David "Happy" Williams | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | David Larry Williams |
Also known as | Happy Williams |
Born | [1] Trinidad | September 17, 1946
Genres | Jazz; pan jazz |
Instrument(s) | Double bass |
Website | davidhappywilliams |
David "Happy" Williams (born September 17, 1946 [1] ), is a US-based Trinidadian jazz double-bassist, who was a long-time member of Cedar Walton's group. Williams has also worked with many other notable musicians, including Woody Shaw, Bobby Hutcherson, Stan Getz, Kenny Barron, Duke Jordan, Monty Alexander, Frank Morgan, Hank Jones, Charles McPherson, Larry Willis, George Cables, Abdullah Ibrahim, David "Fathead" Newman, Sonny Fortune, John Hicks, Louis Hayes, Jackie McLean, Clifford Jordan, Abbey Lincoln, Ernestine Anderson, and Kathleen Battle. [2]
David Larry Williams [3] was born in Woodbrook, Port of Spain, Trinidad. [4] His father, John "Buddy" Williams, [5] was a bass player and one of Trinidad's best-known bandleaders of the 1940s and 1950s. [6] [2] [7] David started playing music at the age of five, initially on piano, then violin and steelpan. [2] He attended Tranquillity Boys School, Port of Spain, [4] and at the age of 12 began playing bass in earnest. As a teenager, he played pan in the Invaders steelband. [4] [8] When his sister went to London on scholarship to study piano, David joined her there in 1962, [9] studying bass for a year at the London College of Music. [2] He recalls, "I started getting offers and gigs, I was working in nightclubs, you know, wherever I could play, pubs, it didn't matter, and I had this desire, this thing to just get out there and play." [9]
Williams went to New York City in 1969 on what was intended to be a two-week visit but decided to stay on when he was offered work after sitting in on a gig with Grachan Moncur in place of Jimmy Garrison. [10] Following leads from Ron Carter, Williams began working with Gap and Chuck Mangione, and then went to Washington, DC, where he became Roberta Flack's bass player for two years, also working with Donny Hathaway during that time. [2]
Williams' first album as a leader, Soul is Free, was released in 1979; one of the compositions from it, "Out of the Sheets, Into the Streets", was used in the 1983 Eddie Murphy film Trading Places . [2] [11] [12]
In 1982 Williams became a member of the Cedar Walton Trio alongside Billy Higgins (whom Williams first met around 1973), [13] on the death of Sam Jones, for whom he had occasionally subbed. [2] They became, in the words of Jazz Journal : "One of the most regarded trios in contemporary acoustic Jazz". [14]
In more recent years, Williams has also written and recorded music inspired by Trinidadian steelpan and calypso, notably the "pan jazz" album Reid, Wright and be Happy (2003), alongside Ron Reid and Orville Wright. [15]
With Herb Alpert and Hugh Masekela
With Kenny Barron
With David Benoit
With The Blackbyrds
With George Cables
With Michael Carvin
With Cyrus Chestnut
With Freddy Cole
With Charles Davis
With Roberta Flack
With Sonny Fortune
With Steve Grossman
With Slide Hampton
With Louis Hayes
With David Hazeltine
With Billy Higgins
With Terumasa Hino
With Freddie Hubbard
With Abdullah Ibrahim
With Jermaine Jackson
With Elvin Jones
With Sam Jones
With Clifford Jordan
With Duke Jordan
With Joyce
With David Lasley
With Liberace
With Warne Marsh
With Jackie McLean
With Charles McPherson
With James Moody, Clark Terry and Elvin Jones
With Frank Morgan
With One for All
With Art Pepper
With Dave Pike
With Ernest Ranglin
With Vanessa Rubin
With Janis Siegel
With the Voices of East Harlem
With Cedar Walton
With Larry Willis
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