Bob Tate
Inducted in 1998
Robert "Bob" Tate, Jr.
July 2, 1932 -- August 3, 1993
Bob Tate Jr. was a legendary
musician who played a vital role
in the development of jazz and
rhythm-and-blues, in both Arizona
and on the West Coast, for roughly
40 years.
Although born in Oklahoma, he
moved with his family to Arizona
as a young child and was raised in
Phoenix, where he attended Carver
High School and Arizona State
University; during the course of
his career, he learned to play
tenor, alto and soprano saxophone,
flute, keyboards, and to read and
compose music, although he
performed and recorded primarily
as a saxophonist and arranger.
In the late 50's he moved to Los
Angeles, and for the next 15 years
or so he played and recorded with
some of the most important figures
in R&B: Sam Cooke (for whom
Bob worked as on-the-road
bandleader), Little Johnny Taylor,
Don & Dewey, Louis Jordan,
T-Bone Walker, Johnny "Guitar"
Watson, Lou Rawls, Saunders King,
and Guitar Shorty (see Living
Blues issue #95, Jan/Feb '9l, for
an article on Shorty in which he
describes Bob's role in his
classic sessions of the late 50's
and early 60's).
The records that Bob appeared on
have become highly-sought-after
collectors' items, and a number of
them have been reissued on CD and
LP; one of his compositions from
this period has been covered in
recent years by Anson Funderburgh
& The Rockets featuring Sam
Myers ("The Ways of a Man",
originally recorded by Guitar
Shorty in 1959).
After returning to Phoenix in the
late 70's, Bob continued to be an
active member of the jazz and
blues scene in Arizona, working
with Prince Shell, Gary Hughes,
Chico Chism and Big Pete Pearson,
among many others. Right up until
his death he continued to serve as
a mentor to younger blues
musicians, who benefited greatly
from his advice. He will always be
missed by those who knew him.
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