Brian tells his story how he came to the organ:
In 1964, I was passing my Record Store in Shepherds Bush Market in
London U.K., where I was born. On the loudspeakers outside the store, I
heard the most amazing sound of an instrument I did not recognise. I
went in and asked to see the record they were playing. They showed me
the cover to the Blue Note Records release of Jimmy Smith- Back at the
Chicken Shack. I immediately bought the album and was amazed at how
exciting a Jazz sound could be made by the Hammond Organ. I had come up
on the Jazz scene in London, and was already appearing at London's new
and Premier Jazz Venue the Ronnie Scott Club playing Jazz Piano. I was
also playing with my piano trio at the Flamingo Club,not far from
Ronnie's, and the Flamingo began to feature R&B bands
with some Hammond players, and others with Lowry, Thomas, Bird, and Vox
Continental Organs. The best of these groups was Georgie Fame and the
Blue Flames, who was playing a Hammond M2. Georgie's Manager, Rik
Gunnell, was always advising me to buy an organ, but I was very
attached to the piano, and subsequently won the Melody Maker Magazine
Jazz Piano Readers Poll. In the summer of 1964, Georgie fell asleep on
the beach, and was taken to hospital with severe sunburn. I got a
frantic call from his manager, Rik, asking me to play Georgie's gigs
for the next two weeks. I agreed, thinking I would be playing Piano.
Upon arriving at the Roaring Twenties Club in Carnaby Street for the
first concert, I was alarmed to find out that there was no piano, and I
would have to play Georgie's Hammond. I had no idea how to set the
drawbars, and the only thing I could think to do,was to try to make the
machine sound as near to a Jimmy Smith organ sound as I could. Over the
next couple of days I managed to make myself really comfortable, and I
found that I really had a natural feel for the organ, and many people
asked me how long I had been playing the Hammond, and were really
surprised when I told them " Three Days". Georgie's
date sheet was exhausting, as we were playing two and three shows a day
in different venues. After two weeks of this "Baptism of Fire," I
decided that I had to buy a Hammond. I saved my money and in early 1965
bought an L 100 model, and tried to get it to sound like Jimmy Smith. I
realised that this wasn't possible.
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