Having just celebrated his 76th birthday last week,
James Mtume died yesterday (9 Jan 2022). Most will probably
associate with his 1983 hit "Juicy Fruit" as part of the group Mtume which
included Reggie Lucas, Philip Field and vocalist Tawatha Agee.
However his
musical journey started many years prior to that at college in the late 60s with Kwanzaa and then as a member of Miles Davis'
group as percussionist (1971-75). He performed with a number of other groups such as Kochi, Mtume Umoja Ensemble, The Heath Brothers (his father was
jazz saxophonist Jimmy Heath and this group was his father's and uncles' Percy & Albert 'Tootie' Heath) and The Players Association and formed Mtume in 1977.
He was born James Heath Jr. in Philadelphia in 1946 and later changed it to
Forman after his step father who was another jazz musician (pianist) James
'Hen Gates' Forman who played in Charlie Parker's group. At ten years old he
was rubbing shoulders with jazz greats like Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonious Monk
and Sonny Rollins! He later played alongside Sonny Rollins, Herbie Hancock,
Pharoah Sanders, McCoy Tyner, Lonnie Liston Smith, Gato Barbieri, Ramsey
Lewis. Whilst at college in the late 60s he joined a black empowerment collective known as
Kwanzaa which is when he changed is name to Mtume (meaning 'messenger' in
Swahili).
He met guitarist Reggie Lucas when they were both members of Miles Davis' group (Davis' group members at this time also included Michael Henderson, Lonnie
Liston Smith and Al "Night Of The Wolf" Foster amongst others) who he
would have a long-term writing partnership with writing hit songs such as
"Never Had A Love Like This Before", "What Cha Gonna Do With My Lovin'",
"Two Hearts" (and many others) for Stephanie Mills, "The Closer I Get To You"
(which Mtume recorded in 1978 on their debut album with Tawatha Agee) &
"Back Together Again" (Roberta Flack & Donny Hathaway), "Say You Will"
& "Prance On" (Eddie Henderson), "You Know How To Love Me" & "Under
Your Spell" (Phyllis Hyman).
In the mid 80s he left contemporary music disillusioned with the attitude
of record companies regarding using it as a means to make money rather
than artistic merit.
Below is a playlist of some of his best recordings with Mtume and a handful of songs he co-wrote with Reggie Lucas (who died in 2018 aged 65).
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