Pianist
Bobby Lyle learned long ago that success and longevity in the
music business are directly related to versatility and the ability
to constantly refine and re-invent God-given talent. In a career
that has spanned some three decades, Lyle has established himself
as a songwriter, producer, arranger, music publisher, sideman,
bandleader, musical director and world-class performer. Audiences
worldwide have been mesmerized by Lyle’s melodic compositions
and dazzling piano technique.
Born in Memphis, Tennessee, Lyle’s
parents joined the post-war flight of African Americans from the
south to urban northern cities. The family ended up in Minneapolis,
Minnesota, where Lyle’s musical odyssey began. “My
love affair with the piano began at age six with Mom as my first
teacher,” Lyle fondly recalls. “Growing up in a climate
where you have six months of winter every year provided lots of
practice time,” he added, with a smile. The resulting development
eventually got him noticed by musicians and club-owners and soon
the gigs began to pour in. This “on-the-job” training,
coupled with exposure to great jazz piano masters – Art
Tatum, Erroll Garner, Oscar Peterson, McCoy Tyner, Ahmad Jamal,
and Hammond B-3 pioneer Jimmy Smith – advanced Lyle’s
performing skills to a point that compelled him to leave college
after two years, feeling that the time was right to join the mainstream
of national touring musicians. The first opportunity arrived in
the form of Red Holt and Eldee Young of Young-Holt Unltd., two
ex-Ramsey Lewis bandmembers, who whisked Lyle away from the Twin
Cities and onto the national jazz club circuit. Young-Holt can
also be credited with exposing Lyle to his first major studio
recording on the Atlantic-Cotillion label – a precursor
of things to come.
Events happened quickly from this
point in the early 70’s: a meeting and subsequent jam session
with Jimi Hendrix, who was planning on starting a jazz-rock group
with Lyle and fellow Minnesotans Willie Weeks (bass) and Bill
Lordan (drums) before his untimely death later that year in 1970;
a permanent move with his young family to Los Angeles in 1974;
a nine-month tour that same year with Sly and the Family Stone;
and a stint with the Ronnie Laws band that led to a meeting with
Wayne Henderson of the Jazz Crusaders, who then took him to Capitol
Records for his first solo recording deal in 1977. After three
albums – “The Genie”, “New Warrior”
and “Night Fire” – Capitol abandoned its jazz
division and Lyle returned to the touring circuit, hitting the
road in 1981 with George Benson. The 80’s were characterized
by extensive tours with Bette Midler, Al Jarreau, and Anita Baker,
all with Lyle as musical director. While performing with saxophonist
Gerald Albright in 1987, Lyle came to the attention of Sylvia
Rhone, then VP of Jazz and Urban music at Atlantic Records. This
resulted in a recording deal in 1988, which spawned six albums
in nine years including “Ivory Dreams”; “The
Journey”, a #1 jazz album in 1990; “Pianomagic”,
a critically acclaimed solo piano project; ”Secret Island”;
“Rhythm Stories”; and “The Power of Touch”.
Lyle also continued to tour with his own bands, as well as with
Bette Midler. He received an Emmy nomination for his musical direction
on her HBO Special “Diva Las Vegas” in 1997.
Lyle is currently gearing up
to promote a brand new CD entitled “Joyful”, slated
for release in November 2002 on the Three Keys Music/Marimelj
label. “I’m very excited to be affiliated with a label
that truly understands and is committed to exposing all of my
musical facets,” says Lyle, explaining that “Joyful”,
aside from being a musical expression of his current state of
mind, is also the first of a trilogy of projects that will include
a solo piano collection and a straight-ahead Hammond B-3 CD. Another
Bette Midler tour is also in the works for early 2003. Lyle’s
future ambitions include breaking into the film-scoring arena,
and setting up jazz seminars in schools and colleges throughout
the country to better educate young people about the evolution
and historical significance of America’s original art form
through demonstration and dialogue. “I just want to keep
doing work that will affect people’s lives in a positive
way,” declares Lyle, an artist with a seemingly unlimited
future.
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