Ronnie Laws
He walked onto the fusion scene in the 1970s with a tenor saxophone that sounded like it had been listening to John Coltrane and Grover Washington Jr. in equal measure, and decided that jazz did not have to choose between complexity and the ability to make people move. Ronnie Laws was born in Houston in 1950, a city that produced more jazz musicians than most states, and he grew up surrounded by a musical tradition that valued both technical skill and the physical response of an audience. He studied at the Houston school system's music programs, learning the fundamentals that would serve him through a career spanning five decades.

The cost was working in the shadow of giants while trying to find his own voice. Laws joined Earth Wind & Fire in the early 1970s as a saxophonist, playing alongside Maurice White during the band's formative years when they were defining the sound of funk-jazz fusion for an entire generation. He appeared on the albums That's the Way of the World and Spirit, contributing to the horn arrangements that gave the band its unmistakable texture. But he was a sideman in a band with a dominant creative vision, and his own voice as a composer and soloist needed room that the collective structure could not provide. He left Earth Wind & Fire in 1975 and launched a solo career that let him explore the territory between jazz, funk, and R&B without having to answer to anyone else's direction.

Always There is the one. Released in 1975 on his debut solo album Pressure Sensitive, the track became a standard in the fusion canon that horn players still study. The melody is simple enough to whistle after one listen, but the improvisation space Laws leaves for himself in the middle section shows a player who can stretch without losing the thread. The album sold well and established Laws as a solo artist who could carry a record without the Earth Wind & Fire brand.

He followed it with Friends and Strangers and Flame, albums that kept the same balance of accessibility and instrumental depth.

Ronnie Laws never became a household name the way some of his contemporaries did, but his influence on the smooth jazz and fusion genres is present in every saxophonist who came after him. He proved that a jazz musician could make records that radio programmers would actually play without sacrificing the improvisational depth that gave the music its substance. The saxophone does not need lyrics to say something worth hearing, and Laws spent his career proving that the horn could tell stories that words simply cannot reach.

Image Credits

1,414 artist portraits across 5 genres (Rock, Jazz, Soul, Blues, Folk). 1,363 sourced from Wikipedia (Creative Commons / Public Domain), 50 from Deezer (promotional artwork).

Full attribution breakdown →

Ronnie Laws

He walked onto the fusion scene in the 1970s with a tenor saxophone that sounded like it had been listening to John Coltrane and Grover Washington Jr. in equal measure, and decided that jazz did not have to choose between complexity and the ability to make people move. Ronnie Laws was born in Houston in 1950, a city that produced more jazz musicians than most states, and he grew up surrounded by a musical tradition that valued both technical skill and the physical response of an audience. He studied at the Houston school system's music programs, learning the fundamentals that would serve him through a career spanning five decades.

The cost was working in the shadow of giants while trying to find his own voice. Laws joined Earth Wind & Fire in the early 1970s as a saxophonist, playing alongside Maurice White during the band's formative years when they were defining the sound of funk-jazz fusion for an entire generation. He appeared on the albums That's the Way of the World and Spirit, contributing to the horn arrangements that gave the band its unmistakable texture. But he was a sideman in a band with a dominant creative vision, and his own voice as a composer and soloist needed room that the collective structure could not provide. He left Earth Wind & Fire in 1975 and launched a solo career that let him explore the territory between jazz, funk, and R&B without having to answer to anyone else's direction.

Always There is the one. Released in 1975 on his debut solo album Pressure Sensitive, the track became a standard in the fusion canon that horn players still study. The melody is simple enough to whistle after one listen, but the improvisation space Laws leaves for himself in the middle section shows a player who can stretch without losing the thread. The album sold well and established Laws as a solo artist who could carry a record without the Earth Wind & Fire brand.

He followed it with Friends and Strangers and Flame, albums that kept the same balance of accessibility and instrumental depth.

Ronnie Laws never became a household name the way some of his contemporaries did, but his influence on the smooth jazz and fusion genres is present in every saxophonist who came after him. He proved that a jazz musician could make records that radio programmers would actually play without sacrificing the improvisational depth that gave the music its substance. The saxophone does not need lyrics to say something worth hearing, and Laws spent his career proving that the horn could tell stories that words simply cannot reach.

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Image Credits

1,414 artist portraits across 5 genres (Rock, Jazz, Soul, Blues, Folk). 1,363 sourced from Wikipedia (Creative Commons / Public Domain), 50 from Deezer (promotional artwork).

Full attribution breakdown →

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The Sunday Drop One song. One story. Every Sunday.