Diferencia entre revisiones de «Willie Weeks»

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In 1984 Weeks moved to Nashville, where he worked his way onto the A-list of session players, logged steady roadwork with Wynnona Judd, and did a stint with Lyle Lovett. In the past two decades, Weeks’s sessions have leaned toward country but also have included blues, soul, and pop. This year he was guitarist John Scofield and drummer/producer Steve Jordan’s inspired choice for Sco’s Verve album That’s What I Say: John Scofield Plays the Music of Ray Charles. Employing reissue Fender Precision and Jazz Basses and a 1969 Ampeg Baby Bass electric upright, classics such as “What’d I Say,” “I Don’t Need No Doctor,” and “I Can’t Stop Loving You.” The album is a fitting tribute not only to Charles but to Weeks, who—speaking from his new home back in North Carolina—sums up his career this way: “Over the years I just wanted to be inside the music—inside the groove.” <ref name="bassplayer">{{cita web |url= http://www.bassplayer.com/article/willie-weeks-does/jul-05/11378|título= Willie Weeks Does It All|autor= Richard Johnston|fecha= Julio 2005|editorial= bassplayer.com|idioma= inglés |fechaacceso=24 de noviembre de 2010}}</ref>