Music | May 12, 2011 | 13 comments

Cornell Dupree, Famed Session Guitarist, Has Died

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Cornell Dupree, Famed Session Guitarist, Dead at 69

Posted on May 10th 2011 11:00AM by Cameron Matthews






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Cornell Dupree, a famed guitarist who played alongside Aretha Franklin, King Curtis, Jimi Hendrix and Joe Cocker, died on May 8 in Fort Worth, Texas. According to Variety, Dupree was 69 years old and suffered from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

Also known as "Uncle Funky" and "Mr. 2500" -– a name derived from his involvement in that number of studio sessions –- Dupree was a seasoned blues musician that detoured into R&B and soul after joining King Curtis and the Kingpins, a band that also featured a young Hendrix.

The guitarist was known as one of the best session musicians that Atlantic records had to offer, playing alongside drummer Bernard "Pretty" Purdie and keyboard player Richard Tee. He was a member of Aretha Franklin's touring band from 1967-1976 and can be heard playing the opening riff on the singer's 'Respect,' as well as on Joe Cocker's 'Stingray' and 'Luxury You Can Afford.'

Dupree's impressive resume also includes work with jazz-funk stalwarts Stuff and drummer Steve Gadd. Besides cutting 10 solo albums from 1974's 'Teasin'' to a yet unreleased record for Dialtone Records, Dupree also published an instructional guitar book called 'Rhythm & Blues Guitar' in 2000. Dupree is survived by his wife Erma.
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13 comments // Cornell Dupree, Famed Session Guitarist, Has Died

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    • http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-cornell-dupree-20110513,0,1008393.s...

      Los Angeles Times...

      Cornell Dupree dies at 68; versatile guitarist

      Cornell Dupree, whose nearly five-decade career as a guitarist included recordings and performances with the likes of Miles Davis, Mariah Carey and Aretha Franklin, dies at his home in Texas.

      Cornell Dupree

      Cornell Dupree, a versatile and prolific guitarist whose range spanned jazz, R&B, soul and rock, has died. He was known as "Mr. 2,500" for the number of recordings he participated in. (Eddie Stout / Courtesy of Dialtone)

      By Don Heckman, Special to the Los Angeles Times

      May 13, 2011

      Cornell Dupree, a versatile guitarist whose long, productive career included performances and recordings with such artists as Aretha Franklin, Paul Simon, Miles Davis and Lena Horne, died Sunday at his home in Fort Worth. Dupree, who had emphysema, was 68.

      Often called "Mr. 2,500" as a reference to the number of recordings he participated in, occasionally as a leader but mostly as a first-call sideman, Dupree adapted easily to the changing demands of soul, R&B, pop, jazz and beyond during his nearly five-decade career.

      Working in the studio, Dupree was renowned for his ability to add something uniquely unexpected to the music. Although his playing was rooted in Texas blues, he quickly developed a style of his own, investing solo lines with subtle harmonic references and bringing rhythm passages to life with buoyantly propulsive accents.

      Add to that his on-the-spot creativity, which offered hooks and rhythmic chording to catch a listener's ear. Some examples include his slippery, sliding lines at the start of Aretha Franklin's "Respect," and his rhythm plucking that supports the brass on Mariah Carey's "Emotions."

      "No matter what I play, I just stay with the feeling of the song," Dupree told the Boston Herald in 1995. "I don't press, and I don't try to impress. Be yourself and play what comes natural — that's my thing."

      Cornell Luther Dupree Jr. was born in Fort Worth on Dec. 19, 1942. He was barely into his teens when he heard Johnny "Guitar" Watson. Fascinated by Watson's pioneering electric guitar techniques, Dupree decided to teach himself the instrument, primarily by sitting in with older blues and R&B guitarists.

      When he was 18, Dupree was heard by saxophonist, bandleader and fellow Texan King Curtis. Impressed by the young guitarist, Curtis promised Dupree a job if he continued practicing. A year later, Curtis brought Dupree to New York to join the Curtis band, the King Pins.

      By the late 1960s, Dupree was at Atlantic Records, his sound and style playing a significant role in the shaping of the label's classic soul recordings. Producer Jerry Wexler, writing in the liner notes for Dupree's "Bop 'N' Blues," recalled how his usual practice of employing three guitars in the rhythm section changed dramatically when Dupree came on the scene. "Miraculously, it seemed to me," wrote Wexler, "one man, playing rhythm and lead at the same time, took the place of three."

      It was a style that kept Dupree in the studios for long working hours, usually with pop music's most visible artists.

      He was often asked about his personal favorites among the 2,500 recordings he made. He told the Syracuse Post-Standard that his favorites included King Curtis' "Live at the Fillmore," Brook Benton's "Rainy Night in Georgia" and Esther Phillips' "From a Whisper to a Scream." In other interviews, he also referred to "Donny Hathaway Live" and "Aretha Franklin Live at Fillmore West," as well as the Barbra Streisand and Barry Gibb recording "Guilty." But, Dupree was quick to add, "it's hard to remember them all."

