Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Willie Tee

 
Artist: Willie Tee

Similar Artists:

Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Wilson Turbinton

Worked With:

  • Born: February 06, 1944, New Orleans, LA
  • Died: September 11, 2007, New Orleans, LA
  • Active: '60s, '70s, '80s
  • Genres: Rhythm & Blues
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Songs: "Teasin' You", "Walking Up a One Way Street", "Thank You John

Biography

Commercial success proved frustratingly elusive, but Willie Tee remains an institution of the New Orleans music scene. A powerfully expressive vocalist and pianist rooted in the traditions of Crescent City R&B and jazz, his mid-'60s soul sides are acknowledged classics on the Carolinas' beach music circuit. Born Wilson Turbinton on February 6, 1944, in New Orleans, he began playing piano at age three, no doubt inspired by older brother Earl's studies of saxophone and flute. In 1952, the Turbintons relocated to the city's Calliope Street housing projects, where Willie and Earl were regularly exposed to the music and dancing of the Native Americans dominant in the area; in 1960, the brothers formed their first group, the Seminoles, launching their career in local talent shows. At school, Willie also fell under the influence of his music teacher, Harold Battiste, who with the permission of the boy's parents, added Turbinton to his jazz combo the AFO Band (All for One), whose roster also included legendary pianist Ellis Marsalis. For Battiste's AFO label, the newly rechristened Willie Tee also recorded his 1962 debut single, "Always Accused" -- though not a hit, the record immediately established the buoyant marriage of R&B and jazz that would remain his signature throughout much of his career. After leaving AFO, Tee formed the Souls with bassist George Davis and drummer David Lee; he then signed with Nola, a new label formed by his cousin, Ulis Gaines; journalist Clint Scott; and producer/arranger Wardell Quezergue. Tee's 1965 Nola debut, "Teasin' You," not only became the label's first local hit, but somehow its notoriety spread to Los Angeles; when blue-eyed soul hitmakers the Righteous Brothers performed the song on TV's Shindig!, Atlantic licensed Tee's original for national distribution. Backed by the superb "Walking up a One-Way Street," the single barely squeaked onto the pop charts but fell just shy of the R&B Top Ten at number 12. The follow-up, "Thank You John," failed to chart but remains a certified beach music classic. (The song was later popularized by Alex Chilton.) After the funky "I Want Somebody (To Show Me the Way Back Home)" also missed the charts, Atlantic released Tee from his contract, and his next single, "Please Don't Go," appeared on Nola's Hot-Line subsidiary. The Marvin Gaye-inspired "Ain't That True Baby" also earned little notice outside of New Orleans, and in 1968 Nola closed its doors; Tee and Gaines then formed Gatur Records, with the former's "I Peeped Your Hole Card" causing few ripples. Tee shifted gears in 1969, co-writing and producing New Orleans soul chanteuse Margie Joseph's cult classic "One More Chance" for the Stax subsidiary Volt. He also reunited with brother Earl in the Jazz Workshop, where his piano prowess caught the attention of the great Cannonball Adderley and helped him earn a deal with Capitol; Tee's first-ever LP, I'm Only a Man, appeared in 1970, but his Capitol stay proved short-lived and he and Gaines soon reactivated Gatur with the lush ballad "The Man That I Am." Subsequent singles like "Your Love and My Love Together" and the galvanizing instrumental "Swivel Your Hips" documented a shift toward a funkier, harder-edged sound. In 1973, Tee was approached to assemble a backing band for a session headlined by the Wild Magnolias Mardi Gras Indian Group, bringing him back to the Native American music that was among his formative influences; recruiting brother Earl and guitarist Snooks Eaglin, he composed new material based on traditional Native chants as well as rearranging a handful of traditional New Orleans classics to incorporate elements of funk and Afro-Cuban music. The resulting LP, 1973's The Wild Magnolias, remains a landmark in Crescent City music history, and is credited with helping introduce the unique Native American Mardi Gras culture to the rest of the world. In 1976, Willie Tee signed with United Artists to release his second LP, Anticipation; fusing traditional up-tempo soul with contemporary disco arrangements, the record again failed to make any kind of commercial impact, and he never again recorded for a major label. Tee and backing band the Gaturs nevertheless remained a staple of the New Orleans club scene; he also renewed his professional relationship with older brother Earl, and Willie even reclaimed the family surname for 1988's Turbinton Brothers, a jazz date for Rounder. In the decade to follow, Tee was rediscovered by the DJs and dancers populating Britain's Northern soul club scene, and in the mid-'90s began making the occasional trip overseas, including an enthusiastically received appearance at the renowned Jazz Café. He was also feted by the hip-hop community, with the Gaturs' "Concentrate" sampled by Sean "Puffy" Combs and the Wild Magnolias' "Smoke My Peace Pipe" bit by the Geto Boys. Tee's classic Nola/Atlantic sides were finally collected in 2002 on the Night Train compilation Teasin' You. In September 2007 Tee passed away from complications of colon cancer. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Willie Tee
Top
Willie Tee

