Julian Priester was a versatile and highly advanced trombonist capable of playing hard bop, post-bop, R&B, fusion, or full-on avant-garde jazz; however, he remains under-appreciated due to the paucity of sessions he recorded under his own name.
Priester was born in Chicago on June 29, 1935, and started out on the city's thriving blues and R&B scene, playing with artists like
Muddy Waters,
Dinah Washington, and
Bo Diddley; he also worked with
Sun Ra's early progressive big band outfits during the mid-'50s. In 1958,
Priester moved to New York and joined
Max Roach's band, appearing on classics like
Freedom Now Suite. In 1960,
Priester also recorded two hard bop sessions as a leader,
Keep Swingin' and
Spiritsville. After leaving
Roach in 1961,
Priester appeared often as a sideman on Blue Note dates, recording with the likes of
Freddie Hubbard,
Stanley Turrentine,
Blue Mitchell,
Art Blakey,
Joe Henderson, and
McCoy Tyner; on a more adventurous note, he also worked with
Sam Rivers and played in
John Coltrane's
Africa/Brass ensemble.
Priester worked with
Duke Ellington for six months during 1969-70, and shortly thereafter accepted his highest-profile gig with
Herbie Hancock's
Headhunters-era fusion band. Upon his departure in 1973,
Priester moved to San Francisco and recorded two dates for ECM, 1974's
Love, Love and 1977's
Polarization. In the '80s,
Priester joined both
Dave Holland's group and the faculty of Cornish College in Seattle, and later returned to
Sun Ra's big band. During the '90s,
Priester continued to work with
Holland, and toured with
Charlie Haden's
Liberation Music Orchestra. In 1997, he finally led another session of his own for Postcards, titled
Hints on Light and Shadow, which featured
Sam Rivers. In 2000,
Priester received a liver transplant, but was back in action the following year at a benefit concert in his honor.
–
Steve Huey, Rovi