LEGENDS ERIC CLAPTON STEVE GADD MARCUS MILLER JOE SAMPLE DAVID SANBORN PUT IT WHERE YOU WANT IT
Joe Sample & Lalah Hathaway - One Day I'll Fly Away
Randy Crawford and The Joe Sample Trio - Montreux Jazz Festival 2013
Randy Crawford & Joe Sample Trio Live
Joe Sample Ashes to Ashes LIVE 2000
Joe Sample Phoenix
Snowflake-Joe Sample-1997
Night Music #111 1988 Earl Klugh, Patti Austin, Joe Sample, Donald Fagen, Muddy Waters, Sister Carol
In All My Wildest Dreams - Joe Sample
Joe Sample & The Crusaders "I Felt the Love" Live At Java Jazz Festival 2008
Zach Tate Interviews Joe Sample for The Islander Magazine
2000 • George Benson & Joe Sample - Deeper Than You Think
Rio De Janeiro Blue - Randy Crawford & Joe Sample
Joe Sample- The Pecan Tree
LEGENDS ERIC CLAPTON STEVE GADD MARCUS MILLER JOE SAMPLE DAVID SANBORN PUT IT WHERE YOU WANT IT
Joe Sample & Lalah Hathaway - One Day I'll Fly Away
Randy Crawford and The Joe Sample Trio - Montreux Jazz Festival 2013
Randy Crawford & Joe Sample Trio Live
Joe Sample Ashes to Ashes LIVE 2000
Joe Sample Phoenix
Snowflake-Joe Sample-1997
Night Music #111 1988 Earl Klugh, Patti Austin, Joe Sample, Donald Fagen, Muddy Waters, Sister Carol
In All My Wildest Dreams - Joe Sample
Joe Sample & The Crusaders "I Felt the Love" Live At Java Jazz Festival 2008
Zach Tate Interviews Joe Sample for The Islander Magazine
2000 • George Benson & Joe Sample - Deeper Than You Think
Rio De Janeiro Blue - Randy Crawford & Joe Sample
Joe Sample- The Pecan Tree
Joe Sample - INVITATION
Joe Sample-Fly With the Wings of Love
Joe Sample Born In Trouble
Joe Sample & The Crusaders "Snowflake" Live at Java Jazz Festival 2008
Almaz - Randy Crawford & Joe Sample
Joe Sample and Take 6 U Turn
♪Night Flight♪ Joe Sample (Sample This)
Joe Sample - Oasis.wmv
Hippies on a corner - Joe Sample
Legends Live at Montreux 1997
George benson & Joe sample LIVE.avi
Melodies of Love Joe Sample
George benson & Joe sample LIVE avi
Joe Sample - Carmel
Joe Sample - Spellbound.mp4
2000 • George Benson & Joe Sample - The Ghetto
AQUI Y AJAZZ, Joe Sample "Old Places, Old Faces".
Marcus Miller,Steve Gadd,Eric Clapton,David Sunborn,Joe Sample Live
"Street Life" - Randy Crawford (2006)
Randy Crawford & Joe Sample - Everyday I Have The Blues ( Live ) * THE SMOOTHJAZZ LOFT*
Randy Crawford & The Joe Sample Trio - Live in London 2012
Put it where you want it - Joe Sample live in Cologne 2002
Randy Crawford & Joe Sample Trio - live - One Day I'll fly away
Joe Sample Carmel.rm
Joe Sample - Hippies on a Corner.rm
Joe Sample at BEST NIGHT MUSIC - Spellbound
Joe Sample - "Barack Obama" - Interview
Interview with Joe Sample
Joe Sample Interview
Interview with Joe Sample.rm
Joe Sample Interview - "We jammin"
Jessy J interviews Joe Sample about "Rainbow Gold"
Joe Sample - "Carmel" on SJC '12
Randy Crawford & Joe Sample - Everybody's Talking
Lalah Hathaway - Joe Sample [Fever]
Joe Sample - Nica's Dream
Joe Sample - Old Places, Old Faces
Joe Sample & Randy Crawford - Everybody's talking
George Benson & Joe Sample
Joe Sample at Java Jazz festival 2008 edited
Joe Sample Hot & Humid
Monty Alexander - Love Notes feat. Joe Sample, George Benson and Ramsey Lewis
Angel Randy Crawford & Joe Sample
Randy Crawford & Joe Sample - Festival de Jazz de Vitoria-Gasteiz 2010
NDR Bigband feat Joe Sample Jazzbaltica 2011
Eric Clapton, David Sanborn, Joe Sample, Steve Gadd, Marcus Miller [PART 2]
Randy Crawford & Joe Sample Trio - Leverkusener Jazztage 2011
Eric Clapton, David Sanborn, Joe Sample, Steve Gadd, Marcus Miller [PART 1]
PERK'S ULTIMATE JAM SESSION 2 RANDY CRAWFORD AND JOE SAMPLE TRIO
