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Bernard Wright bridged and blurred numerous genres throughout a career that encompassed jazz, R&B, hip-hop, contemporary gospel, and reggae, but he was known most for jazz-funk, what he viewed as a hybrid of two equally valid art forms. Taken under the wings of fellow Jamaica, Queens natives
Weldon Irvine,
Don Blackman, and
Lenny White,
Wright was a seasoned touring keyboardist and session musician -- and had played on
Tom Browne's number one R&B smash "Funkin' for Jamaica (N.Y.)" -- by the time he debuted as a teenaged leader with
'Nard (1981). After his second album,
Funky Beat (1983),
Wright reached his commercial peak with Mr. Wright (1985), home to the Top Ten R&B single "Who Do You Love." After that trio of LPs,
Wright cut three gospel albums and as a sideman moved fluidly across styles, collaborating with the likes of
Marcus Miller,
Miles Davis,
Cameo, and his godmother,
Roberta Flack. In and around his adoptive home of Dallas, he became known as a mentor for bands such as
Snarky Puppy.
Born and bred in Jamaica, Queens,
Bernard Wright was five years old when he discovered his natural talent for playing keyboards. Before he turned ten, he was dedicated to his instrument, performing with the Junior Firebolts, who opened for the elder Firebolts at assorted local gigs. Quickly a valued member of Jamaica's communal music scene, he was mentored by
Weldon Irvine and
Don Blackman -- two proponents of mixing jazz and funk -- and at the age of 12 was touring with
Lenny White.
Wright picked up his first session credits in 1979 with
Taana Gardner's self-titled disco-funk album, and also with
Browne Sugar, the GRP label debut of
Tom Browne, a trumpeter discovered by
Blackman. Sticking with much of the same neighborhood-sourced lineup, including
Marcus Miller and
Omar Hakim,
Browne quickly followed up in 1980 with
Love Approach, featuring the party-starting "Funkin' for Jamaica (N.Y.)," a number one R&B hit with
Wright the supplier of its synthesized bassline and electric piano. Also that year,
Wright was heard on albums by
Charles Earland and
Crown Heights Affair.
Having secured a GRP deal of his own,
Wright debuted in 1981 with
'Nard, a set based in jazz-funk with a touch of hip-hop and diversions into R&B, fusion, and straightahead jazz. In addition to many of the Jamaica associates, the cast of the eclectic session included
Roy Haynes and
Buster Williams (on a version of
Miles Davis' "Solar"),
Patti Austin and
Luther Vandross (
Wright's backing vocalists on "Music Is the Key"), and GRP co-founder
Dave Grusin (essentially the date's second keyboardist).
'Nard entered Billboard's R&B chart in March 1981 and peaked at number 23. "Just Chillin' Out," an energetic cut in the same spirit as "Funkin' for Jamaica (N.Y.)," and "Haboglabotribin'," the freakier and even more playful follow-up, both hit the R&B singles chart, respectively reaching numbers 33 and 78.
Wright's more mechanized second album,
Funky Beat, was issued in 1983. It led with three songs produced by
Wright and
Marcus Miller, such as the charting jazz-electro hybrid title song (number 39 R&B).
Grusin and fellow GRP founder
Larry Rosen took it from there. The highlight of that remainder was "Won't You Let Me Love You," a lilting ballad (number 88 R&B) written by
Wright and
Weldon Irvine that would have been suitable for
DeBarge -- or
Don Blackman's self-titled 1982 album for GRP.
Wright moved from GRP to Capitol subsidiary Manhattan, and experienced his greatest commercial success in 1985 with "Who Do You Love." The sweet mid-tempo jam debuted on the R&B chart that October and topped out at number six, and was followed by the tougher "After You," a number 23 R&B hit. The album Mr. Wright, almost strictly a funk-forward R&B affair in the realm of
Prince and
Cameo, contained both singles and six additional originals produced by
Lenny White and
Marcus Miller. It would be
Wright's last secular solo LP, but by the end of the '80s, he was a busy sideman and featured artist. Most notably, he played on
Miles Davis' Tutu ("Tomaas" and "Don't Lose Your Mind"). He duetted with
La La on the "Who Do You Love"-referencing "We'll Keep Striving," and added
White and
Miller's Jamaica Boys project, David Sandborn,
Chaka Khan, and
Cameo, along with
Doug E. Fresh,
Michał Urbaniak, and
Sly & Robbie, among other names, to the list of artists who sought his talent as a stylistically flexible keyboardist and producer.
At the dawn of the '90s,
Wright concentrated on recording contemporary gospel. During the first three years of the decade, he doubled his number of solo albums with Fresh Hymns, Brand New Gospel Format, and Fresh Hymns II, all released on the Frontline label. His session efforts throughout the decade extended to contemporary jazz stars such as
Stanley Jordan and
Alex Bugnon, gospel luminaries
Commissioned and
Vickie Winans, and additionally his godmother,
Roberta Flack, for whom he also worked as musical director.
Wright was featured on
Sadao Watanabe's
Go Straight Ahead 'n Make a Left, a 1997 date for
Verve that kept the Jamaica connection intact with the involvement of Steven Teele,
Charley Drayton, and
Mike Flythe. He moved to his wife's native Dallas during the decade, and while he continued to record and/or perform through the 2000s and 2010s with the likes of
Too Bad, the Freddie Jones Jazz Group,
Roy Hargrove's
RH Factor,
Marcus Miller, and Brandon Williams, he also mentored local musicians, most proudly
Snarky Puppy before the band's breakthrough.
Wright died on May 19, 2022, after he was involved in a traffic accident. ~ Andy Kellman