 |
ARTISTS

In 1958, young Billy Preston appeared on the big screen in St. Louis
Blues, in which he played the great composer W.C. Handy as a child. The
Paramount biopic was one of the first Hollywood movies to feature an almost
exclusively black starring cast, including Nat "King" Cole, Eartha Kitt, Cab
Calloway, Ella Fitzgerald, and Ruby Dee. Even then, it seems, Billy Preston had
a knack for surrounding himself with stellar compatriots.
Born September 9, 1946 in Houston Texas, Billy Preston was playing keyboards
for gospel superstar Mahalia Jackson at the grand age of ten. At sixteen he was
touring Europe with Little Richard. One night in Hamburg, they dropped in at the
Cavern Club to check out a new British band that was just beginning to stir up
excitement. It was there that Billy forged a lifelong friendship with George
Harrison - and his fellow Beatles. From there, he recorded, toured - and often
collaborated - with Sam Cooke, Ray Charles, Sly Stone, Aretha Franklin, The
Jackson Five, Sammy Davis Jr., Quincy Jones, The Rolling Stones, and Bob Dylan.
But it was his work with the Beatles that forever secured Billy's place in the rock'n'roll pantheon. His contributions to The White Album, Let It
Be, and Abbey Road earned him an honorary title as "The Fifth
Beatle." It wasn't just hype, either. The original single of "Get Back" was
credited as "The Beatles with Billy Preston" - the first and only time another
artist was so credited on any Beatles record, And with good reason. Billy's
piano solo on that track still stands as one of the most recognizable figures in
their cannon. Although he first hit the charts with an instrumental gospel
album, The Most Exciting Organ Ever, for Vee Jay records in 1966,
Billy's solo career didn't truly take wing until the Beatles signed him to their
new Apple label in the early seventies. Billy let loose with a streak of
gold-record singles including "Will It Go 'Round In Circles," "Nothing From
Nothing," the Grammy®-winning instrumental "Outa Space," and "You Are So
Beautiful," which became a career-reviving hit for his friend Joe Cocker.
Ray Charles once said, "Billy Preston is the man I would like to carry on the
work I have started." A single listen to "Both Ways," "As One," or his response
to Mavis Staples' call in "That's Enough," will make it amply clear that Billy
is indeed carrying it on.
Work Song Streaming Player
Billy Preston Official
Page
Back to Artists Page
|
 |