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Wilton Felder
Instrument | Sax, tenor
Popularity Rank: 907 | Followers: 0

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Biography


Born: August 31, 1940

Wilton Felder is well known to jazz fans as the saxophonist and composer who spent some thirty years playing, along with Joe Sample, Stix Hooper, and Wayne Henderson in the phenomenally successful Crusaders. The group’s combination of jazz, soul, r&b, and gospel influences created a sound that was rooted in jazz, but which was accessible to listeners raised on pop and rock music.

Unlike many fusion bands, The Crusaders never lost their blues and soul roots, which was one key to their success. Another was the fact that each musician had a definite style on their instrument, and it was a pleasure to listen to each of them play. Felder’s deep, sonorous tenor sound is rooted in the Texas tenor sax tradition, and it is very easy to listen to, largely because it retains an element of soul grit and refuses to be too pretty, even when the surroundings are very smooth

The Crusaders met in Houston while still at high school. They moved to Los Angeles in the late fifties and there became the nucleus of The Jazz Crusaders, the band who pioneered jazz fusion for an entire listening generation. In a golden age that spanned 1971 through to 1990 they recorded, both as a group and as individuals, more than seventy five top selling albums and will perhaps be best remembered for the classic ‘Street Life’ that featured Randy Crawford.

Throughout this time Felder continued to work as a sideman, most notably as a member of the Love Unlimited Orchestra and he also played with Steely Dan, Michael Franks, Marvin Gaye and Joni Mitchell. In addition he enjoyed considerable solo success. His 1980 album “Inherit The Wind,” went to #4 on the Billboard Jazz Albums chart and “Secrets” peaked at #8. He continued to make his presence felt through the nineties with the “Nocturnal Moods,” and “Forever Always” albums. With his latest effort “Let's Spend Some Time,” (2006) it’s just like he has never been gone.




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Created: | Updated: August 31, 2009

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