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John Leslie " Wes" Montgomery (March 6, 1923 – June 15, 1968) was an American . Montgomery was known for his unusual technique of plucking the strings with the side of his thumb and for his extensive use of , which gave him a distinctive sound.

Montgomery often worked with his brothers (Charles F.) and (William H.), as well as organist . His recordings up to 1965 were oriented toward , , and , but around 1965 he began recording more pop-oriented instrumental albums that found mainstream success. His later guitar style influenced and .


Early life and education
Montgomery was born in Indianapolis, Indiana. According to , the nickname "Wes" was a child's abbreviation of his middle name, Leslie. The family was large, and the parents split up early in the lives of the children. Montgomery and his brothers moved to Columbus, Ohio, with their father and attended Champion High School. His older brother dropped out of school to sell coal and ice, gradually saving enough money to buy Wes a four-string from a pawn shop in 1935. Although Montgomery spent many hours playing that guitar, he dismissed its usefulness, saying he had to start over when he got his first six-string several years later.
(2025). 9781872639680, Hal Leonard.


Career
He and his brothers returned to Indianapolis. By 1943, Montgomery was working as a and had gotten married. While at a dance with his wife, he heard a Charlie Christian record for the first time. This experience inspired him to pick up the guitar at the age of 19, and he spent the next year teaching himself to play by imitating Christian's recordings. Although he had not planned on becoming a professional musician, he felt obligated to learn after purchasing the guitar. Montgomery did not receive any formal instruction and could not read music. By the age of twenty, he was performing in clubs in Indianapolis at night, copying Christian's solos, while working during the day at a milk company. In 1948, when was on tour in Indianapolis, he was looking for a guitarist, and after hearing Montgomery play like Christian he hired him.

Montgomery spent two years with the Hampton band. Fear kept him from flying with the rest of the band, so he drove from city to city, town to town, while fellow musicians marveled at his stamina. When arriving at a club, the first thing he did was call home to his wife and family. He was given the opportunity to play with , , and , but not the opportunity he hoped for , and he returned to Indianapolis a better player, though tired and discouraged. He resumed performing at local clubs, this time with the Eddie Higgins Trio and the Roger Jones Quintet, playing with , Walter Perkins, and . He joined his brothers and Monk and saxophonist Alonzo "Pookie" Johnson in the Johnson/Montgomery Quintet, somewhat in the style of . The band auditioned for and recorded sessions with . After a residency at a club from 1955 to 1957, Montgomery and his brothers went west.

Buddy and Monk Montgomery formed The Mastersounds and signed a contract with Dick Bock at Pacific Jazz. Montgomery joined them for a recording session in 1957 that included . Some of the songs were released by Pacific Jazz on the album The Montgomery Brothers and Five Others, while others were issued on Fingerpickin' (Pacific Jazz, 1958). The Mastersounds remained in California when Montgomery returned to Indianapolis to work in his trio with organist .

He worked as a welder during the day to support his wife and seven children, then performed at two clubs at night until well into the morning. He was a smoker who had blackouts while trying to maintain this busy schedule. During one performance, the audience included Cannonball Adderley, George Shearing, and . Adderley was so impressed by Montgomery's guitar playing that he persuaded to sign him to Riverside. Keepnews was also persuaded by a gushing review written by . In New York City Montgomery recorded A Dynamic New Sound, the Wes Montgomery Trio, his first album as a leader after twenty years as a musician. In 1960, he recorded The Incredible Jazz Guitar of Wes Montgomery with Tommy Flanagan, , and .

He joined his brothers in California to perform as the Montgomery Brothers for the Monterey Jazz Festival. The Mastersounds had broken up, and Buddy and Monk had signed with and recorded (with Wes) The Montgomery Brothers, followed by . Montgomery recorded another album as a leader, So Much Guitar, then while visiting his brothers had a chance to perform with group in San Francisco. In 1961, work was getting harder to find. A tour in Canada led to the album The Montgomery Brothers in Canada, then the band broke up. Montgomery returned to Indianapolis to work in his trio with Rhyne. Keepnews sent him back to California to record a live album with , , , and . Their performance became the album Full House. This was followed by Fusion! (1963), his first album.

