Remembering David "Fathead" Newman! | Sax on the Web Forum
Sax on the Web Forum banner

Remembering David "Fathead" Newman!

3K views 6 replies 6 participants last post by  mascio 
#1 ·
David "Fathead" Newman
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Background information
Birth name David Newman, Jr.
Born February 24, 1933
Corsicana, Texas
Died January 20, 2009 (aged 75)
Kingston, New York
Genres jazz
Hard bop
Mainstream jazz
Jazz blues
Occupations Musician, Songwriter
Instruments Saxophone, Flute
Associated acts Ray Charles, Herbie Mann, Stanley Turrentine
Website www.davidfatheadnewman.com

David "Fathead" Newman (February 24, 1933 - January 20, 2009) was an American jazz saxophonist.

Biography

Born in Corsicana, Texas, Newman's professional career as a musician began in 1954 as a member of the Ray Charles Band.

While there are reports of Newman offering more than one origin of his nickname "Fathead", the commonly accepted explanation is that the nickname originated from his high school music class. Mr. Miller, his then music teacher, saw his music upside down on the stand, and knowing that Newman couldn't read music very well at the time, walked over and tapped him on his head with the conductor's baton and called him "Fathead." The entire classroom laughed and Newman, having good humor, did not find it derogatory. The name stuck with him, but he said he preferred to be called "David."[citation needed]
Career

He moved to Dallas where he graduated from Lincoln High School. After high school, he started playing flute and tenor saxophone at local shows. He attended Jarvis Christian College where he studied theology and music. Newman stayed in college for two years and decided to move onto the road to further his music career. He played and toured with Buster Smith, Charlie Parker's mentor, playing many one-nighters with musicians such as T-Bone Walker at dance halls all over the central United States.

At one of these many gigs, he met Ray Charles, and in 1954, Newman joined Charles in his band as the baritone saxophone player (although he is more famous as a tenor saxophone and flute player) and began a twelve-year gig with Charles. He later joined Herbie Mann, with whom he played for another ten years.
Later life

Over the years up to 2008, Newman recorded over thirty-eight albums under his own name, including his first, Fathead, Ray Charles Presents David 'Fathead' Newman recorded in 1958,[1][2] but not released until 1960, and the second, The Sound of the Wide Open Spaces, with James Clay,[3] produced by Cannonball Adderley, the following year.
Influenced

Always a musicians' musician, Newman is best known for his hard bop style that has influenced generations of saxophone players of different genres. He also played R&B and blues, appearing on recordings with Stanley Turrentine, Aretha Franklin, B. B. King, the Average White Band, Jimmy McGriff, Eric Clapton, John Stein, Natalie Cole, Hank Crawford, Aaron Neville, Queen Latifah, Richard Tee, Dr. John, Cheryl Bentyne of The Manhattan Transfer and country/tex-mex artist Doug Sahm.
Final Years

In Ray, the 2004 biographical film about Ray Charles, Newman was portrayed by Bokeem Woodbine.

On January 22, 2008, Newman sat in as a guest with the CBS orchestra on the Late Show with David Letterman.
Death

On January 20, 2009, Newman died from complications of pancreatic cancer.
Discography
As leader

Fathead: Ray Charles Presents David 'Fathead' Newman (1960) Atlantic Records 1304
The Sound of the Wide Open Spaces!!!! with James Clay (1960) Riverside Records 12-327
Straight Ahead[2] (1961) Atlantic 1366
Fathead Comes On[2] (1962) Atlantic 1399
House of David (1967) Atlantic 1489
Double Barrelled Soul with Jack McDuff (1968) Atlantic 1498
Bigger and Better (1968) Atlantic 1505
The Many Facets of David Newman with Clifford Jordan (1968) Atlantic 1524
Captain Buckles[6] (1971) Cotillion Records 18002
Lonely Avenue (1972) Atlantic 1600
The Weapon (1972) Atlantic 1638
Newmanism (1974) Atlantic 1662
Mr. Fathead[7] (1976) Warner Bros. Records BS 2917
Concrete Jungle (1977) Prestige Records 10104
Keep the Dream Alive[4] (1977) Prestige 10106
Front Money[7] (1977) Warner Bros. BS 2984
Back To Basics (1977) Milestone Records 9188
Scratch My Back[4] (1979) Prestige 10108
Resurgence[8] (1980) Muse Records 5234
Still Hard Times[8] (1982) Muse 5283

Heads Up (1987) Atlantic 81725
Fire! Live at the Village Vanguard (1990) Atlantic 81965
Blue Head Live, with Clifford Jordan (1990) Candid Records 70941
Blue Greens and Beans with Marchel Ivery and the Rein DeGraaff Trio (1990) Timeless 351
Return to the Wide Open Spaces Live, with Ellis Marsalis, Cornell Dupree,... (1990) Amazing Records 1021
Bluesiana Triangle (1990) Windham Hill Jazz WD-0125 - with Bluesiana Triangle
Bluesiana II (1991) Windham Hill 10133 - with Bluesiana Triangle
Mr. Gentle Mr. Cool (1994) Kokopelli Records
Under a Woodstock Moon (1996) Kokopelli
Chillin' (1999) HighNote Records 7036
Keep the Spirits Singing (2001) HighNote 7057
Davey Blue (2001) HighNote 7086
The Gift (2003) HighNote 7104
Song for the New Man (2004) HighNote 7120
I Remember Brother Ray (2005) HighNote 7135
Cityscape (2006) HighNote 7150
Life (2007) HighNote 7166
Diamondhead (2008) HighNote 7179
The Blessing (2009) HighNote 7195

As sideman

With Ray Charles

The Great Ray Charles (1957)
Yes Indeed! (1958)
Ray Charles at Newport (1958)
What'd I Say (1959)
The Genius of Ray Charles (1959)
Ray Charles in Person (1960)
The Genius Hits the Road (1960)
The Genius After Hours (1961)
Sweet & Sour Tears (1964)
Berlin, 1962

With Eddie Harris

The Electrifying Eddie Harris (Atlantic, 1967)

With Lee Morgan

Sonic Boom (1967)

With Lonnie Smith

Think! (1968)

With Cornell Dupree

Teasin' (1973)

With BB King

There Must Be a Better World Somewhere (1981)
Let the Good Times Roll (1999)

With Herbie Mann

Mississippi Gambler (1972, Atlantic)

With Shirley Scott

Shirley Scott & the Soul Saxes (Atlantic, 1969)

With John Stein

Green Street (1999)

With JW-Jones

Kissing in 29 Days (2006)

Other appearances

The Atlantic Family Live at Montreux (1977)
 
See less See more
#6 ·
My favorite record of his is off the beaten path... you rarely ever hear it these days.
Foxy Brown. It may not have even been part of the Pam Grier flick soundtrack. But a way cool tune that we used to play in a band that played that kind of stuff, in the 70s.

Not sure if this linnk will work here, but anyway it's the video with the crazy clouds of white smoke.
 
This is an older thread, you may not receive a response, and could be reviving an old thread. Please consider creating a new thread.
Top