One of the many jazzmen who started out playing hard bop but went electric during the fusion era,
Joe Sample was, in the late '50s, a founding member of
the Jazz Crusaders along with trombonist
Wayne Henderson, tenor saxman
Wilton Felder, and drummer
Stix Hooper.
The Crusaders' debt to
Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers wasn't hard to miss -- except that the L.A.-based unit had no trumpeter, and became known for its unique tenor/trombone front line.
Sample, a hard-swinging player who could handle chordal and modal/scalar improvisation equally well, stuck to the acoustic piano during
the Crusaders' early years -- but would place greater emphasis on electric keyboards when the band turned to jazz-funk in the early '70s and dropped "Jazz" from its name. Though he'd recorded as a trio pianist on 1969's obscure
Fancy Dance, 1978's
Rainbow Seeker was often described as his first album as a leader. In contrast to the gritty music
the Crusaders became known for,
Sample's own albums on MCA and, later, Warner Bros. and PRA have generally favored a very lyrical and introspective jazz-pop approach. ~ Alex Henderson, All Music Guide