Background
I had Phineas Newborn on piano. His father played drums, and his brother, Calvin, played guitar with medical
conductor entrepreneur jazz musician
I had Phineas Newborn on piano. His father played drums, and his brother, Calvin, played guitar with medical
Although possibly better known as being one of the last people Martin Luther King, Junior. spoke to moments before his assassination in 1968, Branch had been a leading bandleader for many years. "My very first recordings were for a company out of Nashville called Bullet, the Bullet Record Transcription company," King recalls. "I had horns that very first session.
Branch recorded with King again on an early 1952 Memphis recording with the B.B. King Orchestra with, among others, Hank Crawford and Ike Turner.
Foreign much of the 1950s, Branch was the bandleader for the house band, the Largos, at Curry"s Club in North Memphis, which provided a young Isaac Hayes with his first professional gigs. In 1982 Branch founded the American Music Hall of Fame, a private music school in Chicago.
A few months before his death Branch appeared with his band at the 1987 Chicago Blues Festival backing Rosco Gordon. Branch also recorded with Brother Jack McDuff and Etta James, Little Milton and Philosophy Upchurch.
Branch held a degree in music from Memphis State University.
Branch was president of Doctor Products Incorporated., founded in 1983, in Chicago, Illinois, the nation"s only black-owned soft-drink manufacturing company. The company eventually signed a $355 million agreement with Kemmerer Bottling Group, bottler of several well-known soft drinks, including 7Up, to distribute the Doctor Products beverages. As musical director for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference"s he led the Breadbasket Orchestra and Choir that performed benefits for Doctor Martin Luther King Junior. and Operation/People United to Save Humanity. Just moments before being assassinated, Doctor King had just asked Branch to play a Negro spiritual, "Precious Lord, Take My Hand," at a rally that was to have been held two hours later.
Cannonball Adderley, in the introduction to the title track of his 1969 album Country Preacher, makes a specific mention of Branch in recognition of his work as leader of the Orchestra and Choir.
While musical director of the Breadbasket Orchestra and Operation/People United to Save Humanity, he arranged for gospel singer Deleon Richards to perform at the Chicago Stadium (later the United Center).
Future M.G. bassist Donald "Duck" Dunn was the first white member of Branch"s big band, in the early 1960s.