Biography
George Duke was born in San Rafael, California, and reared
in Marin City, a working class section of Marin County. When he was just
four years old, his mother took him to see Duke Ellington in concert.
"I don't remember it too well," says George, "but my mother
told me I went crazy. I ran around saying 'Get me a piano, get me a piano!'"
He began his piano studies at age seven, absorbing the roots of Black
music in his local Baptist church. "That's where I first began to
play funky. I really learned a lot about music from the church. I saw
how music could trigger emotions in a cause-and-effect relationship."
By the age of sixteen, George had played with a number of high school
jazz groups. He was heavily influenced by Miles Davis and the soul-jazz
sound of Les McCann and Cal Tjader. Attending the San Francisco
Conservatory Of Music and majoring in trombone and composition with a
minor in contrabass, he received his Bachelor of Music degree in 1967.
George and a young singer named Al Jarreau formed a group which
became the house band at San Francisco's Half Note Club. "There was
another club up the street called The Both/And and I worked there on Mondays
with everybody from Letta Mbulu to Sonny Rollins and Dexter
Gordon." George later received a Masters Degree in composition
from San Francisco State University and briefly taught a course on Jazz
And American Culture at Merritt Junior College in Oakland. It was about
this time that George began to release a series of jazz LP's on the MPS
label.
One night, on a local jazz station, George heard a record by the violinist Jean-Luc Ponty. When he found out that Jean-Luc was coming to California
to record, he sent a tape to Dick Bock at World-Pacific Records, along
with a note saying "There is no other pianist for this guy but me."
The George Duke Trio which emerged from those sessions was soon burning
a path of creative excitement through the jazz world. It included a major
European tour and an appearance at the Newport Jazz Festival. The group's
first gig in a rock-oriented venue came in early 1969. "It was a
club in Los Angeles called Thee Experience," George recalls. In attendance
were Cannonball Adderly, Quincy Jones, Frank Zappa, and the unexpected
presence of an electric, rather than acoustic, piano on-stage. The Ponty-Duke
performance wowed the crowd, and ushered in the West Coast counterpart
of the Eastern fusion revolution sparked by Miles Davis, The Mahavishnu
Orchestra and Weather Report. Before '69 was out, George joined
Frank Zappa (as he put together a new "Mothers Of Invention"
lineup) and toured for an entire year.
At the end of 1970, George Duke received an offer he couldn't refuse from
veteran jazzman Julian "Cannonball" Adderly. "I
joined the group in January '71, and stayed two years. Through Cannonball,
I was given the opportunity to meet and work with Nancy Wilson, Joe
Williams, Dizzy Gillespie -- all these great artists I'd been listening
to since I was a kid."
I met Stanley Clarke through my association with Cannonball. We played
a festival in Pori Finland where I heard Stan with Chick Corea for the
first time live – I was astounded! Through my recordings and live
performances with Cannonball and Stanley, I developed a musical, and even
more importantly, a family relationship with Flora Purim and Airto Moriera.
The 70’s were filled with musical experimentation with all of these
great musicians and more.
In 1973, George rejoined Zappa and brought Jean-Luc Ponty with him. That
band stayed together for the next three years, until Duke left to join
forces with drummer Billy Cobham. Together, they formed a powerhouse
jazz fusion unit even more popular and influential than the earlier Duke/Ponty
group.
George Duke became a solo artist in 1976, and enjoyed success with a series
of fusion-oriented LP's such as his debut CBS LP, From Me To You. In 1978, the funk-flavored sound of the gold album Reach For It propelled George Duke into the upper reaches of the charts, and from small
clubs to large arenas.
In the late '70s, George decided to get into producing as a career. George
began by producing the Brazilian instrumentalist Raoul de Souza, then
made his first vocal album with singer Dee Dee Bridgewater. His
breakthrough came with an album by A Taste Of Honey. The single,
"Sukiyaki," went to Number 1 on the pop, adult contemporary,
and R&B charts, ultimately selling over two million copies.