After two more organ trio jazz sessions for Riverside Records in 1963 ( and Portrait of Wes), Montgomery left the label for . At Verve, Montgomery began working with producer , who produced Montgomery for the rest of the guitarist's life. His first Verve release, Movin' Wes (1964), was an instrumental pop album arranged by . It quickly sold more than 100,000 copies and repositioned Montgomery within the recording industry as a capable of significant LP sales. At Verve, Montgomery released his last two small-group jazz albums (a 1965 collaboration with , and a 1966 collaboration with organist Jimmy Smith), but his main focus was recording contemporary pop hits as instrumentals. Montgomery had notable success with his versions of "California Dreamin'", "Tequila", and "Goin' Out of My Head". After moving to A&M, Montgomery had his biggest radio hit, a version of "Windy", a pop song originally recorded by . Of the ten Wes Montgomery albums that Taylor produced while Montgomery was alive (all recorded for Verve and A&M Records), eight were aimed at the pop market. The success of these albums led to invitations for Montgomery to perform on major U.S. television shows including The Hollywood Palace and The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson.


Death
Montgomery died of a heart attack on June 15, 1968, while at home in Indianapolis. He was 45 years old.


Artistry
According to jazz guitar educator Wolf Marshall, Montgomery often approached solos in a three-tiered manner: he would begin the progression with single note lines, derived from scales or modes; after a fitting number of sequences, he would play octaves for a few more sequences, finally culminating with block chords. He used mostly superimposed triads and arpeggios as the main source for his soloing ideas and sounds.

Instead of using a guitar pick, Montgomery plucked the strings with the fleshy part of his thumb, using down strokes for single notes and a combination of up strokes and down strokes for chords and octaves. He developed this technique not for technical reasons but for the benefit of his neighbors and not waking his children. He worked long hours as a machinist before his music career began and practised late at night. To keep everyone happy, he played quietly by using his thumb. This actually worked out well, as he used an amplifier when performing, which allowed him to really exploit his thumb-picking style.

(2025). 9781617130236, Backbeat Books.
His style smoothly incorporated the guitar into jazz and was studied by many.

Montgomery was also known for his use of in his playing. In an interview with music critic Ralph J. Gleason, Montgomery was quoted saying: "Playing octaves was just a coincidence. And it's still such a challenge. I used to have headaches every time I played octaves, because it was extra strain, but the minute I'd quit I'd be alright. I don't know why, but it was my way, and my way just backfired on me. But now I don't have headaches when I play octaves. I'm just showing you how a strain can capture a cat and almost choke him, but after a while it starts to ease up because you get used to it."Marcus, Arnold. (2011) As quoted from the liner notes of the reissue of The Incredible Guitar of Wes Montgomery


Awards and honors
  • Second Place, Readers' Poll, Metronome, 1960
  • Most Promising Jazz Instrumentalist, Billboard, 1960
  • Talent Deserving Wider Recognition, DownBeat, 1960
  • Readers' Poll and Critics' Poll, DownBeat, 1961
  • Readers' Poll and Critics' Poll, DownBeat, 1962
  • Best jazz guitarist, DownBeat magazine Critics' Poll, 1960–63, 1966, 1967
    (2014). 9781625849342, Arcadia Publishing Incorporated.
  • Grammy Award nominations, (two), Bumpin', 1965
  • Grammy Award, Best Instrumental Jazz Performance by Large Group or Soloist with Large Group, Goin' Out of My Head, 1966
  • Jazz Man of the Year, , 1967
  • Grammy Award nomination, "" and "Down Here on the Ground", 1968
  • Grammy Award nomination, Willow Weep for Me, 1969


Legacy
Jazz guitarist said that on A Dynamic New Sound in 1959, Montgomery "introduced a brand new approach to playing the guitar... The octave technique... and his chord melody and chord soloing playing still is today unmatched". Broom modeled his guitar-organ trio after Montgomery's.


