🎹 Album Reviews · Piano

Gene Harris

70s Soul-Jazz and Funk, 1972–1977

The Three Sounds were done, but Blue Note kept calling. Gene Harris reinvented himself as an LA funk-jazz auteur, trading the intimate trio for wah-wah guitars, horn sections, string arrangements, and the production hand of Jerry Peters. Six albums that sound nothing like the records that came before.

6Albums Reviewed
6Years Covered
1Label
← Hub Three Sounds 70s Solo Concord Archival
Three Sounds Yesterday Astral Signal Nexus Special Way Tone Tantrum
🎹Art unavailable
Gene Harris of the Three Sounds
Blue Note · 1972
Gene Harris of the Three Sounds
Gene Harris
★★★☆☆
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01
Album Review · Funk Jazz

Gene Harris of the Three Sounds

Recorded June 1972 · Blue Note
Personnel
Gene Harris, piano  ·  Ron Carter, bass  ·  Freddie Waits, drums  ·  Cornell Dupree, guitar  ·  Sam Brown, guitar  ·  Johnny Rodriguez, congas  ·  Omar Clay, percussion  ·  Wade Marcus, arranger, producer

The title is a contradiction. Despite the name, neither Andrew Simpkins nor Bill Dowdy appear anywhere on this record. Instead, Harris walked into A&R Studios in New York with Ron Carter on bass, Cornell Dupree on guitar, and Wade Marcus writing the charts, and the result sounds like a different musician entirely. The piano is still Harris, but the context around it has shifted to groove-based funk-jazz with electric guitar textures and conga patterns that belong to a different decade.

It works better than you might expect. Harris always had deep blues in his fingers, and the funkier settings give that quality a new platform. Dupree's guitar work is understated and precise, Carter plays electric bass on several tracks with his usual authority, and the percussion section keeps everything moving. The arrangements are professional and slick without being soulless.

"A bridge record: one foot in the trio tradition, the other reaching toward the electric funk that would define everything that followed."

As a transition record it does its job. You can hear Harris working out what a solo career sounds like when the trio format is no longer the default.

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Yesterday Today and Tomorrow
Blue Note · 1973
Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow
Gene Harris
★★★☆☆
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02
Album Review · Jazz Fusion

Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow

Recorded June 1973, Motown Studio, Detroit · Blue Note
Personnel
Gene Harris, piano, arranger  ·  John Hatton, bass, acoustic bass  ·  Carl Burnett, drums, percussion

Recorded at Motown's studio in Detroit, this double LP is the most ambitious and the most uneven of the solo Blue Note records. Harris plays piano and arranges throughout, working with a stripped-down rhythm section of John Hatton on bass and Carl Burnett on drums. The trio format should feel familiar, but the production has that early-seventies warmth that Motown's studio imparted to everything recorded there.

The ambition is the problem and the appeal. Spread across four sides, the album has room for everything: extended blues workouts, quiet ballads, funky vamps, and moments where Harris simply plays beautifully over a spare rhythm. There is no editor here, and the result sprawls. But the best passages remind you why Blue Note kept investing in him: nobody else on the roster played piano with this particular combination of gospel weight and rhythmic swagger.

Treat it as a sampler rather than a statement. The highlights are genuinely good, even if the album as a whole could have been tighter at single-LP length.

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Astral Signal
Blue Note · 1974
Astral Signal
Gene Harris
★★★★☆
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03
Album Review · Jazz Funk

Astral Signal

Recorded August 1974 · Blue Note
Personnel
Gene Harris, keyboards, backing vocals  ·  Oscar Brashear, trumpet  ·  George Bohanon, trombone, backing vocals  ·  Keg Johnson, trombone, backing vocals, producer  ·  Sidney Muldrow, flugelhorn  ·  Ernie Watts, reeds  ·  Jerry Peters, piano, backing vocals, arranger, producer  ·  David T. Walker, guitar  ·  John Rowin, guitar  ·  Chuck Rainey, bass  ·  Harvey Mason, drums

This is the one. Astral Signal is the album where Harris's solo reinvention fully arrives, and the reason is Jerry Peters. Peters arranged and produced, bringing in David T. Walker on guitar, Chuck Rainey on bass, Harvey Mason on drums, and a horn section featuring Oscar Brashear and Ernie Watts. The result is pure mid-seventies LA funk-jazz, beautifully recorded, with Harris's blues piano riding on top of grooves that snap and breathe.

"David T. Walker's guitar and Chuck Rainey's bass: the secret weapons of seventies LA studio funk, and they give Harris a foundation that lets his piano do things the trio format never could."

Walker's guitar tone is unmistakable, that clean, singing sound he brought to Marvin Gaye and Stevie Wonder sessions. Paired with Rainey's metronomic bass and Mason's crisp drums, the rhythm section alone is worth the price of admission. Harris responds to the luxury of this setting by playing with more abandon than usual, stretching into longer phrases and leaning harder into the gospel side of his vocabulary.