"From there," says George, "things started snowballing."
He went on to produce three albums for Jeffrey Osborne (including
the Top Ten pop singles "Stay With Me Tonight" and "On
The Wings Of Love") and two best-sellers for Deniece Williams (including her across-the-board number one smash "Let's Hear It For
The Boy" and the chart-topping R&B single "Do What You Feel").
Duke also wrote and produced the number one single "Sweet Baby"
for his own recording with Stanley Clarke (The Clarke/Duke Project). Duke's
special expertise was even tapped by such unlikely mainstream artists
as Melissa Manchester and Barry Manilow. By the end of 1988,
he had produced four songs for Smokey Robinson and several songs
for saxophonist George Howard. George's other production projects
included the number one chart hit "Call Me" by Phil Perry and several songs for Miles Jaye, vocalist Dianne Reeves, The
Pointer Sisters, 101 North, Najee, Jeffrey Osborne, Take 6, Howard Hewett,
Chante Moore, Everette Harp, Rachelle Ferrell and, most recently, Gladys Knight, Keith Washington, Filipino star Gary Valenciano,
Johnny Gill and Anita Baker.
George Duke made his debut on Elektra in February, 1985 with the Latin-flavored Thief In The Night. A second album, simply titled George Duke, was issued in August 1986, followed by Night After Night, George
Duke's final release for Elektra.
Through the years, along with his own releases and busy producing schedule,
George has acted as musical director for numerous artists and television
specials, including the Soul Train Music Awards (nine years), NBC's Sunday Night Show and Anita Baker (Duke took Anita and a
14-piece band to Washington D.C. to perform at the Kennedy Center for
The Democratic National Committee). He served as musical director for
Disney's concert to benefit the Foundation for Pediatric AIDS For
Our Children (featuring an all-star cast that included Michael
Bolton, Paula Abdul and Kris Kross) and Disney's Salute
To Youth during the President's Inaugural celebration. In '92, he
went to Spain to be music director for the largest guitar festival in
history, featuring such artists as George Benson, Stanley Clarke, Larry
Coryell, Paco de Lucia, Rickie Lee Jones and John McLaughlin. He also was at the helm for Legend to Legend with George Burns,
Tony Bennett, Johnny Mathis, and others.
In addition to his non-stop musical adventures, George appeared on NBC's
soap opera Generations in '89, playing the role of a night club
owner. He also found time in his schedule to appear on Comic Relief with Doc Severinson, donating his funds to the homeless. That same
year George recorded a third album with Stanley Clarke for Epic Records,
titled Stanley Clarke & George Duke 3.
In 1990, George Duke was named "R&B Keyboardist Of The
Year" by Keyboard Magazine for the second consecutive
year. Other honors include Grammy nominations for his production of "We
Are The World" by the Children Of The World; "Sweet Baby"
by the Clarke/Duke project; "Let's Hear It For The Boy" by Deniece
Williams; "Stay With Me Tonight" and "On The Wings Of Love"
by Jeffrey Osborne; and "Fumilayo" by Dianne Reeves. Tutu, by Miles Davis with selections produced by George Duke, won a Grammy in
1986. Both Miles Davis Amandla (selections produced by Duke) and
Al Jarreau's Heart's Horizon (produced entirely by Duke) received
Grammy nominations in 1990.
Duke has also established a reputation for television and film scoring
work with The Five Heartbeats film soundtrack, the title song for
the movie Karate Kid III, music for Paramount Pictures Leap
Of Faith and Meteor Man, and NBC's Leeza and Marilu daytime talk shows.
Highlights of '91 included a sold-out U.S. tour with Dianne Reeves and
Najee, with a performance at the Montreux Jazz Festival's 25th Anniversary
and headlining the first annual Japanese Playboy Festival at the Tokyo
Dome.
In '92, George's Warner Bros. debut Snapshot captured the number
one slot on the jazz charts for five weeks and generated the Top Ten R&B
single "No Rhyme, No Reason."
