Stix Hooper
Nesbert "Stix" Hooper (born August 15, 1938) is an American jazz drummer renowned for his pioneering role in fusing jazz with funk and soul, most notably as a founding member of the influential group The Crusaders (originally the Jazz Crusaders).[1][2] Born in Houston, Texas, Hooper developed a passion for percussion from a young age and became a key figure in the West Coast jazz scene after relocating to Los Angeles.[3][2] Hooper's early musical education began in junior high school under band directors George Magruder and Sammy Harris, where he formed his first group, The Swingsters, which evolved into the Modern Jazz Sextet during high school at Phillis Wheatley High School.[2][1] He continued his studies at Texas Southern University, receiving coaching from Houston Symphony Orchestra members and private instructors, before pursuing further training at California State University, Los Angeles.[3][2] These formative years laid the groundwork for his distinctive drumming style, characterized by innovative rhythms that bridged traditional jazz with emerging funk elements.[2][1] In the early 1960s, Hooper co-founded the Jazz Crusaders with pianist Joe Sample and others in Los Angeles, a collective that released over a dozen albums on Pacific Jazz Records and helped define the jazz-funk genre through hits like "Way Back Home" and gold-selling records such as Street Life.[3][2] The group, renamed The Crusaders in 1971, enjoyed a 30-year run marked by international acclaim, collaborations with artists including Quincy Jones, B.B. King, and The Rolling Stones, and nine Grammy nominations for Hooper personally.[3][1] He was repeatedly named a top drummer by publications like DownBeat and Playboy, earning the honor ten times, and became the first African American National Vice Chairman of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (NARAS), later serving three terms as president of its Los Angeles chapter.[3][2] After departing The Crusaders in the late 1980s, Hooper pursued solo projects, including the 1982 album Touch the Feeling and his 2022 release Orchestrally Speaking, while managing artists like vocalist Ernestine Anderson and contributing to jazz education through clinics and festivals.[3][2] He has received numerous accolades, such as keys to major U.S. cities, a White House invitation, and international honors, and continues to host the radio program Lay It On The Line on KKJZ 88.1 FM in Los Angeles. In recent years, as of 2025, Hooper has performed in tribute concerts, including Joe Sample celebrations in Houston in 2024 and 2025, supported jazz events like the Jackson Street Jazz Walk, and announced new music for release in 2025.[3][1] Endorsed by Pearl Drums and Zildjian Cymbals, Hooper's legacy endures as a trailblazer in jazz percussion and genre innovation.[3][4][5][6][7]Early life and education
Childhood in Houston
Nesbert "Stix" Hooper was born on August 15, 1938, in Houston, Texas.[8] As a young child, he displayed an early fascination with music and percussion instruments, which laid the foundation for his lifelong career in drumming.[9] Hooper grew up in Houston's Fifth Ward, a vibrant African American neighborhood known for its cultural richness and musical heritage during the mid-20th century.[10] In this environment, he first gained access to drums through informal means, including an old parade drum that became central to his initial explorations of rhythm and beat.[10] Around the age of 12, Hooper immersed himself in self-taught drumming practice, spending extensive hours honing his skills on the parade drum, which earned him the lifelong nickname "Stix" from his peers in the Fifth Ward.[10] This period of dedicated, unstructured learning was complemented by his entry into junior high school, where he began formal music studies, including percussion, under the guidance of band director George Magruder, providing structured access to instruments and ensemble playing.[9] These early experiences in school and the neighborhood shaped his intuitive approach to drumming before transitioning to high school activities.[2]Formation of early bands
During his high school years at Phillis Wheatley High School in Houston, Texas, Nesbert "Stix" Hooper developed his drumming skills under the guidance of band director Sammy Harris, who encouraged the school's jazz-oriented ensemble.[9] It was there that Hooper first met fellow students pianist Joe Sample, saxophonist Wilton Felder, and trombonist Wayne Henderson, forming the core of his early musical circle.[9] Around 1954, Hooper founded his first band, the Swingsters, with these schoolmates, focusing on jazz standards and local experimentation to hone their ensemble playing.[3] The group performed amateur gigs at school events, community functions, and small venues across the Houston area, building practical experience through unpaid or low-paying local appearances that emphasized tight rhythmic interplay.