      Dupree began recording on his own in the 1970s with "Teasin'." His Grammy-nominated "Coast to Coast" in 1988 took him in a more jazz-oriented direction in the company of saxophonist David "Fathead" Newman and pianist Ellis Marsalis. In the '90s he shifted musical gears again, this time toward funk and jazz.

      From the mid-'70s to the early '80s, Dupree was a member of the group Stuff. A jazz-funk band recalling the urban blues bands of the '40s, it included keyboardist Richard Tee (with whom Dupree worked frequently), drummers Steve Gadd and Chris Parker, guitarist Eric Gale, and bassist Gordon Edwards. All five of the band's albums went gold, and one received a Grammy nomination. The group's members also backed Paul Simon, Joe Cocker, Franklin and John Lennon, among others.

      More recently, Dupree occasionally toured with a New Orleans-oriented group called the Bayou Buddies. By the mid-2000s he was performing with the Soul Survivors, an ensemble featuring pianist Les McCann and saxophonist Ronnie Cuber. Despite his illness, Dupree reportedly recorded his 10th album in April.

      Dupree is survived by his wife, Erma Kindles Dupree; children Celestine Allan, James C. Dupree, and Cornell Dupree III; and nine grandchildren.

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    • http://www.eurweb.com/?p=104446

      We Remember: Famed Session Guitarist Cornell Dupree Dies at 69
      May 11, 2011 at 03:07 pm

      *Cornell Dupree, 69 – the rhythm-and-blues guitarist whose worked with such artists as Aretha Franklin, Joe Cocker, Paul Simon, Bonnie Raitt and Mariah Carey – died May 8 at his home in Fort Worth, reports the Washington Post. He had emphysema and was awaiting a lung transplant.

      A veteran of New York recording studios, Mr. Dupree’s career spanned more than four decades and, by his estimation, nearly 2,500 albums.

      He was among the elite in a small cadre of musicians who turned in memorable, often crucial hooks in a song and did not mind being overshadowed by the main performer. Writer and guitarist Josh Alan Friedman called Mr. Dupree “the ultimate unshowoff.”

      Some of his prettiest guitar lines colored one of the most melancholy — and sentimental — songs in rhythm and blues, Brook Benton’s 1970 recording of “Rainy Night in Georgia.”

      His guitar engaged Franklin in bluesy conversation on “Respect” (1967), helped take saxophonist King Curtis to church on the gospel-flavored ballad “Soul Serenade” (1964) and later laid a rhythmic foundation for Carey’s 1991 hit “Emotions.”

      Cornell Luther Dupree was born Dec. 19, 1942, in Fort Worth. At 14, he was inspired to learn guitar after seeing a performance by bluesman Johnny “Guitar” Watson and soon started sitting in with older R&B musicians. In 1961, he was recruited to New York by King Curtis.

      Curtis, in-demand as a session player, brought Mr. Dupree into the highly competitive New York studio scene with his band the Kingpins.

      After the success of Franklin’s “Respect,” Mr. Dupree often found himself in the studio 10 hours a day, six days a week. The Kingpins also backed Franklin on the road.

      In the 1970s, Mr. Dupree toured with the funk band Stuff, an all-star group that included drummer Steve Gadd, guitarist Eric Gale and keyboardist Richard Tee. Though Stuff’s albums proved immensely popular in Japan and Europe, the online All Music Guide noted that the band — all studio musicians — sometimes sounded “as if they were waiting for the main soloist to show up.”

      In later years, Mr. Dupree performed with the Soul Survivors, a group whose rotating personnel included such leading jazz lights as pianist Les McCann, organist Lonnie Smith and bassist Chuck Rainey.

      Survivors include his wife of 53 years, Erma Kindles Dupree of Fort Worth; three children, James C. Dupree and Celestine Allan, both of Dallas, and Cornell L. Dupree III of Fort Worth; and nine grandchildren.

      The guitarist recorded his 10th solo album in April even as he struggled with his illness. During a January performance in Austin, he had to be carried in a chair up a flight of stairs to the stage.

      “I’m about a feeling,” Mr. Dupree once told the Houston Chronicle. “And playing the right thing at the right time.”

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    • Cornell Dupree Jr., guitarist for R&B and jazz greats, dies at age 68 in Fort Worth

      By Associated Press, Updated: Thursday, May 12, 9:37 AM

      FORT WORTH, Texas — Cornell Dupree Jr., a guitarist who played on R&B and jazz hits with artists including Aretha Franklin and Miles Davis, has died. He was 68.

      Just out of high school, he went to work in Manhattan with saxophonist King Curtis Ousley, another Fort Worth native.

      Dupree, who went on to be a studio player, played guitar on “Respect” by Franklin, “Rainy Night in Georgia” by Brook Benton and “Memphis Soul Stew” by King Curtis.

      He toured with Franklin’s band from the late 1960s through the mid-1970s.

      His son, Cornell Dupree III, tells the Fort Worth Star-Telegram says most people don’t know his father, but “there’s not too many musicians who don’t know him.”

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