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Musicians - Dick Heckstall-Smith


Dick Heckstall-Smith (September 16, 1934 – December 17, 2004) was a British jazz and blues saxophonist.

He played with the most important British blues-rock and jazz-rock bands of the 1960s and 1970s.

Heckstall-Smith was born Richard Malden in Ludlow, England, and brought up in Knighton, Wales. He learned to play piano, clarinet and alto saxophone in childhood.

After refusing a second term at a York boarding school, he went to Gordonstoun, where his schoolmaster father, Reginald, had taken a job. Reginald soon fell out with the autocratic Kurt Hahn and the family retreated to Dartington.

Heckstall-Smith completed his education at the Foxhole school before reading agriculture – and co-leading the university jazz band – at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, from 1953. Aged 15, he had taken up the soprano sax while at Foxhole, captivated by the sound of Sidney Bechet
. Then the smokiness of Lester Young
's sound caught him, and the music of tenor saxist Wardell Gray
, a major early bebop musician.

Heckstall-Smith was an active member of the London jazz scene from the late 1950s. He joined Blues Incorporated, Alexis Korner's groundbreaking blues group, in 1962. The following year, he was a founding member of that band's breakaway unit, the Graham Bond Organisation; the lineup also included two future members of the blues-rock supergroup Cream: bassist Jack Bruce and drummer Ginger Baker.

In 1967, Heckstall-Smith became a member of keyboardist-vocalist John Mayall's prominent group the Bluesbreakers. That jazz-skewed edition of the band, which also included drummer Jon Hiseman
and future Rolling Stones guitarist Mick Taylor, released the album Bare Wires in 1968.

From 1968 to 1970, Heckstall-Smith and Hiseman were the key creative members of the pioneering UK jazz-rock band Colosseum. The act was a showcase for the saxophonist's writing and his instrumental virtuosity; like American saxophonist Rahsaan Roland Kirk
, he could blow two saxophones simultaneously.

After exiting Colosseum, Heckstall-Smith fronted several other fusion units, including Manchild, Big Chief, Tough Tenors, Mainsqueeze and DHSS. He participated in a 1990s reunion of the original Colosseum lineup and played the hard-working Hamburg Blues Band. In 2001 cut the all-star project "Blues and Beyond", which reunited him with Mayall, Bruce and ex-Mayall and Fleetwood Mac guitarist Peter Green.

He died of cancer.

[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Dick Heckstall-Smith ]



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