Al Jarreau with Marcus Miller - Tenderness_Live Studio 1994
Robbie Vincent Jazz Travels with guests Wynton Marsalis, Melody Gardot and Joe Sample
Old School Smooth Jazz mix up 1
Joseph Smith Makes a Sample of Characters - Dan Vogel
JIMMY WITHERSPOON - SPOONFUL - FULL ALBUM 1975 - BLUES - ROBBEN FORD
Christine and Joe Reception Sample
'Dolla Beals', 'Lil Joe & 'Sample' Performing LIVE @ The Crofoot - June 18th, 2011 - Pontiac, MI
The Crusaders ♪Standing Tall♪ Full Album
Minnie Riperton Adventures In Paradise ( Full Album )
A SMOOTH JAZZ MIX 2013 - PART TWO
Boz Scaggs - Slow Dancer - FULL Album (March, 1974)
A SMOOTH JAZZ MIX 2013 - PART ONE
Joseph Leslie "Joe" Sample (born February 1, 1939) is an American pianist, keyboard player and composer.
He is one of the founding members of the Jazz Crusaders, the band which became simply The Crusaders in 1971, and remained a part of the group until its final album in 1991 (not including the 2003 reunion album Rural Renewal).
Sample began playing the piano when he was five years old. He was a student of the late great organ and piano extraordinaire Curtis Mayo. Since the early 1980s, he has enjoyed a successful solo career and has guested on many recordings by other performers and groups, including Miles Davis, George Benson, Jimmy Witherspoon, B. B. King, Eric Clapton, Steely Dan, and The Supremes. Sample incorporates jazz, gospel, blues, Latin, and classical forms into his music.
In high school in the 1950s, Sample teamed up with two friends, saxophonist Wilton Felder and drummer "Stix" Hooper, to form a group called the Swingsters. While studying piano at Texas Southern University, Sample met and added trombonist Wayne Henderson and several other players to the Swingsters, which became the Modern Jazz Sextet and then the Jazz Crusaders, in emulation of one of the leading progressive jazz bands of the day, Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers. Sample never took a degree from the university; instead in 1960, he and the Jazz Crusaders made the move from Houston to Los Angeles.
Eric Patrick Clapton, CBE, (born 30 March 1945) is an English guitarist and singer-songwriter. Clapton is the only three-time inductee to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame: once as a solo artist, and separately as a member of The Yardbirds and Cream. Clapton has been referred to as one of the most important and influential guitarists of all time. Clapton ranked second in Rolling Stone magazine's list of the "100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time" and fourth in Gibson's Top 50 Guitarists of All Time.
In the mid 1960s, Clapton departed from the Yardbirds to play blues with John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers. In his one-year stay with Mayall, Clapton gained the nickname "Slowhand". Immediately after leaving Mayall, Clapton formed Cream, a power trio with drummer Ginger Baker and bassist Jack Bruce in which Clapton played sustained blues improvisations and "arty, blues-based psychedelic pop." For most of the 1970s, Clapton's output bore the influence of the mellow style of J.J. Cale and the reggae of Bob Marley. His version of Marley's "I Shot the Sheriff" helped reggae reach a mass market. Two of his most popular recordings were "Layla", recorded by Derek and the Dominos, another band he formed and Robert Johnson's "Crossroads", recorded by Cream. A recipient of seventeen Grammy Awards, in 2004 Clapton was awarded a CBE for services to music. In 1998, Clapton, a recovering alcoholic and drug addict, founded the Crossroads Centre on Antigua, a medical facility for recovering substance abusers.
