / early soul-jazz camp, with John Patton on the B3 and frequent collaborator on guitar. He became a preferred tenor sax player for all the top-shelf soul-jazz organists like McDuff, andIn fact, he played with so many hammond organists that he has his own clickable. A BRIEF HISTORY OF HAROLD VICKHarold Vick emerged in the early 1960s as a saxaphonist with a distinctive, lyrical tone who retained a blues edge as the soul-jazz scene played back and forth with post-bop modernism throughout the decade, then followed the development of new forms in the 1970s.Influenced by, he played in the band of vocalist Lloyd Price from about 1958-1960 before joining 's band. ![]()
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