[11] As their skills advanced, the Swingsters evolved into the Modern Jazz Sextet by the late 1950s, incorporating more complex arrangements and expanding to six members while continuing to gig regionally in Texas.[3] After high school, Hooper continued his studies at Texas Southern University, where he received coaching from members of the Houston Symphony Orchestra and was mentored by professional musicians in the area.[3] In 1960, Hooper, along with Sample, Felder, and Henderson, relocated to Los Angeles to pursue broader opportunities, driving cross-country in a convoy of cars and marking the end of their formative Texas phase.[12] Upon arriving in Los Angeles, Hooper pursued further intensive musical training at California State University, Los Angeles.[3] This move allowed the group to transition from amateur circuits to professional scenes, with Hooper's early drumming foundations—rooted in swing and hard bop rhythms—laying groundwork for future innovations.[9]Professional career
Founding and tenure with The Jazz Crusaders
In 1960, Nesbert "Stix" Hooper, along with pianist Joe Sample, saxophonist Wilton Felder, and trombonist Wayne Henderson, relocated from Houston, Texas, to Los Angeles, California, where they officially formed The Jazz Crusaders.[13] The group had initially come together as high school friends in the 1950s under the name The Swingsters, playing a mix of R&B and early jazz, but the move west allowed them to professionalize and sign with Pacific Jazz Records, launching their career in the hard bop scene.[14] Their debut album, Freedom Sound (1961), captured this energetic style, featuring tight ensemble playing and soul-infused grooves that established them as rising stars in West Coast jazz. Throughout the 1960s, The Jazz Crusaders built a strong reputation with a series of albums on Pacific Jazz, including Lookin' Ahead (1962) and Tough Talk (1963), while performing extensively across the United States and beginning international tours in Europe and Japan.[15] By the late 1960s, they incorporated more funk and soul elements, evident in tracks like "Way Back Home" from their 1970 album Old Socks, New Shoes...New Socks, Old Shoes.[16] In 1971, the group shortened their name to The Crusaders to appeal to a broader audience, marking a deliberate shift from hard bop toward jazz-funk fusion, with electric instruments and crossover appeal that propelled them into mainstream success.[13] The 1970s saw The Crusaders at their commercial peak, with key albums like Pass the Plate (1971) and Crusaders 1 (1972), alongside extensive global tours that included performances at major festivals such as the Newport Jazz Festival and openings for acts like the Rolling Stones.[17] Their 1979 album Street Life, featuring the titular hit single with vocals by Randy Crawford, became a crossover sensation, reaching No. 7 on the Billboard R&B chart and introducing their sound to pop audiences worldwide. Hooper's tenure with the group lasted until 1983, when he departed to pursue solo exploration and other projects, leaving Sample and Felder to continue under the Crusaders name.[18]Solo work and departure from the group
Hooper's departure from The Crusaders occurred in 1983, marking the end of the group's classic era after more than two decades together.[19][20] During his tenure, he had begun exploring independent projects while still active with the band, transitioning toward a more personal artistic voice. This shift allowed him to focus on self-led endeavors, including his debut solo album The World Within, released in 1979 on MCA Records, which featured original compositions such as "Brazos River Breakdown" and showcased his percussion work alongside collaborators like Joe Sample on keyboards.[21][22] In the late 1970s and 1980s, Hooper took on significant production roles for his own projects and others, blending his drumming expertise with compositional and managerial duties. He produced B.B. King's Take It Home in 1979 and contributed percussion and production to Joe Sample's Voices in the Rain in 1980, while also contributing production to tracks on Bill Withers' Greatest Hits compilation in 1981.[23] His second solo release, Touch the Feeling in 1982, further highlighted his compositional range with tracks emphasizing jazz-funk grooves, coinciding with his full exit from the group. Later in the decade, Lay It on the Line (1989) included the Grammy-nominated track "Can’t Get Enough of Your Love," underscoring his growing independence as a producer and bandleader.[23] Following his departure, Hooper made brief reunions and guest appearances with The Crusaders, notably contributing drums, percussion, and production to their 2003 album Rural Renewal, which reunited surviving original members including Joe Sample and Wilton Felder.