The album has been rediscovered by crate-diggers and sample hunters, and deservedly so. It belongs in any collection of mid-seventies jazz-funk.

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Nexus
Blue Note · 1975
Nexus
Gene Harris
★★★☆☆
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04
Album Review · Jazz Funk

Nexus

Recorded May–June 1975 · Blue Note
Personnel
Gene Harris, keyboards  ·  Al Aarons, trumpet  ·  George Bohanon, trombone  ·  Mike Altschul, reeds  ·  Fred Jackson, reeds  ·  Lee Ritenour, guitar  ·  John Rowin, guitar  ·  Chuck Rainey, electric bass  ·  Kenneth Rice, drums  ·  strings  ·  Jerry Peters, arranger

Nexus doubles down on the Astral Signal formula but adds strings and a bigger ensemble, and the extra density does not help. Jerry Peters returns as arranger, Chuck Rainey stays on bass, and Lee Ritenour replaces David T. Walker on guitar, but the production feels more calculated this time, less spontaneous. Where Astral Signal had space for Harris to stretch, Nexus tends to fill every corner with arrangement.

There are good moments buried in the orchestration. Harris's piano still cuts through when the charts let him breathe, and Rainey's bass lines are as solid as ever. But the string writing, while competent, pushes the music toward background jazz territory. The album is pleasant and professional, the kind of record you put on at a dinner party, but it lacks the visceral punch of its predecessor.

If Astral Signal is the essential document of this period, Nexus is the well-intentioned sequel that proves the formula had limits.

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In a Special Way
Blue Note · 1976
In a Special Way
Gene Harris
★★★★☆
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05
Album Review · Jazz Funk

In a Special Way

Recorded March–April 1976 · Blue Note
Personnel
Gene Harris, piano  ·  Azar Lawrence, tenor saxophone  ·  George Bohanon, trombone  ·  Jerry Peters, Rhodes, synthesizer, string arrangements  ·  Lee Ritenour, electric/acoustic guitar  ·  Al McKay, electric guitar  ·  John Rowin, electric guitar  ·  Chuck Rainey, bass  ·  Verdine White, bass  ·  Harvey Mason, drums  ·  James Gadson, drums  ·  Philip Bailey, vocals, percussion  ·  Merry Clayton, vocals  ·  Deniece Williams, vocals  ·  D.J. Rogers, vocals

The most star-studded session of the solo era, and the one that most clearly reveals how deep Harris's connections to the LA studio world had become. Verdine White and Philip Bailey from Earth, Wind & Fire, Al McKay on guitar, James Gadson and Harvey Mason splitting drum duties, Merry Clayton and Deniece Williams on vocals, Azar Lawrence on tenor saxophone. Jerry Peters again produces and arranges. The album was recorded in four sessions across two weeks at Total Experience Studios in LA.

The performances are excellent. Lawrence's tenor is muscular and searching, a different energy from the horn section players on the earlier records. Harris plays with conviction, and the rhythm section, anchored by Rainey and Mason on the strongest tracks, gives everything a buoyant, dancing quality. The vocal tracks are the weakest element, pushing the album toward smooth territory, but the instrumental passages are the best Harris committed to tape in this period.

"Azar Lawrence's tenor cuts through the lush arrangements like a searchlight, and for the first time on these solo records, Harris has a soloist who matches his intensity."

Not a perfect album, but the peaks are high enough to justify the whole enterprise.

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Tone Tantrum
Blue Note · 1977
Tone Tantrum
Gene Harris
★★★☆☆
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06
Album Review · Jazz Funk

Tone Tantrum

Recorded March–May 1977 · Blue Note
Personnel
Gene Harris, piano, electric piano, synthesizer  ·  Donald Byrd, trumpet (selected tracks)  ·  Jerry Peters, electric piano, synthesizer, vocals, arranger  ·  D.J. Rogers, vocals  ·  string section  ·  studio rhythm section

The final album of the Blue Note solo era, and the one that pushes furthest from jazz into pure funk and R&B territory. Jerry Peters arranges again, and the big addition is Donald Byrd on trumpet for several tracks, fresh from his own Blue Note funk reinvention. A string section fills out the arrangements, and Harris plays synthesizer and electric piano alongside his acoustic instrument.

As a jazz record, Tone Tantrum is the weakest of the six. Harris's piano is often buried under production, and the vocal tracks tilt the balance away from improvisation toward something closer to a D.J. Rogers R&B record with a jazz pianist sitting in. But as a document of its era, it has a certain charm. The grooves are genuine, the string writing is lush without being saccharine, and when Harris does get space to play, his blues vocabulary remains intact.

After Tone Tantrum, Harris retreated from recording for nearly three years. When he came back, it would be on his own terms, with a return to the acoustic trio and quartet formats that suited him best. The LA funk-jazz experiment was over, and the Concord years were about to begin.