Thomas “Beans” Bowles was a core, yet often uncredited, architect of the early Motown sound and culture.
Not as well-known as Motown’s front-line stars, he shaped the solos that defined classics and provided mentorship that launched many performers’ careers, slowly rising from hole-in-the-wall jazz clubs all the way to Hitsville.
Bowles came to Detroit from Wayne State University in the 1940s, and from there, he enlisted in the U.S. Navy during WW II and joined the U.S. Navy band, later returning home and playing at the Flame Show Bar and the Blue Bird Inn with fellow greats Billie Holiday and Billy Eckstine.
These experiences gave him the technical skill, stage presence, and discipline that would be critical when Motown later emerged.


