Norman Connors
13 Shouts - 133,652 Scrobbles
Biography
Like Roy Ayers, George Benson, and Patrice Rushen, Norman Connors is best known for his major r&b hits but started out as a jazz improviser. The drummer/composer was born and raised in Philadelphia, where he lived in the same neighborhood as Bill Cosby and became interested in jazz when he was only a child. As a kid in elementary school, Connors was exposed to jazz extensively thanks to such schoolmates as drummer Lex Humphries and the younger brother of bassist and Jazz Messenger-to-be Spanky De Brest. Connors was in junior high when he began sneaking into jazz clubs and sat in for Elvin Jones at a John Coltrane gig. At 13, he first got to meet his idol, Miles Davis, and started expressing his admiration for the famous trumpeter by dressing like him. Connors went on to study music at Philly's Temple University and the Juilliard School of Music in New York. Gigs with Jackie McLean, Jack Mcduff, and Sam Rivers followed, and he was first recorded as a sideman when Archie Shepp employed him on his 1967 Impulse! session The Magic Of Ju-Ju.
Read More...After touring with Pharoah Sanders and playing on several of his albums, Connors signed with Buddah's Cobblestone label in 1972 and recorded his first album as a leader, Dance of Magic and its follow-up, Songs of Darkness, Words of Light. A few more jazz-oriented Cobblestone and Buddah dates followed, and it was in 1975 that Connors made r&b his main priority with Saturday Night Special (which included the number ten soul hit "Valentine Love"). The rest of the 1970s found Connors featuring r&b singers prominently (including Michael Henderson, Jean Carn, and the late Phyllis Hyman) and scoring such r&b hits as "We Both Need Each Other," "Once I've Been There," and the lovely "You Are My Starship." Connors, who signed with Arista in 1977, wasn't as popular or as visible in the 1980s, although he would make a comeback in the 1990s by signing with Motown's MoJazz label and focusing on both contemporary classical and crossover. The 21st century found him moving along similar lines, releasing Young for Eternity on Starship Records in 2000 and Tonight The Stars Revolt in 2009 on Shanachie Records. ~ Alex Henderson, Rovi
Top Songs
Total plays on Last.fm over the last 6 months- You Are My Starship - (4:33) - 2,319 plays
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- Black Cow - (3:33) - 1,051 plays
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- Stay With Me - (3:17) - 463 plays
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- Sing A Love Song - (5:19) - 442 plays
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- Keep Doin' It - (5:24) - 419 plays
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- She's Gone - (4:55) - 503 plays
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- Love's In Your Corner - (4:33) - 368 plays
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- Walk On By - (4:38) - 347 plays
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- Any Way You Want - (3:23) - 186 plays
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- Party Town - (5:03) - 120 plays
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