Idris Muhammad
Biography Idris Muhammad
Idris Muhammad
was born in New Orleans (as Leo Morris) on November 13, 1939 into a musical family. His father, Nathaniel Morris, played banjo on a traditional New Orleans band, and several of his brothers are also musicians. He started playing drums at the age of six in the school band, and got his professional job at age twelve playing with a marching band in the back of a truck during Mardi Gras. He was only fifteen when he recorded, with Fats Domino, the original version of Blueberry Hill .
During the fifties he worked with some of the legends of soul music, such as Sam Cooke, Arthur Neville, Curtis Mayfield, etc. He also worked with blues and rhythm & blues stars such as Joe Turner, Muddy Waters, Shirley and Lee or Little Richard.
The sixties found Idris in New York, where he was part of the Funk Jazz movement, with hits such as Lou Donaldson’s Alligator Bugaloo, Charlie Earland’s More today than Yesterday or Stanley Turrentine’s Sugar .
Between 1969 and 1970 Idris was responsible for all the percussion parts for the award-winning musical Hair , and between 1973 and 1979 was the regular drummer for Roberta Flack.
Idris led his career towards pure Jazz during the eighties, working with Johnny Griffin, Pharoah Sanders, George Coleman and the Paris Reunion Band.
During the nineties Idris has worked and recorded with David Murray, John Hicks, Randy Weston, Ahmad Jamal, Tete Montoliu, Hank Jones, John Scoffield, Joe Lovano and Roots.
Universally acclaimed as one of the greatest percussionists of our time, Idris is a fine and versatile stylist, perfectly at ease in any musical context, and he is revered by a whole generation of Jazz drummers as one of the masters of the instrument.