Roy Ayers
One of the most visible and winning vibraphonists since the 1960s, Roy Ayers' reputation is that of one of the prophets of jazz-funk and acid jazz, a man decades ahead of his time. A tune like 1972's "Move to Groove" has a crackling backbeat that serves as the prototype for the shuffling hip-hop groove that became almost ubiquitous on acid jazz records, and his relaxed 1976 song "Everybody Loves the Sunshine" has been frequently sampled. Yet Ayers' own playing has always been rooted in hard bop; it's crisp, lyrical, and rhythmically resilient. His own reaction to being canonized by the hip-hop crowd is tempered with the detachment of a survivor in a rough business. Growing up in a musical family -- his father played trombone, his mother taught him the piano -- the five-year-old Ayers was given a set of vibe mallets by Lionel Hampton, but didn't start on the instrument until he was 17. He got involved in the West Coast jazz scene in his early twenties, recording with Curtis Amy (1962), Jack Wilson (1963 to 1967), and the Gerald Wilson Orchestra (1965 to 1966), and playing with Teddy Edwards, Chico Hamilton, Hampton Hawes, and Phineas Newborn. A session with Herbie Mann at The Lighthouse in Hermosa Beach led to a four-year gig with the versatile flutist (1966 to 1970), an experience that gave Ayers tremendous exposure and opened his ears to styles of music other than the bebop that he had grown up with. After being featured prominently on Mann's hit Memphis Underground album and recording three solo albums for Atlantic under Mann's supervision, Ayers left the group in 1970 to form the Roy Ayers Ubiquity, which recorded several albums for Polydor and featured such players as Sonny Fortune, Billy Cobham, Omar Hakim, and Alphonse Mouzon. Initially influenced by electric Miles Davis and the Herbie Hancock Sextet, Ubiquity gradually shed its jazz component in favor of R&B, funk, and soulful disco, and put together a string of albums that hovered around the Top Ten of the R&B chart. These included Mystic Voyage, Everybody Loves the Sunshine, Vibrations, and Lifeline, which were released from 1975 through 1977. The last LP in this run featured "Running Away," a Top 20 hit on the R&B and disco charts. During the '80s, besides leading his bands and recording, Ayers collaborated with Nigerian musician Fela Kuti, formed Uno Melodic Records, and produced and/or co-wrote several recordings for various artists. As the merger of hip-hop and jazz took hold in the early '90s, Ayers made a guest appearance on Guru's seminal Jazzmatazz album in 1993 and played at New York clubs with Guru and Donald Byrd. Ayers continued to make featured appearances on assorted recordings, including albums with the Soul Society, the James Taylor Quartet, 3D, and Postmodern Jazz. He led dates far less often than he had in the previous decades but remained active as a performer. In 2020, he teamed with Ali Shaheed Muhammad and Adrian Younge for Roy Ayers JID002, the second volume in the duo's Jazz Is Dead series. Muhammad's A Tribe Called Quest was among the dozens of rap groups who exposed Ayers' '70s work to a younger generation.© Richard S. Ginell /TiVo Read more
One of the most visible and winning vibraphonists since the 1960s, Roy Ayers' reputation is that of one of the prophets of jazz-funk and acid jazz, a man decades ahead of his time. A tune like 1972's "Move to Groove" has a crackling backbeat that serves as the prototype for the shuffling hip-hop groove that became almost ubiquitous on acid jazz records, and his relaxed 1976 song "Everybody Loves the Sunshine" has been frequently sampled. Yet Ayers' own playing has always been rooted in hard bop; it's crisp, lyrical, and rhythmically resilient. His own reaction to being canonized by the hip-hop crowd is tempered with the detachment of a survivor in a rough business.
Growing up in a musical family -- his father played trombone, his mother taught him the piano -- the five-year-old Ayers was given a set of vibe mallets by Lionel Hampton, but didn't start on the instrument until he was 17. He got involved in the West Coast jazz scene in his early twenties, recording with Curtis Amy (1962), Jack Wilson (1963 to 1967), and the Gerald Wilson Orchestra (1965 to 1966), and playing with Teddy Edwards, Chico Hamilton, Hampton Hawes, and Phineas Newborn. A session with Herbie Mann at The Lighthouse in Hermosa Beach led to a four-year gig with the versatile flutist (1966 to 1970), an experience that gave Ayers tremendous exposure and opened his ears to styles of music other than the bebop that he had grown up with.
After being featured prominently on Mann's hit Memphis Underground album and recording three solo albums for Atlantic under Mann's supervision, Ayers left the group in 1970 to form the Roy Ayers Ubiquity, which recorded several albums for Polydor and featured such players as Sonny Fortune, Billy Cobham, Omar Hakim, and Alphonse Mouzon. Initially influenced by electric Miles Davis and the Herbie Hancock Sextet, Ubiquity gradually shed its jazz component in favor of R&B, funk, and soulful disco, and put together a string of albums that hovered around the Top Ten of the R&B chart. These included Mystic Voyage, Everybody Loves the Sunshine, Vibrations, and Lifeline, which were released from 1975 through 1977. The last LP in this run featured "Running Away," a Top 20 hit on the R&B and disco charts.
