Leon Russell,
the longhaired, scratchy-voiced pianist, guitarist, songwriter and
bandleader who moved from playing countless recording sessions to making
hits on his own, died on Sunday in Nashville. He was 74. His website said he had died in his sleep but gave no specific cause.
Mr. Russell’s health had had significant setbacks in recent years. In 2010, he underwent surgery for a brain fluid leak and was treated for heart failure. In July he had a heart attack and was scheduled for further surgery, according to a news release from the historical society of Oklahoma, his home state.
With
his trademark top hat, hair well past his shoulders, a long, lush
beard, an Oklahoma drawl and his fingers splashing two-fisted
barrelhouse piano chords, Mr. Russell cut a flamboyant figure in the
early 1970s. He led Joe Cocker’s band Mad Dogs & Englishmen, appeared at George Harrison’s 1971 Concert for Bangladesh in New York City and had hits of his own, including “Tight Rope.”
Many
of his songs became hits for others, among them “Superstar” (written
with Bonnie Bramlett) for the Carpenters, “Delta Lady” for Joe Cocker
and “This Masquerade” for George Benson. More than 100 acts have
recorded his “A Song for You,” which Mr. Russell said he wrote in 10 minutes.
By
the time he released his first solo album, in 1970, he had already
played on hundreds of songs as one of the top studio musicians in Los
Angeles. He was in Phil Spector’s Wall of Sound Orchestra, and he played
sessions for Frank Sinatra, Sam Cooke, Aretha Franklin, the Ventures
and the Monkees, among many others. His piano playing is heard on “Mr.
Tambourine Man” by the Byrds, “A Taste of Honey” by Herb Alpert, “Live
With Me” by the Rolling Stones and all of the Beach Boys’ early albums,
including “Pet Sounds.”
The
music Mr. Russell made on his own put a scruffy, casual surface on rich
musical hybrids, interweaving soul, country, blues, jazz, gospel, pop
and classical music. Like Willie Nelson, who collaborated with him, and
Ray Charles, whose 1993 recording of “A Song for You” won a Grammy Award, Mr. Russell made a broad, sophisticated palette of American music sound down-home and natural.
After
his popularity had peaked in the 1970s, he shied away from
self-promotion and largely set aside rock, though he kept on performing.
But he was prized as a musicians’ musician, collaborating with Elvis
Costello and Elton John, among others. In 2011, after making a duet
album with Mr. John, “The Union,” he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. At the ceremony, Mr. John called him “the master of space and time” and added, “He sang, he wrote and he played just how I wanted to do it.”
Leon
Russell was born Claude Russell Bridges in Lawton, Okla., on April 2,
1941. An injury to his upper vertebrae at birth caused a slight
paralysis on his right side that would shape his music: A resulting
delayed reaction time in his right hand forced him to think ahead about
what it would play. “It gave me a very strong sense of duality,” he said
last year in a Public Radio International interview.
He
started classical piano lessons when he was 4, played baritone horn in
his high school marching band and also learned trumpet. At 14 he started
gigging in Oklahoma; since it was a dry state at the time, he could
play clubs without being old enough to drink. Soon after he graduated
from high school, Jerry Lee Lewis hired him and his band to back him on
tour for two months.
He
moved to Los Angeles in the late 1950s and found club work and then
studio work; he learned to play guitar, and he began calling himself
Leon Russell, taking the name Leon from a friend who had lent him an ID
so he could play California club dates while underage.
His
music-making drew on both his classical training and his Southern
roots, and he played everything from standards to surf-rock, from
million-sellers to pop throwaways. He was glimpsed on television as a
member of the Shindogs, the house band for the prime-time rock show
“Shindig!” in the mid-1960s.
In
1967, he built a home studio and began working with the guitarist Marc
Benno as the Asylum Choir, which released its debut album in 1968. He
also started a record label, Shelter, in 1969 with the producer Denny
Cordell. Mr. Russell drew more recognition as a co-producer, arranger
and musician on Joe Cocker’s second album, “Joe Cocker!,” which included
Mr. Russell’s song “Delta Lady.” When Mr. Cocker’s Grease Band fell apart days before an American tour, Mr. Russell assembled Mad Dogs & Englishmen,
a big, boisterous band that included three drummers and a 10-member
choir. Its 1970 double live album and a tour film became a showcase for
Mr. Russell as well as for Mr. Cocker; the album reached No. 2 on the
Billboard album chart.
Mr.
Russell also released his first solo album in 1970; it included “A Song
for You” and had studio appearances from Mr. Cocker, Eric Clapton, two
members of the Beatles and three from the Rolling Stones. But Mr.
Russell’s second album, “Leon Russell and the Shelter People,” fared
better commercially: It reached No. 17 on the Billboard chart.
Mr. Russell had his widest visibility as the 1970s began. He played the 1971 Concert for Bangladesh at Madison Square Garden with George Harrison, Bob Dylan
and Eric Clapton; he produced and played on Mr. Dylan’s songs “When I
Paint My Masterpiece” and “Watching the River Flow.” He toured with the
Rolling Stones and with his own band.
His
third album, “Carney,” went to No. 2 with the hit “Tight Rope”; it also
featured his own version of “This Masquerade.” In 1973, his “Leon Live”
album reached the Top 10, and he recorded his first album of country
songs under the pseudonym Hank Wilson. The fledgling Gap Band, also from
Oklahoma, backed Mr. Russell in 1974 on his album “Stop All That Jazz.”
His 1975 album “Will O’ the Wisp” included what would be his last Top
20 pop hit, “Lady Blue.”
But
he continued to work. He made duet albums with his wife at the time,
Mary Russell (formerly Mary McCreary). And he collaborated with Willie
Nelson in 1979 on “One for the Road,” a double LP of pop and country
standards. It sold half a million copies.
That
same year he married Janet Lee Constantine, who survives him, as do six
children: Blue, Teddy Jack, Tina Rose, Sugaree, Honey and Coco. Mr.
Russell delved into various idioms over the next decades, mostly
recording for independent labels. He toured and recorded with the New
Grass Revival, adding his piano and voice to their string-band lineup.
He made more country albums as Hank Wilson. He recorded blues, Christmas
songs, gospel songs and instrumentals.
In
1992, the songwriter and pianist Bruce Hornsby, who had long cited Mr.
Russell’s influence, sought to rejuvenate Mr. Russell’s rock career by
producing the album “Anything Can Happen,” but it drew little notice. Mr. Russell continued to tour for die-hard fans, who called themselves Leon Lifers.
A call in 2009 from Elton John, whom Mr. Russell had supported in the early 1970s, led to the making of “The Union”
— which also had guest appearances by Neil Young and Brian Wilson — and
a 10-date tour together in 2010. Mr. Russell also sat in on Mr.
Costello’s 2010 album, “National Ransom.” Then he bought a new bus and returned to the road, on his own.
Jonah Bromwich contributed reporting.