Willie Tee (1996)
Background information
Birth name Wilson Turbinton
Born February 6, 1944(1944-02-06)
New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
Died September 11, 2007 (aged 63)
New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
Genres R&B, soul, jazz, pop
Occupations musician, singer
Instruments Keyboards, vocals
Years active 1962 - 2007
Labels AFO, NOLA, Atlantic, United Artists
Associated acts Wild Magnolias, The Gaturs
Website willietee1.tripod.com

Willie Tee (February 6, 1944 - September 11, 2007) was a keyboardist, songwriter, singer, producer and notable early architect of New Orleans funk and soul, who helped shape the sound of New Orleans for more than four decades.

Born as Wilson Turbinton, Willie Tee secured his place as a New Orleans music legend by arranging, co-writing and leading the band on the Wild Magnolias' self-titled 1974 debut album. The popularity of that landmark recording, and the subsequent "They Call Us Wild" introduced the Mardi Gras Indians' street-beat funk to the world.

Wilson Turbinton and his older brother, modern jazz saxophonist, Earl Turbinton, grew up in the Calliope public housing complex alongside the Neville brothers. His earliest influences ranged from the singular rhythm and blues of Professor Longhair to the bebop jazz of John Coltrane.

He made his first recordings for the local AFO Records in 1962 while still a teenager. Three years later, he cut "Teasin' You", a soulful, mid-tempo composition for Atlantic Records. His "Walking Up a One-Way Street" and "Thank You John" were also popular hits.

In the late 1960s, Willie Tee & the Souls performed everywhere from the Apollo Theater in Harlem to the Ivanhoe on Bourbon Street. After hearing the band at the Ivanhoe in 1968, jazz musician Cannonball Adderley encouraged Tee to record an instrumental album. The album was never released, but the master tapes were recently rediscovered in the vaults of Capitol Records. Tee's pop was called expressive, his funk ferocious and his jazz "like mirrors in a prism" by longtime producer Leo Sacks, who called Willie Tee "a monster on the B-3 organ" in a Times-Picayune article.[citation needed]

Tee's early recordings, many of which were reissued by New York's Tuff City Records, found fresh life as source material for rappers. Houston's Geto Boys sampled "Smoke My Peace Pipe", a song Tee had written for the Wild Magnolias. Sean Combs borrowed riffs and grooves from the Gaturs' "Concentrate" for the 1997 album No Way Out. Alex Chilton also recorded a version of Thank You John in the 1980s, and Russell Minus completed a suite of elegies in 1996 based on the legendary yet notoriously underappreciated status which marked Willie Tee's long career.

More recently, New Orleans rapper Lil' Wayne sampled "Moment of Truth", a song from Turbinton's 1976 album, Anticipation for "Tha Mobb", the opening track on Lil' Wayne's multimillion-selling Tha Carter II.

Willie Tee remained active in his career as a producer, songwriter, performer and session musician. His collaborations with his brother Earl included 1988's Brothers for Life. He contributed to Dr. John's 2004 album, N'Awlinz: Dis Dat or D'Udda, and appeared briefly in the Oscar-winning Jamie Foxx film about Ray Charles, Ray.

In October 2005, after Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans, Turbinton accepted a job as a visiting lecturer in the music department at Princeton University and spent the next four months working with music students there. In January 2006, he returned to Louisiana and settled in Baton Rouge.

In April 2007, The Louisiana Music Hall of Fame honored Willie Tee for his contributions to Louisiana music with an induction.

Willie Tee died on September 11, 2007, aged 63, four weeks after being diagnosed with colon cancer. His brother, Earl Turbinton, had died the previous month.

External links


 
 
Learn More
Rare Soul: Beach Music Classics, Vol. 3 (1992 Album by Various Artists)
Keys to the Crescent City (1991 Album by Various Artists)
The Gaturs (Rhythm & Blues Band, '70s)

What is a flushing tee? Read answer...
What is a tee shot? Read answer...
What is tee time? Read answer...

Help us answer these
What is your willy?
What is tee-ball?
What is the tees banks?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Willie Tee" Read more

 

Mentioned in