has been a dominant accompanist and outstanding soloist. He approaches the drum kit in both a melodic and percussive fashion, never playing overly long or rambling solos. He's known for working slightly ahead of the beat, and has anchored many fine sessions as well as spending five years with
in the '50s and '60s.
did study briefly with Jack Dennett, a percussionist with extensive symphonic credentials. He played with
in Washington, D.C.
Cobb left in 1950 to join
Earl Bostic, and cut his first recordings with him. He played with
Dinah Washington over three years, then worked with
Cannonball Adderley,
Stan Getz, and
Dizzy Gillespie. He took over for
Philly Joe Jones in the
Davis band in 1958, and was on hand for several seminal dates. He finally left, along with
Paul Chambers, to team with
Wynton Kelly. The trio played and recorded with
Wes Montgomery,
Kenny Burrell, and
J.J. Johnson before it disbanded.
Cobb played on the soundtrack for the film Seven Days in May, and later worked with
David Amram. He worked with
Sarah Vaughan through the '70s, and was featured on a public television film of a
Vaughan concert at the Wolf Trap Jazz Festival.
Cobb also worked with
Richie Cole,
Sonny Stitt,
Nat Adderley, and
Ricky Ford. During the '80s he worked with the
Joe Albany trio.
For all his session work from the '50s onward,
Cobb was not particularly known as a leader on his own dates, and rather extraordinarily began developing his own discography in earnest beginning during the late '90s and extending across the first decade of the 2000s, starting (after 1994's
Encounter, a duo release with singer Ada Montillanico) with
Only for the Pure of Heart by
Jimmy Cobb's Mob in 1998. A second
Cobb's Mob album,
Cobb's Groove, was released by Milestone in 2003.
Tribute to Wynton Kelly & Paul Chambers by
the Jimmy Cobb Trio was issued by the Japanese Sound Hills label in 2004, followed by two Chesky releases by
the Jimmy Cobb Quartet,
Cobb’s Corner in 2007 and
Jazz in the Key of Blue in 2009. In addition, the
Marsalis Music Honors series released a
Jimmy Cobb volume in 2006, featuring
Cobb on drums along with
Ellis Marsalis on piano,
Andrew Speight on saxophone, and
Orlando Le Fleming on bass.
Cobb received a National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Masters award in October 2008.
–
Ron Wynn, Rovi