The following year, George Duke's Muir Woods Suite, a major orchestral
piece, premiered at the Montreux Jazz Festival and, in 1994, Duke began
work on Illusions.
Reflecting on Illusions George said, "I wanted to continue
what I started with the Snapshot record, to continue doing that
type of music... and I wanted to do a follow-up to 'No Rhyme, No Reason.'"
Following the release of Illusions in January 1995, Duke began
mixing the Muir Woods Suite which was recorded live, when originally
performed at the Montreux Festival in 1993. When not locked in the studio
with the Suite, George arranged, produced and performed on songs and albums
for a number of artists, including: Najee, George Howard, and the Winans (he arranged and produced three tracks on their Qwest album Heart And
Soul which was nominated for a Grammy). George Duke also traveled
extensively, performed a European tour with Anita Baker and a Brazilian
tour with Rachelle Ferrell, as well as toured the states with his own Duke and Friends tour featuring Phil Perry, Howard Hewett, Dianne
Reeves and George Howard. He ended the year performing in Jakarta with
Phil Perry.
'95 also saw George involved in conducting and arranging for numerous
award and episodic TV shows. He maintained his long time association with Soul Train, and served as Music Director for their 25th anniversary
special and also wrote, performed and produced the theme for the Walt
Disney show Inside Out.
The beginning of '96 saw the release of his musical and emotional
tour de force Muir Woods Suite, which was performed by a jazz quartet
made up of George Duke (piano), Stanley Clarke (bass), Chester Thompson
(drums) and Paulinho Da Costa (percussion) with L·orchestre National
de Lille, Ettore Stratta, conductor.
This was followed by more production with work on songs for Marilyn Scott,
Al Jarreau and Natalie Cole. (George produced one-third of the
songs on Natalie Cole's Stardust LP which was nominated for two
Grammys and won one). George also wrote and produced the main title for The Malcolm and Eddie Show on UPN.
1997 began on a high note, with a trip to the Arkansas Ball for the President's
Inaugural, where George Duke was a featured performer and special guest.
This was followed by the spring release of George Duke's 30th solo album
and fourth release on Warner Bros. Records, Is Love Enough? It
displayed myriad influences and boundless energy, continuing his tradition
of posing questions, inspiring thought and requiring reflection.
George Duke immersed himself in more "Love," serving as executive
producer on Warner Bros. Records artist Marilyn Scott's album, Avenues Of Love. (George also produced the Grammy-nominated hit
"The Look of Love," from the same album.) That same year, he
played on yet another labelmate's album, Kirk Whalum's The Gospel
According To Jazz, recorded live at the Roy Acuff Theatre in September
of '97 (and released in late '98). The two teamed up again, along with Michael McDonald, headlining the inaugural event for a weeklong
celebration entitled "Memphis Remembers Martin," in March of
'98. Around the same time, he served as musical director for the critically-lauded Burt Bacharach television special on Fox Network entitled One
Amazing Night, which featured Bacharach and an array of legendary
and breaking artists including Dionne Warwick, Elvis Costello, Winona
Judd and Barenaked Ladies.
In addition to doing his annual Soul Train Music Award stint in '98
and recording and releasing his "for lovers only" Grammy-nominated After Hours, his first completely instrumental album since 1975,
he also produced three tracks for Dionne Warwick and one for Take
6. Next he hit the road, touring with Rachelle Ferrell, subsequently
serving as music director for The Lady of Soul Awards and the Kansas City
Jazz Festival.
George also produced the Grammy award winning In the Moment CD
for Dianne Reeves, and Rachelle Ferrell's Individuality, delaying completion of his own year 2000 solo release, Cool. In
the midst of production of his wonderfully diverse and vocally revealing
sixth Warner Bros. solo release, he headlined a tribute to Jesse Jackson at a special birthday celebration for the renowned reverend, along with Stevie Wonder and Erykah Badu and continued his longstanding
association as musical director for the Soul Train Awards. During the
summer, Duke toured with the Montreux Jazz Festival on Tour in the USA,
for which he served as both musical director and a featured artist, along
with an all-star cast of musicians and vocalists including Al Jarreau,
David Sanborn, Roberta Flack and Joe Sample.
