Bobby Broom
A jazz fusion guitarist in the vein of George Benson, Bobby Broom balances his hard bop chops with a predilection for smooth R&B. Broom first showcased his blend of serious jazz chops and grooves on a pair of albums he released on Arista in the early 1980s -- Clean Sweep made inroads on the R&B charts -- but it took him nearly three decades of sessions to make a serious impression on the jazz mainstream with 2009's Bobby Broom Plays for Monk. From that point forward, Broom has maintained a sterling critical reputation -- he topped DownBeat's Critics' Poll for three years running in the early 2010s -- and a robust audience who embraced such albums as 2024's covers LP Jamalot.
Broom was born on January 18, 1961, and raised in New York City. Introduced to jazz at an early age (via Charles Earland's 1971 Black Talk). Broom took up the guitar shortly thereafter and started playing off-Broadway productions and gigs with Charlie Parker alumni/pianists Al Haig and Walter Bishop, Jr.; he was invited to join Sonny Rollins' band (he had to turn down the latter, choosing to listen to his parents' advice and complete high school before pursuing music full-time). After attending the renowned Berklee College of Music in Boston, Broom returned to New York, where he worked with Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers, trumpeters Tom Browne and Hugh Masakela, and pianist Dave Grusin before issuing his first solo album, 1981's Clean Sweep.
In 1982, several years after his initial invitation from Sonny Rollins, Broom worked with the jazz legend for five years, touring and recording Rollins' No Problem and Reel Life. In 1987, Broom worked with Kenny Burrell in his Jazz Guitar Band and recorded Generation live at the Village Vanguard for Blue Note. That same year he was also invited to join Miles Davis' band, which lasted for a handful of performances. Broom relocated to Chicago in 1984, where he would eventually form his own trio and co-lead the Deep Blue Organ Trio (with Chris Foreman and Greg Rockingham). It was also where he would come full circle in meeting and working with Charles Earland, another newly transplanted Chicago resident. Together they recorded Front Burner and Third Degree Burn. Just before his untimely death in 1999, Earland had planned to form a trio with Broom and drummer Rockingham. During the '90s Broom collaborated with Dr. John, touring and making recordings like Duke Elegant, which he co-produced.
Over the years Broom also became active in jazz education, beginning in 1982 when he taught for Jackie McLean's jazz program at the University of Hartford. He completed graduate work in jazz pedagogy at Northwestern University in 2005 and taught at DePaul University. Also in 2005, after 20 years, Broom resumed work with his old boss and mentor Sonny Rollins. Two years later, Broom returned with the pop covers album Song and Dance, followed in 2007 by the Latin-infused Passport Not Required featuring Alexandre Pires and Sergio Pires.
In 2009, Broom investigated the compositions of pianist Thelonious Monk with Bobby Broom Plays for Monk. He then returned to his adventurous original compositions for the trio album, Upper West Side Story, in 2012. In 2014, Broom delivered a no-less adventurous exploration of American Songbook standards with My Shining Hour, leading a trio that included bassist Dennis Carroll and drummer Makaya McCraven. Over the next three years, Broom spent his time touring and bonding with his young son. In 2017 he issued the direct-to-web album Throwback (Home Demos 1992-1996). He followed it in the fall of 2018 with Soul Fingers, that showcased his Organi-Sation trio (Ben Paterson, Hammond B-3; Kobie Watkins, drums) in a swinging program of tunes from the late '60s and early '70s -- pop hits from the Beatles, Procol Harum, Bobbie Gentry, and Steely Dan in classic soul-jazz fashion.
Broom paid tribute to great jazz pianists on Keyed Up, a 2022 album that featured songs popularized by the likes of McCoy Tyner, Bud Powell, Erroll Garner, Horace Silver, and Horace Parlan. For Jamalot, a 2024 live album featuring rock and soul covers, Broom featured his trio Organi-Sation.
© Greg Prato & Sean Westergaard /TiVo
Discography
14 album(s) • Sorted by Bestseller
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Jamalot (Live)
Jazz - Released by STEELE MANAGEMENT on 24 May 2024
Available in24-Bit/48 kHz Stereo -
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Soul Fingers
Jazz - Released by Jazzline on 28 Sep 2018
Available in16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo -
Soul Fingers
Jazz - Released by Jazzline on 28 Sep 2018
Available in16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo -
Bobby Broom Plays for Monk
Jazz - Released by Origin Records on 16 Jun 2009
Available in16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo -
Livin' For The Beat
Jazz - Released by Legacy Recordings on 8 Oct 1984
Available in16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo -
Upper West Side Story
Jazz - Released by Origin Records on 15 May 2012
Available in16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo -
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My Shining Hour
Jazz - Released by Origin Records on 19 Aug 2014
Available in16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo -
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The House of the Rising Sun (Live)
Jazz - Released by STEELE MANAGEMENT on 10 May 2024
Available in16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo -
Waitin' And Waitin'
Jazz - Released by Criss Cross Jazz on 1 Jan 2009
Available in16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo