The sound of Greg Adams is one of the world’s best-known musical signatures.
For nearly four decades, from the time he first arrived on the San Francisco
Bay Area music scene of the early ‘70s, Greg has been a driving force
to define artistry that transcends musical genres
Greg has earned both GRAMMY® and Emmy nominations and an International
Broadcasting Award from The Hollywood Radio and Television Society. In
sync with an ever evolving musical landscape and a life’s work that has
included success as an arranger, composer, producer and performer, taking
him on worldwide tours and contributing to some of the most important
recordings in pop culture.
With his current project East Bay Soul, initially
assembled with live dates in mind has just released the self-identifying
CD produced by Adams that distinguishes them from others.
Greg has made an urbane, soulful and lush recording that showcases the
full strength of the rhythm and horn section through his arrangements.
As a trumpet player, Adams alternates between a powerful open horn and
sexy muted trumpet revealing the breadth and elegance he embodies.
East Bay Soul is a combination of instrumental
soul, funk jazz and rhythm and blues vocals built on a design to discover
new achievements rather than extend the past. “The songs just started
coming” says Adams. “It began with “Survival Of The Hippest.” “I started
composing in my head, I first came up with the bass line and then wrote the melody for the
horns. There were no temporary pro-tool’s track. It was very organic
from the start, and until the band played it live in the studio, it had
never been heard before. It was decided to write a lyric, just based
on the song title and that’s how we came up with the rap”
His 1995 solo debut Hidden Agenda stayed at
#1 for five weeks. The ground breaking album received wide critical acclaim,
fueled by the world sound of “Burma Road” and a smoldering remake of
Sade’s ” Smooth Operator” established him as a major architect of the
emerging smooth jazz sound and at the core of creating the genre of urban
jazz. Followed up in 2002 with Midnight Morning and
two more records in as many years with a string of top ten hits.
Adams is a founding member of Tower of Power. Legendary for the horn
arrangements that created it’s resonance and signature sound making Tower
of Power one of the most enduring musical entities today. Greg’s musical
compositions made the TOP horn section a sought out entity all it’s own.
Beginning early with his arrangement on Santana’s “ Everything Is Everything”,
Elton John’s “The Bitch Is Back” and Chaka Kahn’s “ Fool’s Paradise”.
Greg has arranged, performed and recorded with countless artists as diverse
as his career, including The Eurythmics, Rod Stewart, Heart, Lyle Lovett,
Linda Ronstadt, Luther Vandross, Aaron Neville, Quincy Jones, Little
Feat, Wilson Pickett, Huey Lewis and the News, Raphael Saadiq, The Brothers
Johnson, Phish, B.B.King, Everclear, Chicago, Bonnie Raitt, Dionne Warwick,
Ray Charles, Peter Frampton, Billy Preston, Terrence Trent Darby, Josh
Groban, Madonna, The Rolling Stones and Celine Dion.
Greg has played on over five hundred recordings. You have heard Greg’s
collaboration with Paul Shaffer on the opening theme of Late Show
With David Letterman and on musical score arrangements in such films
as Duets, Mask, Top Gun, Saving Silverman, Austin Powers In Goldmember with
Smashmouth and Little Big League where he teams up
with Stanley Clarke and on Sgt Peppers Lonely Heart Club Band with
the illustrious Sir George Martin.
A deep commitment to music education and the art of contemporary music
is realized through his continued involvement in music education in our
public schools through seminars, clinics, performances and development
of new artists. Greg strongly believes in music programs at all levels
of education.
In an ongoing effort to benefit others, Greg always makes himself available.
Greg realized the need to giving back at an early age. With his father,
a missionary in the Salvation Army who served in China and Burma in the
1940’s and Vietnam in the 1960’s, he found himself as a young boy going
to local farms in the fall at harvest time in Spokane, WA for donations
of fruits and vegetables to feed those in need in the local area.
Recently quoted Adams says “Anyway I can benefit the lives of people
who are ill or in need is very rewarding. And in the education department,
I know the great value of mentoring. Music is a lot of fun, but it also
has the great power to make a difference in peoples lives. It’s a privilege
to part of events geared toward that”.
Having served three terms on the Board of Governors of the Los Angeles
Chapter of The Recording Academy®- National Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Greg participates in Grammy Camp, a national outreach program that provides
insight to high school students about careers that are available in music
and direction on how to prepare for them. He continues to participant
and raises funds for EIF-The Foundations National Arts and Music Education
Initiative to help reverse the declining public resources available to
further the arts for children and young people.
Look for Greg and East Bay Soul on the road. “Performing live is what
I enjoy the most, it’s those moments on stage when you connect with your
audience that makes the whole day. The other twenty two hours of your
time is just waiting to get there.”
Adams trust and confidence in what he has designed, is what makes East
Bay Soul so exciting. “It took this much time for me to get here and
to finally make this kind of record. I always knew it would happen."
The opening song “Survival of the Hippest” unfolds with the epitome
of cool, it’s horn laden track swells with complete commitment before
Tom Bowes delivers a rap that is almost biographical as the title implies.
Balancing the sultry and robust, the hopeful and the absolute. East Bay
Soul excels on the west coast straight ahead “Bop Drop” that literally
drops into “Reading Lips” jazz infused R&B soul drenched vocals of
love in bloom.
Lee Thornburg emerges with his interpretation on Howard Tate’s 1960’s
chestnut, “Stop”, and brings the “full funk” of the track to life. While
Brian Allen’s bass anchors the subtle cush laid back groove on “What’s
It Gonna Be?” Sean Holt surrenders a sexy romp on “Jump Shout and Holler”
that is so playful and with Michael Paulo closing with a tenor sax solo
that is sure to become a classic.
Drawing on the inspirations of our times and awareness of new ideas,
“iHope” asks the question of promise and possibilities, a message delivered
with tremendous style by Darryl Walker.
Tom Bowes returns on “Someone New” a stirring closing to the disc about
emotional distances we must overcome to keep love alive and questions
“Am I losing you?”
East Bay Soul will remind you what you love about
music, creating an all new "Metro Jazz", really a new approach
of a melting pot of contemporary urban rhythm and a music combining all the sounds from the
city. The ethnic sounds of the trials and tribulations, the hard fought,
the victories, sweetness and sadness. It comes through in the
music in all forms. It's world, it's metro, it's edgy, it’s urban.