Backed by perfect timing and melodic inventiveness, Paul Chambers was a man whose sound anchored an enormous volume of iconic records — a feat he could not have accomplished had it not been for his upbringing growing up in Detroit, which gave him both the technical base and the rhythmic edge that would later go on to become his trademark.
Chambers was born in Pittsburgh but moved to Detroit as a young child with his family, a community with a music education system and jazz scene that was among the best in the nation at the time.
At Cass Technical High School, he studied classical bass and developed sight-reading and bowing abilities that would later distinguish him in jazz.
Chambers then began performing in Detroit clubs as a teenager alongside local heavyweights like Kenny Burrell, Yusef Lateef, and Barry Harris at a time when the post-war jazz scene in the city was extremely competitive, forcing young players to learn bebop and the high standards that club audiences demanded.