Tributes
wrote two tributes to Montgomery: "Bye Bye World", which appeared on his 1968 album , and "We All Remember Wes", which recorded for his 1978 live album Weekend in L.A.

In 1982, Bob James and collaborated on a duet album and recorded the song "Wes" as a tribute to Montgomery on the album Two of a Kind.

Guitarist released a tribute album to Montgomery in 1988, titled East to Wes.Richard Cook and Brian Morton, The Penguin Guide to Jazz on CD (Penguin Books Ltd, England, (2004)1992: p. 1356, ISBN 0-141-01416-4

released in 2006.

Eric Johnson paid tribute to Montgomery on his 1990 album Ah Via Musicom in a song titled "East Wes".

Guitarist paid tribute to Montgomery on the 1991 album In Motion with the song "Westward Ho".

recorded a tribute album in 1993, , that contained Montgomery covers and some originals by Ritenour. While the production and arrangements are typical for the time, he performed the entire album in Montgomery's style on a Gibson L-5 model.

Guitarist released a tribute album in 1998, I Remember You: A Tribute to Wes Montgomery.


Discography

As leader
Lifetime

  • 1959 The Wes Montgomery Trio (Riverside, 1959)
  • 1960 The Incredible Jazz Guitar of Wes Montgomery (Riverside, 1960)
  • 1960 Movin' Along (Riverside, 1960)
  • 1961 So Much Guitar (Riverside, 1961)
  • 1961 Bags Meets Wes! with (Riverside, 1962)
  • 1962 Full House (Riverside, 1962)
  • 1959-63 Guitar on the Go (Riverside, 1963)
  • 1963 (Riverside, 1963)
  • 1963 Fusion! Wes Montgomery with Strings (Riverside, 1963)
  • 1963 Portrait of Wes (Riverside, 1966)
  • 1964 Movin' Wes (, 1964)
  • 1965 Bumpin' (Verve, 1965)
  • 1965 Willow Weep for Me (Verve, 1969)
  • 1965 Smokin' at the Half Note with (Verve, 1965)
  • 1966 Goin' Out of My Head (Verve, 1965)
  • 1966 California Dreaming (Verve, 1966)
  • 1966 Tequila (Verve, 1966)
  • 1966 with Jimmy Smith (Verve, 1966)
  • 1966 Further Adventures of Jimmy and Wes with Jimmy Smith (Verve, 1969)
  • 1967 A Day in the Life (A&M, 1967)
  • 1967-68 Down Here on the Ground (A&M, 1968)
  • 1968 (A&M, 1968)

With and

  • 1958 The Montgomery Brothers and Five Others (Pacific Jazz)
  • 1958 The Mastersounds, Kismet (World Pacific)
  • 1960 Montgomeryland (Pacific Jazz)
  • 1960 The Montgomery Brothers ()
  • 1961 George Shearing and the Montgomery Brothers (Jazzland)
  • 1961 The Montgomery Brothers in Canada (Fantasy)
  • 1961 (Riverside)

Posthumous

  • The Alternative Wes Montgomery (Milestone, 1982)
  • (Capitol, 1990) – compilation
  • Fingerpickin' (Capitol, 1996) – compilation
  • Echoes of Indiana Avenue (Resonance, 2012)
  • Live at the Turf Club 1956 with the Montgomery–Johnson Quintet (Resonance, 2014) RSD
  • In the Beginning (Resonance, 2015)
  • One Night in Indy (Resonance, 2016)
  • Smokin' in Seattle: Live at the Penthouse (Resonance, 2017)
  • In Paris: The Definitive ORTF Recording (Resonance, 2018)
  • Back on Indiana Avenue (The Carroll DeCamp Recordings) (Resonance, 2019)
  • Maximum Swing: The Unissued 1965 Half Note Recordings (Resonance, 2023)


As sideman
  • , A Good Git-Together (Pacific Jazz, 1959)
  • Cannonball Adderley, Cannonball Adderley and the Poll-Winners (Riverside, 1960)
  • , Work Song (Riverside, 1960)
  • , West Coast Blues! (Jazzland, 1960)


External links

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