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Lee
Ritenour Bio
b.
Lee Mack Ritenour, 11 January 1952, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
The
prolific Ritenour has established himself as one of the world's
leading jazz guitarists with a series of accessible albums
over three decades. Starting at the age of 16, Ritenour played
his first session with The Mama's and the Papa's. Two years
later he was backing Tony Bennett and Lena Horne at L.A.'s
Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. Know as "Captain Fingers,"
Ritenour became a sought-after session player in the mid-70's.
Starting in 1976, at the age of 24, he began his own solo
career which now includes over 30 albums and collaborations.
Although heavily influenced in his early days by the relaxed
styles of Wes Montgomery, Joe Pass and Barney Kessel, he now
has his own distinctive sound and fluid style. His list of
session work is awesome (some 3,000 sessions), but some of
his notable performances were with Herbie Hancock, Steely
Dan, Dizzy Gillespie, Sonny Rollins and Pink Floyd. Since
the mid-80's Ritenour has been strongly influenced by Brazilian
music.
Along
the way, Ritenour has received 17 Grammy nominations, earned
several gold albums, numerous #1 spots in guitar polls and
the prestigious "Alumnus of the Year" award from
USC. In 1981, he scored the pop15 hit "Is It You,"
featuring vocalist Eric Tagg, which has also become a smooth
jazz radio classic. He joined GRP Records in 1985 after recording
for Electra the previous 7 years. At that time, he recorded
the magnificent "Harlequin" album with GRP co-owner
Dave Grusin. It was nominated for 4 Grammy"s and won
1 that year.
In
the early 90's, Ritenour teamed up with Bob James, Harvey
Mason and bass player Nathan East under the name of Fourplay,
who has released a number of soul/jazz/funk fusion albums
for Warner Brothers Records. Lee was a founding member of
the original band and participated in the first three releases
which remain their biggest hits to date. The first Fourplay
album in 1991 spent an unprecedented 33 weeks at No. 1 on
Billboard's contemporary jazz chart.
In
1993, Ritenour topped the Billboard jazz chart with his accomplished
tribute to Wes Montgomery, on his album "Wes Bound",
and followed it in 1995 with an excellent joint album with
Larry Carlton. In 1997, Ritenour was a founding partner of
i.e. Music at Polygram Records. The first release on i.e.
music was a "Twist of Jobim" paying tribute to the
great Brazilian composer Antonio Carlos Jobim. The single
"Water to Drink" from this album was a #1 Radio
n Records NAC airplay single in 1997. In 2000, he and Dave
Grusin returned to their classical roots with "Two Worlds,"
which remained on Bilboard's classical charts for 51 weeks.
In 2001 he released the 2nd of the "twist of" trilogy,
with a tribute to Bob Marley, placing reggae classics in a
contemporary setting. The first single "Get Up, Stand
Up," was the #1 Radio n Records NAC airplay single of
2001. In 2002, Ritenour released "Rit's House,"
a jazzier, funk album with many new original compositions
of Ritenour's. The final of the "Twist of" trilogy
was the 2003 release "A Twist of Motown."
In
2004, Lee Ritenour recorded one of his most ambitious projects,
a hi-definition, 5.1 sound DVD called "OverTime."
The DVD is 2 1/2 hours long with 19 songs covering his music
from the 70's to the current. Musically, it covers 4 distinct
areas starting out with acoustic jazz and moving into Brazilian
music with Ivan Lins. The second half continues with Lee's
early music from the fusion days at The Baked Potato including
the original band of Dave Grusin, Patrice Rushen, Anthony
Jackson, Harvey Mason, Ernie Watts and Steve Foreman. The
DVD concludes with many of his most popular songs from the
80's to 2004 including songs from "WesBound" and
"Twist of Motown."
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