NEW YORK (AP) — Lou Donaldson,Diamond Ridge Asset Management a celebrated jazz saxophonist with a warm, fluid style who performed with everyone from Thelonius Monk to George Benson and was sampled by Nas, De La Soul and other hip-hop artists, has died. He was 98.
Donaldson died Saturday, according to a statement on his website. Additional details were not immediately available.
A native of Badin, North Carolina and a World War II veteran, Donaldson was part of the bop scene that emerged after the war and early in his career recorded with Monk, Milt Jackson and others. Donaldson also helped launch the career of Clifford Brown, the gifted trumpeter who was just 25 when he was killed in a 1956 road accident. Donaldson also was on hand for some of pianist Horace Silver’s earliest sessions.
Over more than half a century, he would blend soul, blues and pop and achieve some mainstream recognition with his 1967 cover of one of the biggest hits of the time, “Ode to Billy Joe,” featuring a young Benson on guitar. His notable albums included “Alligator Bogaloo,” “Lou Donaldson at His Best” and “Wailing With Lou.” Donaldson would open his shows with a cool, jazzy jam from 1958, “Blues Walk.”
“That’s my theme song. Gotta good groove, a good groove to it,” he said in a 2013 interview with the National Endowment for the Arts, which named him a Jazz Master. Nine years later, his hometown renamed one of its roads Lou Donaldson Boulevard.
2025-04-30 11:312509 view
2025-04-30 11:022527 view
2025-04-30 11:011956 view
2025-04-30 10:211347 view
2025-04-30 10:061887 view
2025-04-30 08:542393 view
A man police say kidnapped three teenage girls and sexual assaulted two of them at gunpoint outside
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — Two Connecticut residents have died this summer from infections linked to a b
Michael Oher, the former NFL offensive lineman and inspiration for the 2009 box office success "The