Fred Wesley
by Jason AnkenyAs the longtime musical director for soul legend James Browns renowned backing unit the J.B.s, trombonist Fred Wesley was the worlds most famous sideman, orchestrating the sinuous grooves and contributing the bold, surgically precise solos that defined the language of funk. Born July 4, 1943, in Columbus, GA, Wesley was raised in Mobile, AL. At age three, he studied classical piano under his grandmother, a music teacher, but much preferred the big band music played by his father, Fred Wesley, Sr., who also chaired the music department at Mobile Central High School. Wesley, Jr. remained with the piano until middle school, first adopting the trumpet before moving to the trombone. He made his professional debut at age 12 in a big band led by his schools music teacher, E.B. Coleman, and soon was sitting in with local R&B acts as well. While studying music at Alabama State University, Wesley briefly tenured with the Ike & Tina Turner Revue as well as Hank Ballard & the Midnighters before serving in the U.S. Army, playing with the 55th Army Band and graduating from the Armed Forces School of Music. After returning from military duty in 1967, Wesley formed his own project, the Mastersound, fusing R&B with hard bop. The group splintered within a year, however, and when he received a phone call from J.B.s trumpeter Waymon Reed, who told him Brown was seeking a new trombonist, Wesley accepted the offer. Browns infamously dictatorial approach wore greatly on Wesley, and the two men clashed often. After appearing on landmark singles including Say It Loud (Im Black and Im Proud), Licking Stick, and Mother Popcorn, the trombonist even quit the J.B.s in late 1969, briefly gigging with Sam & the Goodtimers before returning to Browns camp in early 1971 and assuming the role of musical director and arranger. Wesleys contributions to classic funk outings including Black Caesar, Slaughters Big Rip-Off, and The Payback cannot be overstated: alongside bandmates including Maceo Parker and Bootsy Collins, he spearheaded Browns groundbreaking transformation from soul to funk, establishing the template for the R&B of a new decade. I completed [Browns] creations, I followed his blueprints, Wesley later said. He would give me horn things to write, but sometimes maybe it would be incoherent musically and I would have to straighten it out, so to speak. When it came out of my brain, it would be a lot of James Browns ideas and my organization. Wesley even wrote a handful of Brown hits including Doin It to Death and Papa Dont Take No Mess, and headlined several J.B.s records including the classic Damn Right I Am Somebody and Breakin Bread. But creative and financial differences again forced him to part ways with Brown in 1975, this time for good. Wesley signed on with George Clintons Parliament-Funkadelic in time for their seminal Mothership Connection LP. And unlike Brown, Clinton encouraged his collaborators to pursue their own projects, even co-writing most of the songs comprising the trombonists 1977 official solo debut, A Blow for Me, A Toot for You, credited to Fred Wesley & the Horny Horns. After a second solo disc, 1979s Say Blow by Blow Backwards, Wesley exited the P-Funk sphere to return to his first love: jazz. He joined the Count Basie Orchestra, and also moonlighted as a producer, helming the self-titled debut LP by R&B group Kameleon. After settling in Hollywood in 1981, Wesley assumed the role of hired gun, playing on studio sessions headlined by Earth, Wind & Fire, Barry White, and the Gap Band, and also arranged records by Curtis Mayfield and Terry Callier. He reignited his solo career with 1990s jazz date New Friends, and continued recording straight-ahead jazz LPs throughout the decade to follow. As his unmistakable syncopated style became a crucial component of hip-hop via endless sampling of his vintage James Brown sides, Wesley also toured with fellow Brown alums Maceo Parker and Pee Wee Ellis as the JB Horns before forming his own Fred Wesley Group in 1996. In 2002 he published his memoirs, Hit Me, Fred: Recollections of a Sideman. He concurrently served as an adjunct professor of jazz studies at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.\r