David "Fathead" Newman Has Died at 75
Categories: DFW Music News
Newman, who so beautifully straddled the line between jazz and R&B throughout his estimable career, had one of the most illustrious careers in modern music, stretching all the way from Lincoln High School to bandleader Buster Smith to Ray Charles to Atlantic Records to Aretha Franklin to ZuZu Bolin to Robert Altman's film Kansas City, in which he had a small role as a sax player, but of course. As Josh wrote in 1996, "Aside from his own 28 [albums], Newman estimates he has played on some 400 pop, jazz, and blues albums as a star sideman." He acquired his nickname while at Lincoln: As Sarah Hepola recounted in the Observer in 2004, legendary band director J.K. Miller "called him a 'fathead' after he bungled a note in class."
In '04, Newman told the Observer that playing with Charles "was like a course in music appreciation... Ray loved jazz, blues, rock, rhythm and blues, country and western, and classical. I was stuck in the bebop era, and I didn't think there was anything other than bebop, but he taught me differently."
In 2005, Newman released the album I Remember Brother Ray. It would be among his last. His final album was 2008's Diamondhead, which also featured South Dallas-born pianist Cedar Walton.



