[23] In the 1980s, he pivoted toward music education, mentoring aspiring drummers through workshops and leading bands that emphasized innovative percussion techniques.[19] By the 1990s and into the 2000s, he officially retired from full-time Crusaders involvement, focusing instead on selective solo pursuits.[24] Up to 2025, Hooper has maintained a low-profile solo presence with occasional performances, such as his 2024 homecoming appearance with the Jazz Houston Orchestra honoring Joe Sample and supporting the 2025 Jackson Street Jazz Walk in Seattle.[25] He released Orchestrally Speaking in 2022, reinterpreting his classic compositions with orchestral arrangements, affirming his enduring commitment to percussion-driven innovation outside group settings.[23]Later collaborations and projects
After departing from The Crusaders in 1983, Hooper pursued session work and production roles with various artists, including drumming on Joe Sample's 1980 album Voices in the Rain and Randy Crawford's Now We May Begin that same year.[23] He also contributed percussion to the 1996 documentary soundtrack When We Were Kings, directed by Leon Gast, which documented the 1974 Rumble in the Jungle boxing event and featured original music by various jazz musicians.[23] In the 1990s and early 2000s, Hooper expanded into production, helming projects like Gerry Gibbs and Ravi Coltrane's 1996 album Thrasher and serving as drummer and producer on The Crusaders' 2003 reunion effort Rural Renewal.[23] His collaborations extended to broader sessions with luminaries such as Quincy Jones, B.B. King, and The Rolling Stones, blending jazz with pop and rock elements.[3] Hooper founded the Universal Guild for Jazz and Progressive Music (UGJPM) in the late 2000s, a non-profit organization dedicated to honoring, promoting, protecting, and preserving jazz through educational seminars, concerts, clinics, and forums aimed at informing and enlightening music professionals.[26] As of 2025, Hooper remains active in jazz preservation, supporting events like the Jackson Street Jazz Walk in Seattle and performing guest spots, including a 2024 tribute concert to fellow Crusader Joe Sample with the Jazz Houston Orchestra at The Hobby Center.[6][27] He released the orchestral jazz album Orchestrally Speaking in 2022, featuring international musicians and lush arrangements bridging jazz with symphonic influences.[3] Through Stix Hooper Enterprises, established as his production and management company, Hooper oversees artist development, including formerly managing vocalist Ernestine Anderson, and programs jazz content on public radio station KKJZ (88.1 FM), where he has hosted the interview series Lay It On The Line since 2021.[3][28]Musical style and contributions
Drumming innovations
Stix Hooper developed a powerful, syncopated drumming style that seamlessly blended the swing rhythms of traditional jazz with the infectious funk grooves of the era, providing a robust rhythmic backbone for the Jazz Crusaders' evolving sound. This approach allowed for greater expressive freedom, as Hooper noted in reflections on the band's transition from hard bop to fusion: "We found that by occasionally dropping the 4/4 rhythm, we could find greater freedom of expression, and that is what it is all about."[29] Rooted in his formative years in Houston's vibrant music scene, where he honed his skills on parade drums before forming early ensembles, this style emphasized dynamic propulsion and subtle accents that enhanced the group's improvisational flow.[10] Hooper's technique prominently featured polyrhythms and cross-stick methods, which he integrated into both live performances and studio recordings to create intricate layers of rhythm and timbre. These elements added complexity without overwhelming the ensemble, allowing polyrhythms to interweave with the frontline horns and keyboards for a cohesive yet adventurous texture. In live settings, such as the Crusaders' 1975 performances, Hooper's solos highlighted these techniques, building tension through overlapping rhythmic patterns before resolving into funky resolutions.[30] His use of cross-sticks, often on the snare for crisp, popping accents, contributed to the band's signature drive, as heard in later works like "Rural Renewal" where they punctuated syncopated kick patterns.[31] Deeply influenced by Art Blakey and the hard-bop intensity of the Jazz Messengers—which directly inspired the formation of the Jazz Crusaders—Hooper adapted the conventional trap set to better suit jazz-funk ensembles. He expanded his kit to include an array of octave-tuned toms, dual hi-hats (a 14-inch for primary ride pulsation and a 12-inch for accents), and additional percussion like woodblocks and a gong, enabling spontaneous timbral shifts and polyrhythmic exploration.[32] This customization, detailed in his Pearl endorsement setup from the late 1970s, prioritized percussive colors over strict timekeeping, fostering the band's innovative fusion sound.Role in jazz-funk development
