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Monk Higgins is best known for the R&B hit instrumentals "Who Dun It" and "Gotta Be Funky." The prolific
Higgins also wrote a slew of songs for others including
Bobby Bland and one of
the Chi-Lites' first singles, "Go Go Gorilla." A mainstay of the Chicago R&B/soul music scene, he was a producer/arranger/session player at Chess Records during the '60s.
Higgins also worked with
Three Sounds,
Blue Mitchell,
Junior Wells,
Gene Harris,
Muddy Waters,
Freddy Robinson, and
Etta James, among others.
The saxman was born
Milton Bland in Menifee, AR, on October 17, 1936. After moving to Chicago,
Higgins started doing sides for George Lerner's One-Derful Records. Later, he began recording for St. Lawrence Records. One of his instrumentals for the label, the cool, funky "Who Dun It," hit number 30 R&B during the summer of 1966. The flip side was the melancholy past-midnight ballad "These Days Are Filled With You."
While at St. Lawrence, he hired his cousin
Barbara Acklin as a secretary.
Higgins recorded a single on her under the name
Barbara Allen for his Special Agent label. Later,
Higgins used
Acklin as a background singer on his Chess Records sessions.
Acklin later hit as a recording artist in the summer of 1968 with "Love Makes a Woman."
In 1969,
Higgins moved to Los Angeles. He arranged and produced acts for United Artists Records, Imperial, and Minit. The multi-talented sax player recorded a few albums for United Artists. The LP Heavyweight (August 1972) included his biggest hit, "Gotta Be Funky" (number 22 R&B). Another UA LP, Monk Higgins (January 1973), includes "Little Mama." On Buddah Records,
Higgins recorded "Dance to the Disco Sax of Monk Higgins" (December 1974). He's featured on the movie soundtrack and Buddah LP release from the 1975
Pam Grier/American International film Sheba, Baby.
Higgins collaborated with former Stax Records executive
Al Bell on hits for
Bobby Bland during the '70s and '80s.
In 1983, blues artist
Keb Mo joined his Higgins' Whodunit Band, contributing vocals and guitar as the group performed at Los Angeles-area clubs like Marla's Memory Lane.
Keb Mo credits his time with
Higgins as the most important element in developing his understanding of the blues. During the '90s,
Higgins' music has been sampled by numerous rap artists and is included on various breakbeat compilation CDs.
MCA Records bought the Chess catalog in the mid-'80s from Joe and
Sylvia Robinson of Sugarhill Records, reissuing many sides that feature
Higgins' contributions.
Monk Higgins died July 3, 1986, in Los Angeles, CA. ~ Ed Hogan