Boots Randolph, 1927-2007

 Boots Randolph.jpg 

From the Nashvlle Tennessean, by our friend and colleague Bill Friskics-Warren.

Randolph’s soulful sax enriched Nashville Sound
Published: Wednesday, 07/04/07

Boots Randolph, Nashville’s most celebrated saxophonist and a member of the city’s vaunted “A-Team” of session musicians, died Tuesday afternoon after suffering a subdural hematoma last week. He was 80.

Mr. Randolph played a major role in the development of the Nashville Sound, where his always soulful playing galvanized popular recordings by the likes of Elvis Presley and Eddy Arnold.

As singular as his work as a sideman was, however, Mr. Randolph was best known for his 1963 hit “Yakety Sax,” a juking instrumental inspired by King Curtis’ saxophone solo on the Coasters’ 1958 R&B smash “Yakety Yak.”

Written with guitarist James “Spider” Rich, Mr. Randolph’s record later became the theme song of the long-running British comedy The Benny Hill Show.

“Chicken pickin’ saxophone” is how fellow A-Team member and Country Music Hall of Famer Harold Bradley described the short, spluttering notes that hooked “Yakety Sax.”

Mr. Randolph, too, invoked rural imagery to describe his playing, routinely joking from the stage that he was “the world’s only hillbilly saxophonist.”

Ironically, it was his gift for improvisation and command of dynamics in genres ranging from jazz to blues that stood out most in many ways.

“The sax is a loud, blare-y instrument,” said A-Teamer Bob Moore. “But Boots had a way of playing something that would fit with the style and the mood of the song. Whatever he came up with was always outstanding.”

Brenda Lee, discussing Mr. Randolph’s swinging solo on her 1960 hit “Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree,” said, “I don’t care who has recorded that song since, they all copied him.”

From his salacious wailing on Elvis’ 1960 recording of “Reconsider Baby” to the staccato riff he played on Roy Orbison’s “Oh, Pretty Woman,” Mr. Randolph’s contributions indeed were inimitable.

He played in family band

Born in Paducah, Ky., in 1927, Mr. Randolph grew up playing ukulele and trombone in his family’s band, whose performances supplemented their household income during the Depression. He didn’t take up the saxophone until he was in high school.

Mr. Randolph worked in nightclubs in Indiana and Illinois for a decade after serving in the Army during World War II. His big break came after he sent a tape of “Yakety Sax” to Chet Atkins, then the head of RCA Records in Nashville. Atkins liked what he heard and hired Mr. Randolph to do session work for such artists as Perry Como and Homer & Jethro.

Atkins also signed him to a solo contract, but it wasn’t until Mr. Randolph moved to the fledging Monument label that his career took off. He became a regular on the Grand Ole Opry and was a frequent guest on such network TV programs as The Ed Sullivan Show and The Tonight Show With Johnny Carson.

In 1977, he opened his famous Boots Randolph’s nightclub in Printers Alley, a popular tourist attraction until it closed in 1994.

Just last month, he released A Whole New Ballgame, an album of standards like “Nature Boy” and “‘Round Midnight” that found him in fine form.

He was sideman and star

Mr. Randolph continued to work as a sideman even after he became a headliner. Bradley called him a consummate team player and believes that Mr. Randolph’s contributions helped lend the Nashville Sound broader popular appeal.

Moore remembered Mr. Randolph as someone who would pitch in where needed. At the same time, he said, “If you didn’t watch out, Boots would become the star, it didn’t matter who he was playing with.

“I’ve always said that, as the bass player, I have the best seat in the house,” Moore explained. “I stood right behind Elvis, and I stood right behind Tammy (Wynette). No matter who I was playing with, I’d look out at the crowd and could always tell by the looks on people’s faces when Boots would take his turn at the center of the stage. He knocked them out every time. And when he would step back to the side, they would still be watching him.”

Beyond his unassailable musicianship, Mr. Randolph was an avid golfer, a devoted family man and a friend to many.

“He was not only a definitive musician,” said Lee, “he was also a true gentleman, and a wonderful friend to me, as he was to so many in the Nashville recording community.

“He was a precious, sweet man,” she added. “His passing leaves a void that will be impossible to fill.”

Mr. Randolph is survived by Delores “Dee” Randolph, his wife of 59 years, his son Randy Randolph and daughter Linda O’Neal, all of Nashville; brother Bob Randolph and sister Dorothy Thomas of Evansville, Ind.; four grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren.

Arrangements, which are pending, are being handled by Anderson & Garrett in Joelton. A memorial service will be conducted by the Nashville Association of Musicians Local 257 at a later date. -bfw

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Here are two of my favorite Randolph solo sides. –dc

Boots Randolph “Sleep Walk” and “So Rare,” both on RCA, both from 1959, and both available on Yakety Sax (Bear Family)

3 Responses to “Boots Randolph, 1927-2007”

  1. Happy Says:

    What a fine reading of “Sleep Walk”!

  2. Danny Says:

    Great story, Bill!

    Danny

  3. Kevin Aucoin Says:

    Hi my name is Kevin Aucoin from Massachusetts.
    I was Boot’s Randolph biggest fan, all my life I idolized that man he is the one for the reason I started playing Saxophone.I started playing when I was 6 years old.
    I met Boots in 1990 for the first time at the club in printer’s alley, and have been so close to him.I live here in Massachusetts and have met and talked with him several times when he played with Jimmy Sturr in Springfield Mass for the xmas show. I made a cd copy from a tape when he played with the Boston Pops in 1972, and he loved it so much he did not have a copy of his performance in Boston.That day Boot’s let me play his horn that day before the show in Dec of 2006 and he loved the way I played he said I sounded like him,well idolizing him all my life I started to develop his sound but adjusted to my own style as well. I want to start a Boots Randolph tribute band just like he had and play all his music in his honor I also wanted to say that I met my girlfriend almost 4 years ago on line in a chat room and she is from Evansville Indiana I know that is where Boots met his wife Dee. I think its ironic that I met the love of my life to from Evansville she will be moving here soon but I always go to Nashville when I see her there. I just wanted to share that with you. May God Bless you and your family Boots was the best he was a class act all the way as a musician and as a person he will always be number #1 to me always I love him and he was the greatest Sax player all time as well as being a special human being.

    Sincerely,
    Kevin Aucoin

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