Stix Hooper played a pivotal role in the co-creation of jazz-funk as a genre through his foundational work with The Crusaders, formerly known as The Jazz Crusaders. In the early 1970s, the group underwent a significant transition, shortening their name and shifting from hard-bop and soul jazz roots to incorporate funk elements, marking a deliberate evolution toward fusion sounds. This change, initiated around 1971 with albums like Pass the Plate and Crusaders 1, helped define jazz-funk by emphasizing groove-oriented rhythms and accessible structures while retaining improvisational depth.[13][18] Hooper's drumming provided the rhythmic backbone for integrating electric bass lines, horn sections, and drum-driven grooves, creating a hybrid style that blended jazz complexity with funk's propulsion. This approach influenced subsequent acts, such as Herbie Hancock's Headhunters, whose polyrhythmic and funky explorations echoed the Crusaders' innovations in albums like Head Hunters (1973). The Crusaders' sound, propelled by Hooper's precise yet dynamic percussion, set a template for jazz-funk's emphasis on ensemble interplay and infectious beats.[18][33] Hooper advocated for the genre's commercial viability by supporting the band's pivot to crossover appeal, which broadened their audience beyond jazz purists. This strategy culminated in hits like "Street Life" (1979), featuring vocalist Randy Crawford, which topped R&B charts and crossed into pop success, earning Grammy nominations and platinum status for the album. Such achievements demonstrated jazz-funk's potential for mainstream impact, with Hooper's steady grooves underpinning the track's blend of soulful horns and funky bass.[13][32] Over the decades, Hooper has received long-term recognition as one of the top drummers in jazz and fusion from peers and critics alike. A Zildjian representative noted, “It is rare for a drummer to have such a vast influence on so many musical styles and to play with so many varied musicians through the years.” Additionally, he was named among DownBeat's and Playboy's top three drummers on ten occasions, affirming his enduring contributions to the genre's rhythmic evolution.[3][34]Discography
As leader
Stix Hooper's recordings as a leader primarily encompass solo jazz-funk and straight-ahead jazz albums, beginning in the late 1970s while still active with The Jazz Crusaders. His debut solo effort, The World Within (MCA Records, 1979), featured tracks like "Brazos River Breakdown" and "African Spirit," showcasing his rhythmic versatility with contributions from musicians such as George Duke and Eric Gale.[23][35] Subsequent releases in the early 1980s continued this fusion-oriented approach. Touch the Feeling (MCA Records, 1982), highlighted by the title track and "Especially You," incorporated smooth grooves and electronic elements, reflecting Hooper's production role alongside players like Lee Ritenour.[23][36][37] In the late 1980s and beyond, Hooper's leadership extended to more varied projects, including co-led ensembles in the 2010s and 2020s that blended traditional jazz with orchestral and international influences. Notable among these is Lay It on the Line (Artful Balance Records, 1989), which included the single "Can't Get Enough of Your Love," produced by Hooper himself. Later works such as Jazz Gems (Stix Hooper Enterprises, 2010), Many Hats (Stix Hooper Enterprises, 2010), and Mainstream Straight-Ahead (Stix Hooper Enterprises, 2010) emphasized his multi-instrumental production style.[23][1]| Year | Album Title | Label | Key Tracks/Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1979 | The World Within | MCA Records | "Brazos River Breakdown," "African Spirit" – Debut solo album blending jazz-funk.[23][22] |
| 1982 | Touch the Feeling | MCA Records | "Touch the Feeling," "Especially You" – Features fusion elements with guest artists.[23][36] |
| 1989 | Lay It on the Line | Artful Balance Records | "Can't Get Enough of Your Love" – Includes vocal single; self-produced.[23][1] |
| 2010 | Jazz Gems | Stix Hooper Enterprises | Straight-ahead jazz focus; producer and drummer.[23][38] |
| 2010 | Many Hats | Stix Hooper Enterprises | Multi-role production; jazz standards reinterpretations.[23][38] |
| 2010 | Mainstream Straight-Ahead | Stix Hooper Enterprises | Emphasizes core jazz drumming; self-produced.[23] |
| 2015 | We Went West | Stix Hooper Enterprises | Co-led with Western jazz influences; live elements.[23][39] |
| 2015 | Live in L.A. | Stix Hooper Enterprises | Concert recording highlighting improvisational leadership.[23] |
| 2016 | Friends Across the Pond | Stix Hooper Enterprises | Co-led with European collaborators; transatlantic jazz fusion.[23][40] |
| 2022 | Orchestrally Speaking | Stix Hooper Enterprises | Orchestral arrangements; recent mature work as leader.[23][40] |