During the '80s, besides leading his bands and recording, Ayers collaborated with Nigerian musician Fela Kuti, formed Uno Melodic Records, and produced and/or co-wrote several recordings for various artists. As the merger of hip-hop and jazz took hold in the early '90s, Ayers made a guest appearance on Guru's seminal Jazzmatazz album in 1993 and played at New York clubs with Guru and Donald Byrd. Ayers continued to make featured appearances on assorted recordings, including albums with the Soul Society, the James Taylor Quartet, 3D, and Postmodern Jazz. He led dates far less often than he had in the previous decades but remained active as a performer. In 2020, he teamed with Ali Shaheed Muhammad and Adrian Younge for Roy Ayers JID002, the second volume in the duo's Jazz Is Dead series. Muhammad's A Tribe Called Quest was among the dozens of rap groups who exposed Ayers' '70s work to a younger generation.
© Richard S. Ginell /TiVo
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Evolution: The Polydor Anthology
Roy Ayers
Jazz - Released by Universal Records on Feb 28, 1995
Evolution: The Polydor Anthology charts Roy Ayers' 12 years and 20 LPs with Polydor, a rich time where his gliding, loose-groove jazz-funk gained many ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Virgin Ubiquity II
Roy Ayers
Funk - Released by BBE Music on Dec 1, 2018
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
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Roy Ayers JID002
Roy Ayers
Soul - Released by Jazz is Dead on Nov 16, 2020
Like a sea snake, Roy Ayers regularly breaks the surface. In 1980, the great jazz-funk vibraphonist who had fallen a little out of memory, reemerged i ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Change Up The Groove
Roy Ayers
Jazz - Released by Verve Reissues on Jan 1, 1974
Its misleading title notwithstanding, Change Up the Groove does little to alter the inimitable jazz-funk aesthetic Roy Ayers perfected on earlier LPs ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Ubiquity
Roy Ayers
Jazz - Released by Verve Reissues on Jan 1, 1971
Roy Ayers' leap to the Polydor label inaugurates his music's evolution away from the more traditional jazz of his earlier Atlantic LPs toward the infe ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
West Coast Vibe
Roy Ayers
Jazz - Released by Blue Note Records on Jul 1, 1963
While working in Los Angeles in support of pianist Jack Wilson, Roy Ayers befriended the respected jazz critic and producer Leonard Feather, a relatio ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Virgin Ubiquity: Unreleased Recordings 1976 - 1981
Roy Ayers
Funk - Released by BBE Music on Dec 1, 2018
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
In the Dark
Roy Ayers
Jazz Fusion & Jazz Rock - Released by Roy Ayers on Jan 1, 1984
Roy Ayers' first session for Columbia updates his signature funk-jazz sensibility for a new generation, and the results are mixed at best. Co-produced ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
I'm The One (For Your Love Tonight) [Expanded Edition]
Roy Ayers
Pop - Released by Columbia - Legacy on Jan 1, 1987
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Live At Ronnie Scott's: The Best of Roy Ayers
Roy Ayers
Jazz - Released by Carter Lane - OMiP on Dec 9, 2012
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
You Might Be Surprised
Roy Ayers
Jazz Fusion & Jazz Rock - Released by Roy Ayers on Jun 15, 2012
When You Might Be Surprised came out in 1985, Roy Ayers wasn't having as many hits as he had enjoyed in the late '70s. The R&B landscape had changed a ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
You Send Me
Roy Ayers
Jazz - Released by Verve Reissues on Jan 1, 1978
With 1978's You Send Me, Roy Ayers added vocalist Carla Vaughn to his band Ubiquity. Vaughn, who is featured on several selections, never became a big ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Red, Black & Green
Roy Ayers
Jazz - Released by Hip-O Select on Jan 1, 1973
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Vibrations
Roy Ayers
Jazz - Released by Verve Reissues on Jan 1, 1976
Whenever someone makes the transition from jazz instrumentalist to R&B singer, he/she is bound to be lambasted by jazz purists and denounced as a sell ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
The Best Of Roy Ayers
Roy Ayers
R&B - Released by Polydor on Jan 1, 1997
This greatest-hits title was the first of its kind upon its release in 1979. During that time, Roy Ayers was one of the leading acts on Polydor Record ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Virgin Ubiquity: Remixed
Roy Ayers
Funk - Released by BBE Music on Dec 1, 2018
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
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Reaching the Highest Pleasure
Roy Ayers
Funk - Released by BBE Music on May 15, 2020
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Sugar (The Reflex Revision and Instrumental)
Roy Ayers
House - Released by BBE Music on Dec 1, 2018
24-Bit 44.1 kHz - Stereo