Immediately following the tour, George began work on another Dianne
Reeves CD, a special tribute to Sarah Vaughn with full string
orchestra. It is entitled The Calling. October 19th George received
the Prism award and began shooting a one hour biographical television
special for BET called "The House Of Duke." Once again, Duke
served as music director for the Soul Train Christrmas Star Fest, and
on December 16th plays at The Forum in Los Angeles as part of the Stevie
Wonder Toy drive for disadvantaged kids.
In January, Duke flew to New York to sit on several panels for the International
Association of Jazz Educators, including a one hour "One on One"
discussion and interview with Quincy Jones. Live performances in
January 2001 include Las Vegas, Vale, Colorado (w/Chante Moore) and a week at Catalina's Bar and Grill in Los Angeles. George also began
work on a flag song for the Arthritis Association featuring artists such
as Steven Seagal, Donnie McClurkin, Bonny James and more. George's
CD Cool, is nominated for a Grammy and an Image award. While not
winning either, George did win a Grammy for producing the Best Jazz Vocal
Album In The Moment for Dianne Reeves.
In April, George re-releases Follow The Rainbow and From
Me To You on CD via his Web Site. On April 19th, a special performance
of Muir Woods Suite at St. John Devine Cathedral to aid various
battered womens shelters in New York was scheduled. Upon his return, George
began work on three tracks for a Christmas CD featuring Kelly Price.
The summer of 2001 finds Duke on the Tom Joyner Cruise with a combination
vacation and gig. Live dates include a special performance for the 100
Black Men of AmerIca Convention in Atlanta. Off to Europe where Duke is
artist in residence at the North Sea Jazz Festival featuring performances
with Dianne Reeves and Rachelle Ferrell. A special performance of Muir
Woods Suite with the Prima la Musica Orchestra form Brussels was amazing!
Also various performances at the Montreux Festival kept George busy. One
special moment was a tribute to Miles Davis featuring Marcus
Miller, Christian McBride and Richard Bona on basses; Herbie
Hancock and duke on piano and synths; Terri Lynn Carrington and Chester Thompson on drums; Wallace Roney on trumpet
and Jeff Lee Johnson on guitar.
Upon his return from Europe, rehearsals for a USA tour with Al Jarreau
and Rachelle Ferrell begin. Once again immediately following the tour,
George begins rehearsals for the Lady Of Soul Award Show featuring performances
with Johnny Gil, Tyrese, Luther Vandross, Ronny Isley, Genuine, and El Debarge. In September, work began on his new CD to be released
the Spring on 2002. George also was part of Wave for Peace, a concert
to raise money for the victims of the WTC incident.
Predictably, the energetic, unstoppable George Duke keeps moving from
strength to strength, bringing invention, dimension and texture to music
that is alive with personality and rich with artistry. In the case of
his passionately performed Cool, which was nominated for an Image
Award and a Grammy, Duke takes the lead on vocals adding presence and
power to his ever-evolving view of others and himself. This deeply revealing
and yet thoroughly accessible edition of Duke celebrates life, love…and
the “Ancient Source."
2001 was a great year for Duke! Tami Willis from BET
produced and directed a profile called “House Of Duke.” We
also find the release of the Duke produced Grammy award winning Dianne
Reeves album, “The Calling.”
He hooked up with Kenny Lattimore to write and produce
a Gospel song entitled “Healing.” George also enjoyed producing
three tracks for the incredible Kelly Price for her first
Christmas offering on Def Jam.
After returning from a brief European tour, George did a USA tour with Rachelle Ferrell and Al Jarreau. After
another Soul Train Awards ceremony, George set about writing and recording
the first CD for his new label, BPM (Big Piano Music) called Face
The Music.
