Education
He graduated with a Bachelor of Surgery from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University in Greensboro, North Carolina.
He graduated with a Bachelor of Surgery from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University in Greensboro, North Carolina.
He was the second child of Hettie Marina and William Lorenzo Lampley, and had a brother named William Elwood. There he formed a group that was later going to be the first all-black, 45-piece band in the then white-only Navy. lieutenant was called the "United States Navy B-1 Band." Lampley himself served two and a half years in the Army Infantry.
Lampley moved to New York City in 1946 to continue his education at the Juilliard School Of Music.
During his 9-year stint with Columbia, he rose to the position of Recording Director of the Popular Albums Department. He was later hired by record producer George Avakian, which would later become his assistant, to work as an A&R and as a record producer for music labels such as Columbia, Warner Brothers, Radio Corporation of America/Victor, and Prestige.
He worked with artists including Miles Davis, Mahalia Jackson, Dave Brubeck, Art Blakey, Leonard Bernstein, Freddie McCoy and Louis Armstrong. Other collaborations were with classical, jazz and popular greats such as Nina Simone, Robert Cassadesus, Zino Francescatti, Guiomar Novaes, Johnny Mathis, Genevieve, Victor Borge, Carmel Quinn, Arthur Godfrey, Tab Hunter, Bill Haley, Lonnie Sattin, and Chico Hamilton.
His own version of the composition "Misty" by jazz musician Richard "Groove" Holmes was Prestige"s Records biggest single in its entire history.
lieutenant peaked at number 44 on the Billboard charts in 1966. In tribute to his musical contribution to the city and the state, Mayor Kurt L. Schmoke officially promulgated the "Cal Lampley Day" on May 1, 1994 in Baltimore at a City Hall ceremony. On July 6, 2006 Lampley died at the Baltimore Washington Medical Center in Baltimore from complications of Multiple Sclerosis.