He's Got Rhythm

Houston crooner Horace Grigsby — stylish, smooth and celebrated by his fellow musicians — struts his stuff at the Katy Jazz Fest.

Phoebe Rourke
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Seated on a stool in front of the floor-to-ceiling stained glass windows in the chapel of Trinity Episcopal Church, dressed in a stylish dark blue denim jacket and fedora hat, 81-year-old singer Horace Grigsby has his audience in the palm of his hand. Despite the early hour, and being a bit under the weather after the previous night’s gig, Grigsby is regaling the gathered faithful (actually a master class for young musicians) with a swinging rendition of “They Can’t Take That Away From Me,” a song made famous by Ella Fitzgerald. As sunlight pours into the chapel, Grigsby, accompanied by longtime pianist Bob Henschen, sings the lyric in his distinctively melodic and conversational style that belies the years of practice and experience it takes to reach this point, where communication with a listening audience appears effortless.

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