Jimmy Smith
Jimmy Smith

I always had the facial hair so I looked older than I was.

Jimmy Smith
Jimmy Smith

And then when I found my sound, it took me two and a half weeks to find my sound and when I did I pulled out all the stops, all the stops I could find.

Jimmy Smith
Jimmy Smith

I played with Eddie Taylor's son, Tim Taylor and Carey Bells son Lurie Bell.

Jimmy Smith
Jimmy Smith

My mom would have liked it that I patterned myself more after Jimmy Reed.

Jimmy Smith
Jimmy Smith

Ninety-five percent of my audience was white.

Jimmy Smith
Jimmy Smith

I heard Mr. Wild Bill Davis. I heard him play in 1930 and he told me that it would take me fifteen years just to learn the pedals, the pedals of the organ and I got mad.

Jimmy Smith
Jimmy Smith

Michael Coleman, now that was a boy that taught me some stuff too.

Jimmy Smith
Jimmy Smith

My first recording, a guy came down to Philadelphia and heard me play and he introduced me to Alfred Lion.

Jimmy Smith
Jimmy Smith

Three months. I was playing the organ for three months. It was a challenge for me in the beginning.

Jimmy Smith
Jimmy Smith

I did my first recording. It was called The Champ.

Jimmy Smith
Jimmy Smith

People like the idea of the trio and so I did mostly trio.

Jimmy Smith
Jimmy Smith

All the colleges I played, most of the colleges, they were white.

Jimmy Smith
Jimmy Smith

I just came from Aspen, Colorado and they had fifteen kids I played for and they all played horns.

Jimmy Smith
Jimmy Smith

I played with Sam Lay, Jimmy Reed, Big Walter Horton, Big Moose Walker, and all those guys.

Jimmy Smith
Jimmy Smith

Yeah, you know everybody has somebody that they patterned themselves after.

Jimmy Smith
Jimmy Smith

My boys told me they'd rather play than practice.