
Everyday Creation
Everyday Creation is about purpose, awe and good vibrations. The show's title refers to three types of creation: The ways we express ourselves (for example, with art, music and so many other pursuits fueled by purpose and passion); the parts of life that fill us with awe (birth, death, love, the big picture); and our personal power to create our best possible lives while also making the world a better place. Here, you’ll encounter interviews, essays and some episodes created simply for information and fun. I'm your host Kate Jones, welcoming you to Everyday Creation.
Everyday Creation
Virtuoso Saxophonist David Sanborn Did a Bang-Up Job Throughout His Stellar Career
David Sanborn learned to play the alto sax at age 11; by his early teens, he was playing in blues clubs. As a member of the Paul Butterfield Blues Band, he performed at Woodstock; in the '70s and '80s, he collaborated with such major artists as Stevie Wonder, David Bowie and Bruce Springsteen.
Sanborn also released his own albums, 17 of which made Billboard's 200 chart, and four reached number two on the jazz chart. His single "Bang Bang" peaked at number 53 on Billboard's Hot 100.
You can go here to watch him perform "Bang Bang" with Paul Shaffer's band on one of Sanborn's many guest appearances with David Letterman. I love how Shaffer really gets into banging on the piano keys and singing along. The comments below the video are good too. Here's one of them: "Caught his show at the Music Mill of Indianapolis in the spring of 2008. He hung out with fans during intermission. One of my best memories. Incredible music legacy, for sure."
The image in the thumbnail is from the cover of "David Sanborn Saxophone Play-Along Volume 8," published by Hal Leonard and available on Amazon and on the publisher's website.
In the chapters, you'll also see a Down Beat magazine from 1983 with Sanborn on the cover, as well as a picture of Sanborn performing at the Riviera Maya Jazz Festival in Playa del Carmen, Mexico, in 2008.
This tribute is one of 41 stories that Sheldon Zoldan, a longtime journalist, has written and recorded in honor of the music notables who passed away in 2024. He's written tributes for other years as well. You can listen to the ones from 2023 on Everyday Creation. We'll have the 2022 tributes available later this year.
Sheldon also is the creator of Song of the Day, a story that he sends by email to a list of subscribers. To get on his subscriber list, email shzoldan@comcast.net with the subject line ADD ME TO SOTD.
This is Kate Jones. Thank you for listening to Everyday Creation, available on YouTube and in podcast directories including Apple, Audible, iHeart and Spotify.
Sheldon:
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Do bad things happen for a reason? David
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Sanborn might never have become a virtuoso
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saxophonist
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if polio hadn't attacked his leg, arm and
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lungs when he was 3 years old.
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Sanborn spent a year in an iron lung.
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He battled a weakened leg, and his left
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arm was shorter than his right.
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He turned from piano to alto sax when
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he was 11 at the recommendation of his
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doctor
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to help him build up his lungs.
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Sanborn died May 12 in Tarrytown, New York,
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from prostate cancer.
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He was 78.
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The Song of the Day is paying tribute
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to the singers, musicians and songwriters who died
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in 2024.
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Sanborn was playing in blues clubs three years
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after picking up the sax.
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After college,
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he joined the Paul Butterfield Blues Band and
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played with them at Woodstock.
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He would have made a name for himself
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without ever recording his own album.
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He recorded and toured with some of the
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biggest artists of the 1970s and
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1980s.
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He played on Stevie Wonder's "Talking Book,"
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David Bowie's "Young Americans,"
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James Taylor's "How Sweet It Is," and Bruce
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Springsteen's
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"Born to Run."
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He was a member of the "Saturday Night
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Live" band for a year and often played
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with Paul Shaffer's band.
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He co-hosted a music show in the
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1980s. He started a podcast
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last year.
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Sanborn began recording his own music with the
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album "Taking Off" in 1975.
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His music was pigeonholed
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as smooth jazz,
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a term he loathed.
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Seventeen of his albums reached Billboard's 200
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chart.
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Four of his albums reached number two on
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the jazz chart.
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"Bang Bang" was his only single to crack
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Billboard's Hot 100,
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reaching 53.
Kate:
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That was Song of the Day creator Sheldon
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Zoldan. And I'm Kate Jones,
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host of Everyday Creation.
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Thank you for joining us today.