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BIOGRAPHY
Born one of the seven children of Thomas
and Gwendolyn East on December 8, 1955, in Philadelphia, PA,
Nathan East and his family moved to San Diego, CA, when he was
four years old to accommodate his father's aerodynamic engineering
job. As a child, East would
peck out familiar melodies on the family piano. He began playing
the cello in the junior high school orchestra when he was in
the seventh grade. When East was
14, he switched to bass guitar, inspired by his older brother
David's mastery of the instrument. He began playing for local
church groups and folk masses with his brothers.
East played
along with the recordings of jazz bassists Ron
Carter, Ray
Brown, Charles
Mingus, Buster
Williams, Scott
LaFaro, Motown's James
Jamerson, James
Brwn, Sly
Stone with Larry
Graham, Cream,
and horn bands like Chicago, Tower
of Power, and Blood,
Sweat & Tears as they came over the radio or out of his
record player. The young bassist began playing in his high school's
jazz ensemble, marching band, choir, chorus, and pep band, as
well as Top 40 bands. He also listened to Wes
Montgomery, Quincy
Jones, Herbie
Hancock, Wayne
Shorter, Canonball
Adderley, George
Benson, Bob
James, Harvey
Mson, Lee
Ritenour, Jimi
Hendrix, Santana,
session bassist Chuck
Rainey, Earth,
Wind & Fire's Verdine
White, and Rocco
Prestia.
East's
breakthrough came while he was a member of a band named Power.
They were hired as the road band for a Stax revue. The recognition
brought the attention of Barry
White, who hired the band for a national tour. Still a teenager,
East became
a member of the
Love Unlimited Orchestra ("Love's Theme") playing Madison
Square Garden, the Apollo Theater, and other major venues. East
earned a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Music from University of
California at San Diego. He was starting to work on a master's
degree when instructor Bertram
Turetzky suggested that he already had enough education and
that it was time for him to go to Los Angeles to try and start
a lucrative music career.
While getting involved with the San
Diego club and studio scene, Barry
White contacted him to play on some of his recording projects.
In early 1980, veteran writer/arranger Gene
Page, whom East had worked with on White's
sessions, called the bassist to play on a recording session for
a commercial jingle. Impressed with East's
ability to read music as well as his diverse playing skills,
Page used East on
numerous projects (Dionne
Warwick, Johnny
Mathis).
As East's
reputation grew on the L.A. session scene, so did his job calls.
From that point on, East worked
consistently. He did sessions for Lionel
Richie ("Endless Love," Kenny
Rogers' "Lady") and Kenny
Loggins ("Vox Humana," "Footloose"). He toured with Loggins (appearing
with the singer on a late-'90s Live By Request installment
on the A&E network) and with keyboardist Greg
Phillinganes and drummer Steve
Ferrone as part of Eric
Clapton's late-'80s band.
In 1990, while recording Bob
James' Grand
Piano Canyon album, the keyboardist asked East,
Lee Ritenour, and Harvey
Mason if they'd be interested in forming a group where each
member would be an equal partner and could contribute songs.
James,
who worked for Warner Bros.' jazz A&R department, got them
a deal with the label; a couple of months later, the group now
known as Fourplay began
recording their debut album. Their first record, 1991's Fourplay,
sold half a million copies and it remained at number one on Billboard's
contemporary jazz charts for 33 weeks. Their next LP, 1993's Between the Sheets, reached number
one, went gold, and received a Grammy nomination. In 1995, their
third gold album, Elixir,
inherited the number one position from Kenny
G's Breathless and
held on to the top spot for a record 92 weeks. Fourplay's 4 album
entered the jazz charts at number one.
East's
two younger brothers are musicians. James
East is the bassist with Sergio
Mendes and Marce
East is a guitarist/songwriter/producer working with Nathan on
a group called Two
Faces of East. His oldest brother Raymond is Pastor/Monsignor
of Church of the Nativity in Washington, D.C., and an excellent
vocalist. The musician won the most valuable player award in
the bass category at the International Rock Awards. East developed
his own Yamaha Signature Series bass guitar that is available
in musical instrument stores. He also has an instructional VHS
video, Contemporary Electric Bass.
For more information on Nathan East, visit www.nathaneast.com
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