Nick Sample to honor Joe Sample’s legacy with annual event
Joe Sample's son launches an annual Houston event to preserve his father's musical legacy.

For years, Joe Sample’s music has traveled the globe, rooted in Houston’s Fifth Ward yet shaping the soundscape of modern music far beyond it.
Now, his son, Nick Sample, is building something more permanent than memory: a living, breathing institution designed to carry that legacy forward—the Joe Sample Landmark Heritage Session
In 2019, Nick Sample introduced audiences to a music-driven, “New Orleans mini Mardi Gras Creole-flavored immersive theater show” inspired by his father’s composition Creole Joe. His father performed with him during the artistic creation. However, those were the last times father and son jammed together. The elder Sample succumbed to cancer 14 years ago.
After years living abroad with his family, Nick, who spent 12 years playing bass in his father’s band, returned to the U.S. with a renewed sense of purpose. Initially, that purpose took the form of online storytelling, sharing experiences he had with his father.
From social media to cultural institution
But what began as cautious digital engagement evolved into something more expansive. Sample recognized that honoring his father required more than posts and memories; it demanded structure, intention, and community investment.
“I think approaching it from a not-for-profit, it just tastes better for those who want to get involved,” he explained. “It allows us to offer and present the best quality concerts and educational products, and specialized events for legacy.”
That vision sharpened during a conversation about an unreleased dual-piano recording featuring Joe Sample and George Duke. As discussions unfolded, a larger question emerged: How to sustain the legacy of artists whose audiences—and peers—are aging.
“Those are great mediums,” Sample said of streaming and social media, “but that doesn’t continue the legacy. I think it needs to be more immersive, more educational…It’s not a $50 Picasso painting at a garage sale. It’s actually on the wall at a museum, and it’s priceless.”
Out of that philosophy comes the Joe Sample Landmark Heritage Session—an annual, multi-day event rooted in Houston. More than a tribute concert, the initiative is designed as a cultural intervention.
Building the Joe Sample Landmark Heritage Session

“After Pops passed, numerous people…said, ‘Hey, let’s do a tribute night,’” Sample noted. “And of course, a tribute is beautiful…But what we are planning is an annual event for Joe Sample. Houston is the city for obvious reasons.”
Those reasons run deep. Joe Sample was not only a founding member of The Crusaders and an internationally acclaimed solo artist, but also a consistent supporter of local institutions, particularly Black Catholic churches and youth programs. His philanthropy matched his artistry.
“After Pops passed, numerous people…said, ‘Hey, let’s do a tribute night. And of course, a tribute is beautiful…But what we are planning is an annual event for Joe Sample. Houston is the city for obvious reasons.”
Nick Sample
Originally planned for February—his birth month—the event was moved to Sept. 12, marking the anniversary of his passing, to ensure participation from the many artists who worked alongside him.
The Heritage Session is built on three pillars. First is “Cultivation,” where sponsors and donors are invited into an intimate setting to understand the mission.
“It’s almost as if the royal court would commission a classical artist,” Sample said, framing the effort as both patronage and preservation.
Next comes direct engagement with youth musicians. In a professional setting, students rehearse alongside seasoned artists, learning in real time.
“They’ll learn how to hear the band, how to listen, and execute immediately,” Sample explained.
The final day culminates in a concert—one that collapses the distance between student and master, as young musicians perform alongside the very professionals who mentored them.
Community impact and cultural continuity
For longtime family friend Mary Fontenot, president of the Pleasantville Heritage Foundation, the initiative is both timely and necessary.
“Joe Sample…kept the Houston jazz connection front and center for decades,” she said. “And though we miss him, we still have his incredible library of songs. And now…we’ll have an annual event celebrating him and supporting young musicians—the next generation of Joe Samples.”
That intergenerational bridge is no accident. It reflects the lessons Nick Sample absorbed growing up—not just in studios or on stages, but at home.
Lessons from the father have been passed to the future.
“My parents always had parties at the house that included dad’s barbecue,” he recalled. “He was a pit master as well.”
But beyond the food and fellowship was something deeper: an understanding of music as culture, history, and collective memory.
“One, there’s Black culture in jazz, funk, and blues. Two, it’s the stories that come with it,” Sample said. “Where it’s from makes a big difference.”
Perhaps the most enduring lesson came not from theory, but from practice.
“The biggest thing that dad taught me was…how to listen,” he said. “How to hear what everyone’s doing, how to execute instantly…He could hear that I was a millisecond off.”
It’s a level of precision—and presence—that can’t be taught from a textbook. And it’s exactly what the Joe Sample Landmark Heritage Session aims to pass on.
In a cultural moment where algorithms often flatten history, Nick Sample’s effort insists on something richer: That legacy must be lived, taught, and shared in community. Not streamed and forgotten—but rehearsed, embodied, and carried forward.