Steve Gadd (born April 9, 1945 in Irondequoit, New York) is an American session and studio drummer, notable for his work with popular musicians from a wide range of genres.
Gadd is a native of Irondequoit, New York, a suburb of Rochester, New York. When he was seven years old, his uncle, who was a drummer in the US army, encouraged him to take drum lessons. By the age of eleven he had sat in with Dizzy Gillespie.
After graduating from Irondequoit's Eastridge High School, he attended the Manhattan School of Music for two years before transferring to the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, playing in wind ensembles and concert bands. After Gadd finished college in the late 1960s, he played regularly with Chuck Mangione and his brother Gap Mangione. His first recording was on Gap Mangione's debut solo album, Diana in the Autumn Wind (1968).
Gadd was drafted into the U.S. Army and spent three years as a drummer in the Army Music Program, most of which was spent with the Jazz Ambassadors of the U.S. Army Field Band in Ft. Meade, MD. While living in the Washington DC area, he briefly took lessons from the noted jazz drummer, Michael S. Smith. Following his military service, Gadd played and worked with a band in Rochester. In 1972, Gadd formed a trio with Tony Levin and Mike Holmes, traveling to New York with them. The trio eventually broke up, but Gadd began to work mainly as a studio musician. Gadd also played with Chick Corea's Return to Forever but left the group.
Marcus Miller (born William Henry Marcus Miller Jr., June 14, 1959, Brooklyn, New York) is an American jazz composer, producer, and multi-instrumentalist. Miller is best known as a bassist, working with trumpeter Miles Davis, pianist Herbie Hancock, singer Luther Vandross, and saxophonist David Sanborn, as well as maintaining a prolific solo career. Miller is classically trained as a clarinetist and also plays keyboards, saxophone and guitar.
Miller was born in 1959 and raised in a musical family that includes his father, William Miller (a church organist and choir director) and jazz pianist Wynton Kelly. By 13, Marcus was proficient on clarinet, piano and bass guitar, and already writing songs. Two years later he was working regularly in New York City, eventually playing bass and writing music for jazz flautist Bobbi Humphrey and keyboardist Lonnie Liston Smith. Miller soon became a first call session musician, gracing well over 500 albums, a short list of which includes Michael Jackson, Herbie Hancock, Mariah Carey, Wayne Shorter, McCoy Tyner, Frank Sinatra, Dr. John, Aretha Franklin, Elton John, Grover Washington Jr., Donald Fagen, Bill Withers, Chaka Khan, LL Cool J, Me'shell Ndegé Ocello and Flavio Sala.
David Sanborn (born July 30, 1945) is an American alto saxophonist. Though Sanborn has worked in many genres, his solo recordings typically blend jazz with instrumental pop and R&B. He released his first solo album Taking Off in 1975, but has been playing the saxophone since before he was in high school. Sanborn has also worked extensively as a session musician, notably on David Bowie's Young Americans (1975).
One of the most commercially successful American saxophonists to earn prominence since the 1980s, Sanborn is described by critic Scott Yannow as "the most influential saxophonist on pop, R&B, and crossover players of the past 20 years." Sanborn is often identified with radio-friendly smooth jazz However, Sanborn has expressed a disinclination for both the genre itself and his association with it.
Sanborn was born in Tampa, Florida, and grew up in Kirkwood, Missouri. He suffered from polio in his youth, and began playing the saxophone on a physician's advice to strengthen his weakened chest muscles and improve his breathing. Alto saxophonist Hank Crawford, at the time a member of Ray Charles' band, was an early and lasting influence on Sanborn. Sanborn performed with blues musicians Albert King and Little Milton at the age of 14, and continued playing blues when he joined Paul Butterfield's band in 1967, after attending the University of Iowa.
I make it alone
When love is gone
Still you made your mark
Here in my heart
One day I'll fly away
Leave you love to yesterday
What more can your love do for me
When will love be through with me
I follow the night
Can't stand the light
When will I begin
My life again
One day I'll fly away
Leave you love to yesterday
What more can your love do for me
When will love be through with me
Why live life from dream to dream
Dread the day that dreaming ends
One day I'll fly away
Leave you love to yesterday
What more can your love do for me
When will love be through with me
Why live life from dream to dream
And dread the day that dreaming ends