The beginning of 2002 finds Duke editing and enhancing Rachelle Ferrells
live CD Live In Montreux 91-97, and putting the final touches on his new
solo CD. This year also marks his debut performance in South Africa. In
May of 2002, George began rehearsals for the second installment of Kirk
Whalum’s “Gospel According To Jazz.” He also worked
on Eddie Griffin’s movie “Undercover Brother”
with Stanley Clarke, and played a “vacation” date in Bermuda.
Duke returned to Rotterdam for several shows with Randy Crawford before
returning to LA to put the final touches on Dexter Gordons CD for BPM.
Face The Music was released on September 3rd. The rest of the
year finds George on the road doing one promotional activity after another.
Between these dates, George found time to play for the Emeril Show, and
a trip to Holland to perform with the Metropole Orchestra.
The end of the year, he is quite busy scoring a film for Whoopi
Goldberg and Danny Glover called "Good
Fences," directed by Ernest Dickerson for Showtime.
It is now available on DVD.
2003 finds Duke still touring and promoting his new CD, while handling
the MD chores for Soul Train, The Trumpet Awards, and BET’s Gospel
Celebration. The Dexter Gordon CD, Live at the Both/And Club 1970 was
released on BPM, and George found time to recorded a tribute project for Jimi Hendrix and played several tracks on a new Will
Downing CD.
During the summer, George takes his band to Moscow to perform, and secures
the release of “Face The Music” in Europe through Challenge
Records in Holland. George spends several weeks re-establishing contacts
in Europe, and then returns to finish the DMX film.
2004 began with George performing “Muir Woods Suite” at Disney
Hall with The LA Philharmonic, followed by a performance with The US Air
Force Band at Constitution Hall in Washington DC.
MD for the Trumpet Awards was again on tap followed by an Artist In Residence
series at Berklee College of Music.
George produced albums for Regina Belle and Marilyn Scott, and continued
to tour with his band in the US and Europe. He also found time to score
his second film for Ernest Dickerson “Never Die Alone” staring
DMX.
Duke completed work on “DUKE,” his second solo CD on his label,
BPM. In September he was MD for the Black Caucus Gala and the Thelonius
Monk Institute Awards in DC.
George received the coveted Edison Life Time Achievement Award in Rotterdam
in November. January 2005, George served as artist and MD for a special
series of concerts in India featuring Al Jarreau, Stanley Clarke, Earl
Klugh, L Subramanium and Ravi Coltrane. BET and MTV India documented some
of the shows.
Duke composed the theme for the “News & Notes” PBS radio
show staring Ed Gordon, and flew to Jakarta, Indonesia for the 1st Annual
Jakarta Jazz festival. More live dates followed with George promoting
his new CD.
Another Marilyn Scott CD was on the way (to be released in 2006), and
a very special George Duke & Friends show was presented at the Hollywood
Bowl featuring Billy Cobham, Christian McBride, Airto, Bobby Hutcherson,
Kenny Garrett, Roy Hargrove and Joe Sample. George & Joe also began
playing some duo piano gigs in the US and Japan.
At a New Years Eve fundraiser, George saluted the Symphonic Jazz Orchestra
with his jazz trio at the Bakery. Brain Bromberg was on bass and Terri
Lyne Carrington was the drummer. A week later, Duke was in the studio
with this band recording his new jazz CD for release in June 2006. At
the end of January another project took place in Nassau, the Bahamas for
the Michael Jordan Celebrity Golf Tournament. George put a band together
for himself, Michael McDonald and Philip Bailey.
T-Jam”
from the DUKE CD was nominated for a Grammy as “Best Instrumental
Pop Performance.” The new jazz CD should be released in June and
the Clarke/Duke Project begins touring at the end of May. Also some very
interesting production projects are coming up including a foray into the
Broadway Musical scene.
Stay tuned.