In the '90s, guitarist
Jeff Golub's blend of
jazz,
R&B, and pop earned him a reputation for being one of the edgier, more tasteful players in the crossover
jazz/NAC/
smooth jazz field. Although some of
Golub's recordings were played on
smooth jazz stations extensively, he was quoted as saying that he refuses to play outright elevator music, and to be sure,
Golub's solos give the impression that he is essentially a
soul-jazz improviser at heart. The Ohio native (whose influences have included
Wes Montgomery,
George Benson,
Lee Ritenour, and
Larry Carlton, among others) is quite capable of playing straight-ahead bop; he certainly has the chops for it.
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However,
Golub chose to focus on more commercial music and has a long résumé as a
rock, pop, and
R&B session player. He appreciates being compared to artists like
David Sanborn,
the Crusaders,
Ronnie Laws,
Joe Sample, and the late
Grover Washington, Jr., that is, instrumentalists who can be commercial and groove-oriented but still have a
jazz improviser's mentality.
Golub was born on April 15, 1955, in Akron, OH, where he grew up listening to a variety of
R&B,
funk,
blues,
jazz, pop, and
rock and began playing the guitar as a pre-adolescent. In the '70s,
Golub moved away from Akron to attend to the prestigious Berklee College of Music in Boston. But by 1980, he had relocated again, this time to New York City, where he was still residing 23 years later. It was in the early '80s that
Golub was hired to back
arena rock/
hard rock star
Billy Squier, and that association led to a lot of other session work. The list of major
rock or
R&B artists
Golub backed in the '80s or '90s (either in the studio or on-stage) includes
Tina Turner,
John Waite,
Vanessa Williams,
Ashford & Simpson,
Dar Williams, and former
J. Geils Band vocalist Peter Wolf. In 1988,
Golub was hired to back
Rod Stewart, an association that lasted for eight years. 1988 was also the year in which
Golub's first album as a leader, Unspoken Words, was released by the Gaia label, but at that point, he was still devoting most of his time to backing other artists. It wasn't until 1994, when
Golub founded the band
Avenue Blue, that playing as a leader became the guitarist's main activity. That year,
Golub signed with Mesa/Bluemoon, and
Avenue Blue's self-titled debut album of 1994 fared well in the
smooth jazz/NAC market. Two more
Avenue Blue projects were released by Mesa/Bluemoon --
Naked City in 1996 and Nightlife in 1997 -- but after that, he put the name
Avenue Blue to rest. While Avenue Blue,
Naked City, and Nightlife had been billed as "
Avenue Blue featuring
Jeff Golub," 1999's Out of the Blue on Atlantic was billed as strictly
Jeff Golub. After that,
Golub moved to GRP/Verve, which released
Dangerous Curves in 2000,
Do It Again in 2002, and Soul Sessions in 2003. A few years later,
Golub made yet another move releasing Temptation on Narada in 2005.
Grand Central followed in 2007. ~ Alex Henderson, All Music Guide