Butch Cornell

Butch Cornell (David C. Randolph, Jr. (November 21, 1941 in Chattanooga, Tennessee December 7, 2008 in Chattanooga, Tennessee) was an American jazz organist.[1][2]

After initially learning classical piano, Cornell switched to jazz organ upon hearing the early 1960s Jimmy Smith approach to the instrument which was then gaining in popularity. Cornell released Here 'tis Now in 1963 and appeared frequently as a sideman with various recording artists in 1960s and 1970s, chiefly Stanley Turrentine, George Benson, and Freddie Hubbard. His most commercially successful recording was with Turrentine on the 1970 CTI release, Sugar.[3]

Discography

As leader

  • "Here 'tis Now" b/w "Goose Pimples" (Ru-Jac Records, 1963)

With Willis Jackson

With Boogaloo Joe Jones

With Stanley Turrentine

gollark: I see. I'm sure you'll possibly get to this later maybe.
gollark: If they have physical manifestations, they aren't what I mean and they aren't what you seem to mean.
gollark: Which ones, specifically? I mean, we have lots of fields doing some of that. Economics, politics, sociology, psychology, sort of thing.
gollark: The issue with saying "realm of spirit" instead of just "information [which doesn't physically exist]" is that you then have all the various vaguely religion-y connotations which you can then use to "prove" other things.
gollark: There aren't any (known) "people" who aren't also "humans", and humans physically exist, according to research.

References

  1. "Butch Cornell". at The International Archives for the Jazz Organ
  2. "Randolph, David C. "Butch Cornell" Jr". The Chattanoogan. December 9, 2008. Retrieved June 2, 2016.
  3. "Sugar". at Doug Payne's CTI Records discography


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