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The
Cliff Smalls story is a big saga of music, but certainly not a tall tale as no ridiculous exaggeration would be required for this versatile pianist, trombonist, and music director to travel from one genre to another.
Smalls, whose father was also a musician, started out playing in a high school band in his hometown of Charleston, SC, eventually joining the ranks of the illustrious Carolina Cotton Pickers, an early jazz band and not a description of economic opportunities in that part of the world sometimes called "Cackalackee."
Smalls remained involved with jazz and related vocal music throughout his career, but by the '50s and '60s could also be called something of a soul and rhythm and blues man, working closely as a bandleader for singers
Clyde McPhatter,
Smokey Robinson, and
Brook Benton. Jazz buffs who look down their nose at what they regard as the simple nature of popular soul music need to be reminded, by facts if not a smack in the head, of the virtuosity of many of the instrumentalists involved. The brilliant, innovative bandleader and pianist
Earl Hines was the man who put a halt to
Smalls' aforementioned musical cotton-picking, utilizing this new hire in the unique doubling position of trombone and second piano.
Smalls worked with
Hines in this capacity from 1942 through 1946, then accompanied singer
Billy Eckstine for two years and enjoyed a brief stint with saxophonist
Earl Bostic. In 1951
Smalls suffered a serious auto accident involving injuries which took several years to recover from. When he went back to work in the mid-'50s,
Smalls continued playing jazz with the superb trombonist
Bennie Green but also moved his way into accompanying
McPhatter in the popular styles developing under names such as doo wop and rhythm and blues.
Benton hired him as pianist and musical director in the late '50s for more than seven years, a period in which
Smalls also developed similar clients such as soul hit parade colossus
Smokey Robinson.
Smalls played with both
Ella Fitzgerald and the Reuben Phillips Big Band during the '60s and in the '70s was heavily associated with a big band led by arranger and composer
Sy Oliver. Resurging interest in classic jazz veterans led to some of
Smalls' grandest recording opportunities in his later years, including a solo album entitled The Man I Love in 1979. ~ Eugene Chadbourne