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Artist
Roy Brooks (March 9, 1938 β November 15, 2005) was an American hard bop jazz drummer. Brooks was born in Detroit and drummed since childhood. He was an outstanding varsity basketball player as a teenager and was offered a scholarship to the Detroit Institute of Technology; he attended the school for three semesters and then dropped out to tour with Yusef Lateef. After time with Lateef and Barry Harris, he played with Beans Bowles and with the Four Tops in Las Vegas. He played with Horace Silver from 1959 to 1964, including on the album Song for My Father; in 1963 he released his first album as a leader. Following this he freelanced in New York City through the 1960s and early 1970s, playing with Lateef again (1967β70), Sonny Stitt, Lee Morgan, Dexter Gordon, Chet Baker, Junior Cook, Blue Mitchell, Charles McPherson, Pharaoh Sanders (1970), Wes Montgomery, Dollar Brand, Jackie McLean, James Moody (1970β72), Charles Mingus (1972β73), and Milt Jackson. He married Hermine Brooks in 1967.[3] His 1970 album The Free Slave featured Cecil McBee and Woody Shaw in early performances. Later in 1970 he joined Max Roach's ensemble M'Boom, and in 1972 put together the ensemble The Artistic Truth. Brooks's performances often included unusual instruments such as the musical saw and drums with vacuum tubes set up so as to regulate the pitch. He began to acquire a reputation for bizarre behavior on and off stage, and occasionally sought treatment for mental disorders. In 1975 he left New Yor

Ethnic Expressions

Beat

Understanding (Live)

The Free Slave

Duet in Detroit

The Free Slave (Live At The Left Bank Jazz Society, Baltimore, MD / April 26, 1970)

Understanding
Beat - EP
Jazz Side of Motown 1961-1967
Duet in Detroit (feat. Geri Allen, Don Pullen, Woody Shaw & Randy Weston)
The Free Slave (Muse 1970)
Free Slave