- Queen Talk: Live at the Left Bank · 2023
- Queen Talk: Live at the Left Bank · 2023
- Queen Talk: Live at the Left Bank · 2023
- Queen Talk: Live at the Left Bank · 2023
- Queen Talk: Live at the Left Bank · 2023
- Queen Talk: Live at the Left Bank · 2023
- Queen Talk: Live at the Left Bank · 2023
- Queen Talk: Live at the Left Bank · 2023
- Queen Talk: Live at the Left Bank · 2023
- Queen Talk: Live at the Left Bank · 2023
- Jazz for a Lazy Day (feat. Shirley Scott) · 2015
- Jazz for a Lazy Day (feat. Shirley Scott) · 2015
- Jazz for a Lazy Day (feat. Shirley Scott) · 2015
Artist Playlists
- Joyous jazz instrumentals led by snake-charming organ runs.
Singles & EPs
- 2016
Appears On
- Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis
- Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis
- Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis Quintet
About Shirley Scott
The "Queen of the Organ," pianist and Hammond B-3 specialist Shirley Scott helped to define the sound of small-group soul-jazz. Scott initially came to prominence in the 1950s alongside saxophonist Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, with whom she recorded a string of seminal albums for Prestige, spawning the 1958 hit "In the Kitchen" and proving a lasting template for the organ-trio-and -sax sound. She debuted as a leader with 1958's Great Scott!, and with (then-husband) tenor saxophonist Stanley Turrentine collaborated on albums like 1963's Never Let Me Go and 1968's Common Touch, that again proved highly influential in soul-jazz's development. Scott later recorded for Cadet and Strata East, putting her organically funky spin on pop and R&B hits. She rode a wave of resurgent interest in organ jazz into the '90s and even revisited the piano on record, as on 1991's Blues Everywhere, before her death in 2002.
- HOMETOWN
- Philadelphia, PA, United States
- BORN
- 14 March 1934
- GENRE
- Jazz