The Blackbyrds were a jazz-funk group with thick R&B streaks running down their backs. Assembled by
Donald Byrd in 1974, the group's original members -- percussionist
Pericles "Perk" Jacobs, Jr., drummer
Keith Killgo, keyboardist
Kevin Toney, reeds player Allan Barnes, bassist
Joe Hall, guitarist
Barney Perry -- were mined from Howard University's music department, where the doctor and jazz legend was an instructor. (Other key players included guitarist
Orville Saunders and saxophonist/flautist
Steve Johnson.) During
the Blackbyrds' nearly decade-long existence, the group cut a handful of LPs (1973's
The Blackbyrds, 1974's
Flying Start, 1975's City Life, 1976's
Unfinished Business, 1977's
Action, 1980's
Better Days); scored films (1975's Cornbread, Earl and Me); and supported artists like
B.B. King,
Mandrill, and
Roberta Flack. "Walking in Rhythm," "Rock Creek Park," and "Happy Music" are their three best-known cuts; they have remained underground club classics, and they have been kept alive, in part, through sampling. The group's catalog has been overhauled and reissued a number of times; multiple best-ofs have been released (Fantasy's
Greatest Hits is the strongest and most thorough), and most of the group's full-length output has been put out on CD through two-fers. As far as outside activities were considered,
Barney Perry released a solo album under the name
Blair in 1978 (through his own Solar Sound imprint). The remaining members' involvements are far too extensive to list.
–
Andy Kellman, Rovi